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FAUCI CRONY Quits — Why The Silence?
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FAUCI CRONY Quits — Why The Silence?

The acting director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) has stepped down, leaving yet another leadership vacancy at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) — and federal health officials are refusing to explain why. Story Snapshot Jeffery Taubenberger stepped down as acting director of NIAID, confirmed during a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing by Sen. Tammy Baldwin. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has not responded to press inquiries, and NIAID staff were reportedly not informed of the change. Taubenberger had served as acting director since April 2025, replacing Jeanne Marrazzo, who was placed on administrative leave under the Trump administration. The exact timing and reason for Taubenberger’s departure remain publicly unknown, fueling speculation about the circumstances surrounding his exit. Another NIAID Leadership Vacancy Surfaces Sen. Tammy Baldwin disclosed during a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing that Jeffery Taubenberger had stepped down as acting head of NIAID, one of the federal government’s largest and most influential health research institutes. STAT News reported the development on May 21, 2026, noting that the agency’s leadership status had become “unclear” and that queries to HHS “have gone unanswered and unacknowledged.” NIAID staff, according to the report, had not been formally informed of the change. Taubenberger was appointed acting director of NIAID in April 2025, stepping into the role after Jeanne Marrazzo was placed on administrative leave as part of the Trump administration’s broader restructuring of federal health agencies. NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya publicly acknowledged Taubenberger in the position through an NIH video, describing him as acting director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. His tenure in that role ran approximately from April 2025 through May 2026. Silence From HHS Raises Questions What stands out most is not the departure itself but the institutional silence surrounding it. Large federal agencies routinely cycle through acting leadership during transitions, and that alone would not be newsworthy. What makes this different is that HHS failed to respond to press inquiries, NIAID employees were left uninformed, and the disclosure came not from the agency but from a senator during a budget hearing. That combination of opacity is not consistent with a routine administrative handoff. The exact date Taubenberger stepped down has not been publicly established. STAT reported it was “unclear when Taubenberger stepped down, or why,” and noted that internal chatter within the institute had been circulating before the public disclosure. Whether the departure was voluntary, requested by NIH leadership, or the result of a broader personnel decision remains undocumented in any public record. HHS has offered no clarifying statement as of the time of reporting. Gain-of-Function Controversy Shadows the Exit Taubenberger is a virologist known for his work reconstructing the 1918 influenza pandemic virus — research that has drawn scrutiny from critics of high-risk pathogen studies. Conservative activist group White Coat Waste Project had publicly targeted him in connection with gain-of-function research concerns, and his association with the broader NIH scientific establishment made him a figure of interest to those pushing for accountability in federal pandemic research programs. Those criticisms formed the backdrop against which his departure became public. 1/ It was revealed today that the acting head of NIAID that replaced Fauci, Jeffrey Taubenberger, has stepped down. There is yet no current information available publicly as to why. Here is a reminder on who Jeffrey is and why having that position was a threat to humans… https://t.co/bRUPCtwjPz — Melissa (@missyTHX1138) May 21, 2026 However, the available public record does not establish a direct causal link between activist pressure and Taubenberger’s exit. No resignation letter, internal memo, personnel action notice, or on-record statement from NIH or HHS connects his departure to gain-of-function research criticism or any specific campaign. The facts on record are that he held the role, he no longer holds it, and the government has not explained the change. That gap between what is known and what is being claimed is significant — and it is a gap the administration should close with a straightforward public statement. NIH Accountability Demands Transparency American taxpayers fund the NIH to the tune of tens of billions of dollars annually. The public has a legitimate interest in knowing who is running its largest infectious disease research institute and why leadership changes occur. The Trump administration has made NIH reform a stated priority, which makes the silence around this departure harder to justify — not easier. Accountability cannot be a one-way street that applies only to the previous administration’s decisions. When federal health agencies go dark on basic personnel questions, they undermine the very trust conservatives have demanded be restored to American public health institutions. Sources: [1] Web – Acting head of NIH’s infectious disease institute reported to have … [2] Web – Jeffery Taubenberger Named Acting Director of NIAID – AABB.org [3] YouTube – Dr. Jeffery Taubenberger & NIAID – Director’s Desk [4] Web – Jeffery Taubenberger – Wikipedia

Court SHOCKER: Murdaugh Convictions Overturned—Jury TRAINED!
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Court SHOCKER: Murdaugh Convictions Overturned—Jury TRAINED!

A blockbuster Southern murder case just exposed how easily one ambitious court insider can trample the Constitution and poison a jury — and it should alarm every American who still believes in equal justice under the law. High-Profile Convictions Thrown Out Over Tainted Jury South Carolina’s Supreme Court unanimously overturned Alex Murdaugh’s 2023 convictions for murdering his wife Maggie and son Paul, ruling that he did not receive a fair trial by an impartial jury because of improper influence from a court official.[1][2] Justices stressed they were not declaring him innocent or disputing the existence of evidence, but they concluded the verdict itself could not stand under the Constitution.[1] Their order sends the case back for a full retrial, re-opening one of the country’s most watched prosecutions.[2] Broadcast coverage explains that the court grounded its decision in a long-standing legal rule protecting juries from outside pressure, sometimes called the Rimmer presumption, which assumes prejudice when there is improper contact with jurors.[2] The justices held that statements made by the Colleton County clerk of court created exactly that kind of outside influence, triggering a duty on the state to prove the jury was not swayed.[2] According to the court, prosecutors failed that test, requiring a clean slate and new trial.[2] Clerk’s Misconduct Shows How Power Can Be Abused Inside the Courthouse The core of the ruling is the conduct of Colleton County Clerk of Court Rebecca “Becky” Hill, who managed the jury during the original six-week trial.[1][2] Jurors reported that Hill privately urged them not to be fooled by the defense, told them to watch Murdaugh closely when he testified, and commented on his body language, steering them toward a guilty view.[1][2] One juror later said these comments influenced her decision to convict, a direct strike against the requirement of a neutral, unpressured jury.[1] The Supreme Court found Hill inserted herself into the deliberative process for personal gain, concluding she believed a dramatic guilty verdict would help her sell more books about the trial.[1] That kind of self-serving behavior comes from the same mindset conservatives recognize in other forms of government overreach: unelected insiders willing to bend rules, chase fame, and treat citizens’ rights as expendable. Hill has since pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice, perjury, and misconduct in office arising from related behavior, underscoring how serious the system viewed her actions.[1] Court Reasserts That Due Process Protects Even Unpopular Defendants In its opinion, the Supreme Court emphasized that “every” person is entitled to a fair trial before an impartial jury, deliberately stressing that this promise does not turn on whether the defendant is powerful, disgraced, or despised in the media.[2] Commentators noted that the court’s language goes directly to the heart of the constitutional guarantee that the government must prove each element of any crime beyond a reasonable doubt, free from outside interference.[2] By using strong language about Hill’s “fingers on the scales of justice,” the justices signaled that court insiders cannot quietly override that standard.[2] Legal analysts pointed out that a lower-court hearing had previously concluded Hill’s misconduct did not affect the final verdict, but the Supreme Court rejected that finding and said the presumption of prejudice had not been overcome. That reversal sends a clear message nationwide: when the integrity of a jury is compromised, appellate courts must step in, even in high-profile cases where the public is eager to see someone punished. For conservatives who worry about weaponized institutions and biased bureaucrats, this ruling functions as a rare example of a court actually pulling the reins on government power.[2] What Comes Next: Retrial, Media Spin, and the Fight for Trust The decision does not clear Murdaugh of the murder charges or return him to the street. He remains in prison serving long sentences for separate financial crimes, including stealing millions of dollars from legal clients, and will stay behind bars while the state prepares a new murder trial.[2] South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson has said his office plans to aggressively retry the case and will move as quickly as possible to bring it back before a jury.[2] That means the families of Maggie and Paul still face a long path to final resolution. ALEX MURDAUGH SUES COURT CLERK FOR $600K AFTER HIS MURDER CONVICTIONS WERE OVERTURNED FOR JURY TAMPERING pic.twitter.com/FxGrQ8pBF6 — Melee Culture (@melee_culture) May 19, 2026 The Supreme Court also criticized how much evidence about Murdaugh’s financial crimes was allowed into the murder trial and signaled that such evidence must be sharply limited in any retrial.[1][2] This addresses a concern many observers raised: that jurors might have been swayed more by outrage over financial misconduct than by clear, focused proof of homicide. For readers who have watched federal agencies and prosecutors use unrelated dirt to smear political or cultural opponents, this narrowing is significant. It insists that the state win a conviction on the crime charged, not on character assassination.[1] Sources: [1] YouTube – Court overturns Alex Murdaugh’s murder convictions and … [2] YouTube – Supreme Court overturns Alex Murdaugh’s murder convictions

Trump’s SHOCKING Attack on Lauren Boebert…
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Trump’s SHOCKING Attack on Lauren Boebert…

A sitting president threatening to kneecap an ally over a single intra-party endorsement spotlights how loyalty tests now outweigh voter priorities in Washington. Story Snapshot President Trump labeled Representative Lauren Boebert “weak minded” and tied the insult to her support for Representative Thomas Massie [1]. Trump signaled he could withdraw his endorsement and back a “proper alternative” if one emerged [1]. Boebert acknowledged Trump’s post and publicly maintained her alignment with Massie [1]. Local reporting indicates it may be too late for a new candidate to join Colorado’s primary ballot this cycle [3]. What Happened: Trump Targets Boebert Over Massie Support President Donald Trump used his social platform to deride Representative Lauren Boebert as “Weak Minded Lauren Boebert,” linking the insult to her support for Kentucky Representative Thomas Massie. Trump asked if anyone was interested in running against Boebert in Colorado’s Fourth Congressional District and suggested that “anybody who can be that dumb” by backing Massie deserved a strong primary challenge. The attack escalated a visible rift inside the Make America Great Again coalition and put Boebert’s standing with Trump’s base at risk [1]. Trump also signaled that his prior endorsement of Boebert was conditional, stating that if “the right person came along,” he would withdraw his endorsement and support a “good and proper alternative.” The reporting does not include evidence that the endorsement has been formally rescinded. No referenced primary-source campaign statement, endorsement list update, or official filing confirms a completed withdrawal, leaving the dispute in the realm of threats rather than documented follow-through [1]. Boebert’s Response and the Limits of the Record Representative Boebert publicly acknowledged seeing Trump’s post and posted a side-by-side image referencing both Trump and Massie, reinforcing that her support for Massie is a matter of record. The available reporting, however, does not include Boebert’s full original post, event transcript, or video from the Massie appearance. That gap limits verification of the event’s scope and whether her action was a formal endorsement, a joint rally, or a symbolic gesture, though the core dispute basis appears uncontested by either party [1]. One local outlet reports that it is too late for an additional candidate to get on the June primary ballot in Colorado, even as Trump calls for a challenger. Ballot access timelines matter: threats to engineer a quick primary fight can collide with filing deadlines and petition rules, affecting what pressure tactics can actually achieve in the current cycle. If accurate, this procedural barrier could push any practical challenge to a later phase or to off-ballot political pressure [3]. Why It Matters: Loyalty Tests Versus Local Priorities This clash illustrates how modern endorsements operate as loyalty enforcement tools inside polarized parties. When a party leader publicly threatens to revoke backing over a single cross-current alliance, candidates learn that personal alignment may outweigh local issues or legislative records. Voters who already suspect Washington power brokers prioritize status over service will see this episode as more evidence that insiders guard influence first and delegate interests second, regardless of whether they lean conservative or liberal [1]. President Trump is calling for a GOP primary challenge to Rep. Lauren Boebert (it's too late for that this year). Boebert is the second CO Rep to lose Trump's endorsement this year for perceived disloyalty. pic.twitter.com/AeSJoBo8Fq — Kyle Clark (@KyleClark) May 19, 2026 Mass public focus on nicknames and intra-party spectacle can crowd out policy debate, including disagreements that motivated Boebert’s stance. The available record connects the dispute to Massie’s brand of independence, but it lacks primary-source documentation of Boebert’s substantive rationale. Without original posts, videos, or transcripts, citizens must rely on secondary summaries. That opacity feeds the bipartisan frustration that elites control narratives, and it rewards political theatrics over transparent, verifiable governance [1]. What To Watch Next Watch for concrete steps that turn rhetoric into reality: a formal endorsement withdrawal posted by Trump’s campaign or political committees; any recruitment signals for a Boebert challenger that meet Colorado’s legal thresholds; and full-source posts or footage from Boebert explaining her Massie alignment. If none appear, the episode may function primarily as a warning to other Republicans: cross the leader’s preferences and face public discipline, even if procedural calendars blunt the immediate electoral impact [1][3]. Sources: [1] Web – Trump gives Lauren Boebert savage new nickname in scorching … [3] Web – Trump threatens to turn on Boebert, but it’s too late for a 2026 …

Gun Rights CRISIS: Veteran and Owner Fight Back…
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Gun Rights CRISIS: Veteran and Owner Fight Back…

When a combat veteran and a small-town restaurant owner both decide their own state treats them like suspects for wanting a handgun at home, something fundamental about citizenship is on trial. Story Snapshot Illinois forces every would‑be gun owner to secure a Firearm Owner’s Identification card before touching a firearm or even ammunition. A new federal lawsuit says that “show your papers” regime flips the Second Amendment from a right into a licensed privilege.[1][3] Plaintiffs include an honorably discharged veteran and a restaurateur who see the law as an insult to ordinary, law‑abiding adults.[2][3] The outcome could decide whether universal gun licensing survives the Supreme Court’s modern Second Amendment test. How Illinois Turned Gun Ownership Into A Permission Slip Illinois law demands that every resident obtain a Firearm Owner’s Identification card from the Illinois State Police before acquiring or possessing a firearm, stun gun, taser, or even ammunition.[4][5] That card is not optional; without it, simply having a box of cartridges in your kitchen is a crime. The system looks tidy on paper: fill out an application, pay a fee, wait up to thirty days, receive your card. In reality, that license is the legal choke point for an entire constitutional right.[4] Unlike background checks that happen at the point of sale, this regime reaches inside the home. A widow who wants her late husband’s shotgun, a twenty‑something woman moving into a sketchy neighborhood, a retired Marine finally buying the handgun he refused to carry off‑base—all must first send their personal data and money to the state and wait for bureaucrats to decide whether they may exercise what the Constitution calls a right to keep and bear arms.[3][4] Why A Veteran And A Restaurant Owner Finally Said “Enough” Civil liberties lawyers now represent several plaintiffs in a federal case that calls Illinois’s system an “unconstitutional universal gun possession licensing mandate.”[2][3] Media coverage describes the law in plainer language: a “show your papers” rule for anyone who wants to own a gun or ammunition.[1] One plaintiff is a veteran who served his country with a rifle, trusted with deadly force overseas, yet must buy a government card to keep a handgun in his own bedroom. That contradiction offends basic American common sense.[2][3] Another plaintiff, a restaurant owner, faces the same demand. He can hire staff, manage payroll, follow health codes, and serve alcohol responsibly, but he cannot lawfully keep a firearm to defend his cash business without first clearing a state licensing hurdle.[1][3] Their argument is not that dangerous felons should be armed; it is that law‑abiding adults should not need a standing permission slip to avoid felony charges for owning tools that the Constitution already protects. Conservatives instinctively recognize the danger of making fundamental rights depend on paperwork. The Constitutional Fault Line After Bruen The Supreme Court’s decision in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association versus Bruen rewired Second Amendment law by saying governments must justify gun regulations with historical tradition, not vague claims of public benefit. That shift unleashed challenges to licensing schemes nationwide, from carry permits to magazine limits. Illinois, with one of the country’s most aggressive, statewide gun licensing regimes, became an obvious target for litigation that asks whether any universal permission system for simple possession can survive this new standard.[5] Illinois officials point to a web of gun regulations that courts have not fully dismantled and lean on the presumption that duly enacted laws are constitutional until judges say otherwise.[5] Yet that comfort looks fragile when the same legal world now questions whether governments may demand licenses for public carry at all, let alone for keeping a firearm at home. When a state requires a license before you may exercise a right the Supreme Court has called “fundamental,” the burden of justification should rest heavily on the state, not on ordinary citizens. From “Background Check” To De Facto Gun Registry The Illinois Firearm Owner’s Identification card is defended as just a background‑check mechanism, but its universal scope makes it something closer to a slow‑motion registry. Every lawful owner must be logged. Every change of address, renewal, or revocation updates that record. Advocacy materials supporting the law rarely grapple with a basic conservative concern: once a government builds a comprehensive database of who owns guns, future legislators can misuse it for confiscation, selective enforcement, or harassment.[4][5] @orgop @AWRHawkins @HarmeetKDhillon Oregon is also guilty. Illinois Sued Over Firearms Licensing Scheme https://t.co/CF4r6ribNv via @dailycaller — Frontier Resident (@A922023) May 21, 2026 Gun control supporters respond that the card screens out dangerous people and that honest citizens have “nothing to fear” from a little paperwork. Yet that assurance rings hollow in a state where bureaucratic delays have already left applicants “in limbo for months,” despite statutes that require decisions in thirty days.[4] When the same agency that must approve your license also controls the data proving its own failures, skepticism is not paranoia; it is healthy oversight. Conservatives should insist that delays and mismanagement affecting a constitutional right receive at least as much scrutiny as late driver’s licenses or botched tax refunds. What This Fight Really Decides About Citizenship This lawsuit will not instantly erase Illinois’s gun laws, but it could force a choice about the kind of republic Illinois wants to be. One model treats ordinary adults as presumptively trustworthy, restricting only those who prove themselves dangerous. The other model flips that presumption, requiring everyone—including veterans and small business owners—to beg for permission first, then live under the threat that a bureaucratic glitch or political shift might yank that permission away. The federal court will decide which vision aligns with our constitutional tradition.[2][3] Americans over forty have watched phrases like “papers, please” used to mock foreign police states. When your neighbor must keep a government card current to avoid becoming a felon for the contents of his own gun safe, the line between safety regulation and soft authoritarianism grows thin. Regardless of partisan identity, anyone who values limited government should follow this case closely, because if Illinois can license away one enumerated right, no serious person thinks it will stop there.[1][2][3] Sources: [1] Web – Civil liberty advocates sue Illinois over ‘show your papers’ gun law [2] Web – NCLA Tells Federal Court: Stop Illinois’ Unconstitutional Universal … [3] Web – NCLA Tells Federal Court: Stop Illinois’ Unconstitutional Universal … [4] Web – Illinois State Gun Laws and Regulations Explained | NRA-ILA [5] Web – Gun laws in Illinois – Wikipedia

66 Charges UNLEASHED: Justice System Fumbled?
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66 Charges UNLEASHED: Justice System Fumbled?

A Maryland shooting-and-carjacking spree stacked up 66 charges and one brutal question: why was a man with a serious record free to terrorize a county on a Friday afternoon? What Police And Reporters Say Happened, Stop By Stop Reporters attribute to police a timeline that starts near 2:30 p.m. with shots fired in College Park, proceeds to a shooting on Riverdale Road, and escalates with an overturned sport-utility vehicle, a carjacking of another vehicle, and additional gunfire before an arrest capped the chaos [4]. The coverage states the suspect faces 66 charges tied to the spree and was already on bond from an attempted murder case, having missed a hearing that same day according to court records cited by the outlet [4]. Accounts describe harm across several scenes: a 64-year-old reportedly suffered head wounds from shattered glass, while at least one man was hit and critically injured yet expected to survive [4]. Reporters state the incident ended only after an off-duty officer called for backup and helped take the suspect into custody at the scene [4]. That claim, if borne out by charging documents and body-camera footage, would sharply tighten the link between the identified suspect and the rolling string of crimes alleged by prosecutors. The Record That Grabs Headlines, And The Evidence We Still Need Media say court records paint a decades-long criminal history that includes a first-degree murder charge from nearly 39 years ago, plus armed robbery and other violent felonies [4]. The same coverage also states police had not officially confirmed those old records belong to the present defendant, a caveat that matters when names and ages can overlap in databases [4]. Responsible readers should treat that linkage as provisional until prosecutors file documents anchoring identity through fingerprints, photographs, and docket-certified materials. The absence of a publicly available charging affidavit, sworn probable-cause statement, or forensic summaries leaves key gaps: which firearm or firearms were recovered, how ballistics match shell casings to scenes, whether vehicle trace evidence links the suspect to the crash and carjacking, and what surveillance video shows from start to finish [4]. Reported requests from investigators for public surveillance footage suggest the evidentiary file was still building when cameras rolled and headlines hit [4]. Those gaps do not dismiss the case; they mark the homework that still needs grading. Accountability, Bail, And A System That Keeps Relearning The Same Lesson Public safety demands a bail regime that weighs danger to the community ahead of wishful thinking. If a defendant out on a six-figure bond for attempted murder really skipped a hearing and then racked up dozens of fresh violent counts, that sequence challenges the competence and priorities of the release decision-makers [4]. Conservative common sense says courts should privilege credible risk assessments, prior bench-warrant behavior, and firearm red flags over mechanical schedules or ideological leniency that discounts repeat-violence probabilities. Comparative cases show how officials can and do impose heavy consequences when evidence is tight. An Ohio high court summary describes a 60-year sentence that survived appeal for a robbery and kidnapping spree once the record supported each element [1]. Federal prosecutors routinely leverage long terms for repeat armed robbery offenders when surveillance, victim IDs, and gun evidence cohere, as seen in a case where the United States Attorney’s Office detailed a prolific robber’s multi-year sentence after a strong evidentiary showing [2]. Those examples underline the aim: speed to arrest must be matched by depth of proof. Due Process Is Not A Loophole; It Is The Proof Test Caution belongs alongside outrage. A defensible case needs chain-of-custody clarity, body-camera corroboration, and clean witness procedures that will survive cross-examination. The reported involvement of an off-duty officer at the arrest scene is promising for identification integrity, but jurors will still expect forensics to knit scenes together and surveillance to close timing gaps [4]. Prosecutors should move fast to release a redacted probable-cause statement, while defense counsel should test every link. Truth does not fear transcripts, timestamps, or lab reports. A man convicted of murder decades ago is now charged in a shooting and robbery spree in Maryland that injured two people, according to multiple reports.https://t.co/WQL1qrPYaz — Hudson Crozier (@Hudson_Crozier) May 18, 2026 Citizens deserve a justice system that locks in on dangerous repeat violence early and proves its case meticulously. If the reported spree and bond history stand up to the record, accountability should be swift and unsentimental. If any part falters, correction should be just as swift. Evidence-first thinking, not character-first inference, is how communities get both safety and fairness—especially when headlines thunder and patience runs thin. Sources: [1] Web – Court Upholds 60-Year Sentence for Crime Spree Convictions [2] Web – Prolific Armed Robber Sentenced to Over 25 Years in Prison [4] YouTube – Bond revoked for suspect charged in deadly shooting spree that led …