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Guard Dog Left SHAKING After BIGFOOT Encounter…
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Guard Dog Left SHAKING After BIGFOOT Encounter…

Six towering, hairy figures stalked the woods of northeast Ohio over four days this March, leaving one guard dog trembling in terror and an entire county wondering what just moved through their backyard. Four Days of Fear in Portage County The reports began March 6 when someone spotted a 9-foot brown figure outdoors near Mantua Center. The next day brought an 8-foot brown figure accompanied by footprints and guttural grunts. March 9 delivered three separate encounters: an 8-foot black figure, a towering 10-foot black creature emitting a musky odor, and a 6-foot brown figure observed through a window from 100 feet away. The final sighting on March 10 described an 8-10 foot “large black shadow” that witnesses insisted looked nothing like a bear. The geographic cluster proved remarkable. All sightings occurred within Portage County’s wooded areas spanning Mantua Center, Garrettsville, Streetsboro, and Newton Township—a relatively small footprint southeast of Cleveland. Witnesses emphasized distinctive behaviors that separated these encounters from typical wildlife misidentifications. The figures allegedly walked with stiff, stilt-like gaits, turned their entire shoulders rather than necks, and left behind unexplained footprints. One account specifically mentioned a guard dog reduced to shaking with fear during the encounter, suggesting an animal’s instinctive response to something genuinely unnerving. When Enthusiasts Sound the Alarm Jeremiah Byron, host of the Bigfoot Society podcast and administrator of its 282,000-member Facebook community, recognized the pattern immediately. He labeled the cluster a “flap”—cryptozoology terminology for an abnormal concentration of sightings in a compact timeframe and location. Byron told media outlets this represented something unusual, emphasizing that multiple reports within such a small area over just days deviated from typical sporadic encounters. His group issued warnings to Portage County residents to stay vigilant in wooded corridors, urging them to keep eyes open and doors locked. The Bigfoot Society served as the central clearinghouse for these reports, aggregating eyewitness accounts from anonymous locals who reached out through social media channels. Byron’s commentary framed the sightings as evidence of creature movement, possibly migration through established travel corridors. His excitement was palpable, describing the volume of reports as massive compared to normal reporting rates. Yet for all the enthusiasm, no photographs, video footage, or physical evidence accompanied any of the six encounters. Every claim rested solely on verbal descriptions from witnesses who remain unidentified. Ohio’s Long History with Sasquatch Portage County’s wooded terrain, particularly around the 167-acre Nelson-Kennedy Ledges State Park, provides habitat that Bigfoot enthusiasts consider ideal for sightings. Ohio has accumulated over 500 historical Bigfoot reports in Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization databases, ranking the state among America’s most active for such claims. The modern surge in reports traces back to the 1950s, amplified by events like the famous 1967 Patterson-Gimlin film that remains cryptozoology’s most debated piece of evidence. Indigenous North American lore documented similar creatures long before contemporary fascination took root. Northeast Ohio’s dense forests support legitimate wildlife populations including black bears, creating natural opportunities for misidentification. However, witnesses in this latest cluster explicitly ruled out bears, insisting the figures moved bipedally with distinctly non-ursine characteristics. Cryptozoology enthusiasts argue these details lend credibility, while skeptics counter that conviction does not equal verification. The region has seen scattered reports over decades, but nothing matching the intensity of this four-day window. Previous national “flaps” occurred sporadically in locations like Washington State, though concentrated bursts remain uncommon enough to generate significant attention when they surface. Evidence-Free Investigation The Decatur Police Department received mention in connection with a March 12 incident, though details remain unspecified and the location seems geographically odd given Portage County’s focus. No wildlife management agencies or law enforcement entities issued official statements about the sightings. The investigation, such as it exists, proceeds informally through the Bigfoot Society’s network. Hunters claimed they locked eyes with the creatures, describing moments of frozen confrontation before the figures vanished into tree cover. Yet not a single witness produced photographic documentation despite the proliferation of smartphone cameras. This absence of physical proof represents the fundamental challenge undermining these accounts. Footprints went uncast, odors dissipated without chemical analysis, and the terrified guard dog’s reaction remains anecdotal rather than documented. Media coverage from outlets including Mercer County Outlook and Fox News Digital amplified the story based entirely on secondhand reporting from the Bigfoot Society. No independent verification occurred. The dynamic favors viral speculation over methodical skepticism, with enthusiast communities wielding informal influence through social media reach that traditional authorities cannot match. For Portage County residents, the choice becomes whether to trust neighbors’ eyes or demand evidence that never materializes. Sources: Believe It Or Not…Numerous Bigfoot Sightings In Ohio – Mercer County Outlook Six reported Bigfoot sightings in northeast Ohio within four days spark cryptid flap speculation – Fox News

Soros DA Blames MAGA for ISIS Attack…
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Soros DA Blames MAGA for ISIS Attack…

A George Soros-backed district attorney sparked fury across Virginia after blaming pro-gun lawmakers for an ISIS-inspired terrorist attack at Old Dominion University that left a decorated military veteran dead and two ROTC students wounded, ignoring the fact that unarmed students heroically subdued the jihadi attacker without firearms. Deflecting From Terrorism to Push Gun Control The Soros-funded district attorney’s statement politicizing the March 12, 2026 Old Dominion University attack represents a dangerous pattern of progressive prosecutors ignoring radical Islamic terrorism to advance gun control narratives. FBI Director Kash Patel explicitly labeled the incident terrorism, praising the brave students who stopped the threat. The shooter, Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, deliberately targeted an ROTC class after confirming its military nature, shouted “Allahu Akbar” during the attack, and aspired to replicate the 2009 Fort Hood massacre. These facts demolish any attempt to frame this as a gun policy failure rather than terrorism and prison release negligence. ISIS Convict Released Early From Federal Prison Jalloh served in the Virginia Army National Guard from 2009 to 2015 as a combat engineer before turning to terrorism. In 2016, at age 26, he contacted ISIS members in Africa and plotted an attack inspired by the Fort Hood shooting that killed 13 Americans. He communicated with an FBI informant posing as an ISIS associate and attempted to purchase an AR-15 rifle, which authorities rendered inoperable. After pleading guilty to providing material support to ISIS, Judge Liam O’Grady sentenced him to just 11 years. His early release in December 2024 enabled the Old Dominion attack barely three months later. You are a complete moron. Blaming pro-gun organizations when you know damn well it was a terrorist attack. Naturalized or not he was a terrorist Soros-backed DA sparks backlash after blaming Old Dominion shooting on pro-gun lawmakers: 'F— right off'https://t.co/17Y1R9gn7R — SeelyCS (@E9_BRAT) March 13, 2026 Unarmed ROTC Students Stop Armed Terrorist At approximately 10:49 a.m., Jalloh entered a classroom in Constant Hall, asked if it was an ROTC class, and opened fire upon confirmation. He killed instructor Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, a retired Army officer who flew helicopters in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Eastern Europe. Two ROTC students sustained wounds. Within minutes, unarmed students subdued and neutralized Jalloh without firing a single shot, preventing further casualties. FBI Norfolk Special Agent Dominique Evans credited their “extreme bravery” with terminating the threat. ODU Police Chief Garrett Shelton confirmed the shooter was dead less than 10 minutes after the initial 911 call at 10:43 a.m. Americans Reject Progressive Prosecutor’s Spin The DA’s attempt to blame pro-gun lawmakers ignited widespread backlash, including profane public rejections of the narrative. Citizens recognized the absurdity of blaming Second Amendment advocates when an ISIS-inspired terrorist deliberately targeted military students in an act of jihad. The heroism of unarmed ROTC students further undermines gun control arguments, as they stopped the threat through courage and training, not firearms. This incident underscores the real threats Americans face: lenient sentencing for terrorists, early prison releases, inadequate monitoring of convicted extremists, and prosecutors more interested in advancing progressive agendas than holding radical Islamic terrorists accountable for their ideology-driven violence. Norfolk's Soros-backed Attorney Ramin Fatehi is blaming the shooting on…. Republicans Not the foreign islamist who actually carried out the attack and was previously convicted for providing support to ISIS pic.twitter.com/1RD24LsRfH — Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) March 13, 2026 The political exploitation of this tragedy dishonors Lt. Col. Shah’s sacrifice and the bravery of ROTC students who confronted evil. Americans deserve prosecutors focused on justice and national security, not ideologically-driven narratives that deflect from terrorism. The questions surrounding Jalloh’s early release and post-prison monitoring demand answers, not gun control rhetoric that ignores the documented facts of an ISIS-inspired attack on American military personnel. Sources: Timeline of events surrounding shooting at Old Dominion University – WTKR 1 of 3 victims has died after a shooting at Virginia’s Old Dominion University – WSLS Police respond to active incident at Old Dominion University in Virginia – ABC News Old Dominion shooting has terrorism ties – Politico

History’s Most Surprising Vice President Picks
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History’s Most Surprising Vice President Picks

The selection of a Vice Presidential running mate is often the first major “presidential” decision a nominee makes, serving as a signal of their judgment, priorities, and political strategy. While many candidates opt for “safe” choices that provide geographic or ideological balance, others have stunned the political establishment with picks that were entirely unforeseen. From obscure congressmen to ideological rivals, these surprising choices have often redefined the trajectory of American elections. The 1840 Whig Gamble: John Tyler The selection of John Tyler by the Whig Party was a calculated but ultimately shocking move. A former Democrat from Virginia, Tyler was added to the ticket with William Henry Harrison primarily to attract Southern voters who were wary of the Whig’s northern industrialist base. At the time, the Vice Presidency was considered a political dead-end, and few expected the healthy Harrison to die just one month into his term. Tyler’s subsequent “accidental” presidency was a shock to the Whigs, as he vetoed his own party’s legislation and became the first president to be expelled from his party while in office. The 1944 Shakeup: Harry S. Truman In 1944, Franklin D. Roosevelt was seeking a fourth term with failing health, making his choice of VP a matter of life or death for the administration. The incumbent, Henry Wallace, was beloved by the party’s left wing but viewed as a “mystic” and a Soviet sympathizer by party bosses. In a surprising backroom maneuver at the convention, the “Missouri Compromise” was reached, and Harry S. Truman—a relatively obscure senator known for his work on a war-waste investigating committee—was tapped for the role. This pivot away from the radical Wallace changed the course of the Cold War, as Truman would be the one to decide on the use of the atomic bomb less than a year later. The 1988 Youth Movement: Dan Quayle When George H.W. Bush announced Dan Quayle as his running mate, even the press corps was caught off guard. At only 41 years old, the Indiana Senator was largely unknown on the national stage. Bush’s team hoped Quayle’s youth and telegenic presence would bridge the gap with younger voters and the conservative base, but the pick immediately faced intense scrutiny. The surprise of the selection was quickly overshadowed by a series of gaffes and the famous “You’re no Jack Kennedy” debate moment, making it a cautionary tale in the risks of picking a candidate before they are fully “vetted” by the national media. The Modern Era of “Game Changers” The 2008 selection of Sarah Palin by John McCain remains one of the most disruptive choices in modern political history. McCain, trailing in the polls and facing an energized Democratic base, bypassed safe picks like Joe Lieberman or Mitt Romney in favor of the first-term Governor of Alaska. The move was designed to provide a “maverick” jolt to the campaign and appeal to blue-collar voters. While it initially caused a massive surge in the polls and energized the Republican base, the pick eventually became a lightning rod for criticism regarding her readiness for high office. This era of the “Game Changer” pick highlights a shift in political strategy where the goal is no longer just “balance” but “momentum.” Candidates now often feel pressured to make a high-risk, high-reward choice to break through the 24-hour news cycle. While Palin is the most famous example, this trend has forced every subsequent nominee to weigh the benefits of a “splashy” announcement against the potential for long-term instability. The surprise factor has become a double-edged sword that can either redefine a candidate’s image or provide the opposition with a permanent target. Sources: The First 100 Days of the Second Trump Administration The Anti-Immigrant Policies in Trump’s Final “Big Beautiful Bill … The Trump Administration’s 2025 Changes to Immigration Law … Protecting The American People Against Invasion – The White House

Resurfaced C-SPAN Clip Ambushes Trump DHS Pick…
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Resurfaced C-SPAN Clip Ambushes Trump DHS Pick…

A resurfaced C-SPAN clip is being used to bog down President Trump’s DHS reset just as the department sits shuttered and border enforcement hangs in the balance. Trump Moves to Swap DHS Leadership as the Agency Remains Shut Down President Trump announced on March 5, 2026, that Sen. Markwayne Mullin will be his pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security, with the change slated to take effect March 31. The move follows mounting turmoil around outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, whose standing reportedly collapsed inside the administration and among key senators. The practical problem is timing: multiple reports describe DHS as shut down during an ongoing funding standoff. Senate Majority Leader John Thune signaled Republicans want the process moving quickly, describing Mullin as “pretty well-vetted” and urging the Senate to get started. Mullin, for his part, has framed his approach as outreach-heavy, saying he wants to “earn everybody’s vote” and promising to work across the aisle. The basic test will be whether the Senate prioritizes operational continuity at DHS over partisan leverage. Why Noem Was Pushed Out—and What That Means for Accountability Reporting indicates the break with Noem was driven by a mix of controversies and internal frustration, including disputes about management and funding and the influence of adviser Corey Lewandowski. The research also cites a January 2026 incident in Minneapolis involving DHS agents killing two U.S. citizens, including 37-year-old Alex Pretti, followed by backlash after Noem labeled Pretti a “domestic terrorist” without evidence. Those events intensified pressure for a leadership change. Noem has defended her record and is described as moving into a Western Hemisphere role aimed at targeting cartels. Support for her also appeared uneven inside the Republican conference, with reporting that some GOP senators withdrew backing even as others defended her. With DHS overseeing border security, immigration enforcement, and disaster response, the bigger issue for Americans is whether the department can function predictably, lawfully, and under clear civilian leadership—especially during a funding impasse. What?!! @SenMullin praised and hugged Ashli Babbitt’s killer cop Michael Byrd? Is @realDonaldTrump aware of this? It doesn’t sound like there was a good vetting process in place! I miss @Sec_Noem already! https://t.co/ipX3XdPOAS pic.twitter.com/NU2KEdja7t — Hank (@HankishTwitZone) March 6, 2026 Democrats Signal a Confirmation Fight Tied to “Reforms” and DHS/ICE Overhauls Democratic leaders are signaling they will use the nomination as leverage. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer publicly opposed moving forward, tying his stance to demands for policy changes and arguing the “rot” goes beyond one secretary. The research also notes Democratic pressure for an ICE “overhaul” during broader DHS funding and reform battles. That approach ensures the nomination becomes a proxy war over immigration enforcement rather than a narrow debate about Mullin’s qualifications. Some Democratic reactions have been less uniformly hostile. Sen. John Fetterman, according to the research, called Mullin a “nice upgrade,” underscoring that the fight may be more about extracting concessions than opposing the nominee personally. Still, the Senate math and the pace of the process will matter. When confirmation becomes a bargaining chip, the immediate cost can be operational paralysis—exactly what Americans do not want from a security agency. The “Resurfaced Video” Narrative: What’s Verified and What Isn’t Online posts are circulating claims about a resurfaced video connected to Mullin, and the original story angle highlighted by the provided research frames the clip as “shocking.” However, the research summary itself cautions that specific details of the video are not verified in the available results, and no transcript or confirmed context is provided here. That makes it difficult to evaluate the clip’s substance without more primary documentation from the full recording. For readers frustrated by years of politicized bureaucracy and media spin, the key is separating what is documented from what is merely viral. Verified points include Trump’s nomination timeline, the intended March 31 transition, and the fact that Senate leaders are already staking out positions. If lawmakers want a serious confirmation process, they should focus on sworn testimony, documented records, and DHS’s mission—rather than letting an uncontextualized clip drive national security staffing decisions. Border Security, Funding, and the Constitutional Stakes of DHS Instability DHS was built to secure the homeland after 9/11, and today it sits at the center of two core federal responsibilities: enforcing immigration law and responding to disasters. The research indicates the agency’s shutdown is disrupting operations, which can ripple quickly into border communities and emergency management. For conservatives, the underlying concern is predictable: when Washington fails to fund or manage core functions, everyday Americans pay the price in safety and order. Is Markwayne Mullin a huge mistake?? Resurface video from C-SPAN in July 2021 has Mullin PRAISING Mike Byrd, the killer cop who MURDERED Ashli Babbitt in cold blood, calling him the real 'victim' and 'hero'#DHS #MarkwayneMullen #AshliBabbitthttps://t.co/BEzFQzv9zA — Phil Jones (@MAGAPhil1776) March 6, 2026 Republicans will likely argue that confirming a vetted nominee restores command clarity and helps execute the elected agenda on enforcement. Democrats appear positioned to trade confirmations and funding for structural changes, particularly around ICE. With limited detail available on the viral-video allegation in the research, the most concrete takeaway is this: the Senate fight is set, and DHS stability—border enforcement, disaster response, and lawful governance—hangs on whether politics overrides basic continuity. Sources: https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/05/markwayne-mullin-confirmation-dhs-00815293 https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/05/markwayne-mullin-noem-dhs-00814761 https://www.cornyn.senate.gov/news/cornyn-on-president-trump-announcing-senator-markwayne-mullin-to-lead-dhs/ https://www.foxnews.com/politics/schumer-weaponizes-mullin-nomination-demand-dhs-overhaul-says-rot-goes-beyond-noem https://www.cbsnews.com/video/sen-markwayne-mullin-reacts-trumps-nomination-replace-kristi-noem/

WOW: Trump SUED By SNAP Recipients…
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WOW: Trump SUED By SNAP Recipients…

Five families with food stamps just dragged the Trump administration to federal court over candy bars, soda, and the government’s sudden authority to decide what poor people deserve to eat. From Nebraska’s Experiment to National Controversy Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins handed Nebraska the first waiver on May 19, 2025, banning soda and energy drinks from SNAP purchases. Within ten months, 21 more states secured similar approvals, creating a patchwork of prohibited items spanning fruit drinks under 50 percent juice, prepared desserts, sugar-sweetened beverages, and candy. The rapid expansion stems from the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again initiative, championed by Rollins and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who told governors in June 2025 that taxpayers shouldn’t fund products fueling chronic disease. The escalation blindsided recipients accustomed to decades of broad purchasing freedom under SNAP, established by the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008. By December 2025, Rollins announced six additional state approvals, framing the waivers as empowering states to protect children from processed foods. March 4, 2026, marked the 22nd waiver approval, triggering the lawsuit filed one week later in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by five plaintiffs from Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska, Tennessee, and West Virginia. When Policy Collides With Real Lives Amanda Johnson’s story encapsulates the lawsuit’s human stakes. The Tennessee mother depends on SNAP to feed her autistic daughter, whose eating disorder limits her diet to specific restricted foods including M&Ms and fruit punch. Johnson now faces impossible choices at checkout: use benefits for allowed foods her daughter won’t eat, or spend scarce cash on necessities the government suddenly deems unworthy. Her situation exposes the fundamental flaw critics see in the waivers—they draw arbitrary nutritional lines that ignore complex medical realities, dietary restrictions from allergies, and the daily energy demands of low-income workers. The plaintiffs, represented by the National Center for Law and Economic Justice and private attorneys, argue the waivers violate the Administrative Procedure Act and Food and Nutrition Act by exceeding USDA authority without reasoned decision-making. They point to 2018, when the USDA itself rejected state proposals for similar bans, citing lack of health evidence, administrative burdens on retailers, and the impossibility of defining “healthy” without arbitrary distinctions. The sudden reversal under Rollins raises questions about whether politics trumped analysis, especially given Kennedy’s public pressure for all governors to adopt bans by 2026’s end. The Conservative Case For and Against Restrictions The administration’s position appeals to fiscal conservatives weary of subsidizing junk food with tax dollars while chronic disease rates climb. Rollins and Kennedy frame the restrictions as restoring SNAP’s nutritional purpose, protecting children from processed foods, and leveraging purchasing power to incentivize healthier choices. The Make America Healthy Again initiative resonates with voters who see government assistance programs enabling poor dietary habits rather than lifting families out of poverty. States gained flexibility to tailor restrictions, a federalist approach conservatives typically champion over one-size-fits-all mandates. Yet the lawsuit highlights conservative principles the waivers arguably violate. Personal freedom and parental authority clash with bureaucrats dictating grocery lists. The patchwork of 22 different state rules creates regulatory chaos for retailers and confusion for recipients moving across state lines, contradictions anathema to limited government ideals. The 2018 USDA analysis—conducted under both parties—found no proven health benefits, raising concerns about feel-good policies lacking empirical justification. Amanda Johnson’s predicament demonstrates how central planning fails individuals with unique needs, a core conservative critique of government overreach. Precedent, Politics, and What Comes Next This lawsuit diverges from parallel SNAP litigation making headlines in 2026. Separate cases involve Democratic-led states challenging SNAP eligibility cuts totaling 186 billion dollars over ten years and emergency suspensions during government shutdowns. Those suits address funding and access; this case targets what beneficiaries can buy, a novel legal battleground. The D.C. federal court must decide whether USDA waivers rest on reasoned analysis or political expediency, with implications stretching beyond nutrition policy to administrative law’s boundaries. The USDA declined comment on pending litigation as of March 12, leaving Rollins’ December 2025 statement as the administration’s public defense. Grocery retailers face mounting compliance costs adapting systems to varying state rules, while recipients in 22 states navigate restricted aisles with benefits that suddenly won’t cover former staples. If the court voids the waivers, Kennedy’s goal of nationwide bans collapses; if upheld, expect rapid expansion as remaining states join the bandwagon. The case tests whether common sense health reforms can coexist with individual liberty, or whether good intentions pave roads to unintended consequences that harm the vulnerable families policies claim to protect. Sources: SNAP Recipients Sue Trump Administration Over Sugary Food Restrictions – The Epoch Times US sued by food stamp recipients over restrictions on sugary drinks, candy – The Straits Times SNAP Recipients Sue USDA Over Sugary Drink Restrictions – Newsmax States sue Trump administration over SNAP eligibility changes – Grocery Dive 25 states suing Trump administration over SNAP – Food Dive SNAP Suit Plaintiffs Sue – Western Center on Law & Poverty