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WATCH: Israeli Minister’s Shocking Taunt Video LEAKS…
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WATCH: Israeli Minister’s Shocking Taunt Video LEAKS…

A senior Israeli minister filmed himself taunting handcuffed detainees kneeling with their foreheads pressed to the ground, and that video may be the least disturbing part of what deported Gaza flotilla activists are alleging happened to them in Israeli custody. Story Snapshot Hundreds of activists aboard the Gaza-bound Sumud Flotilla were intercepted at sea and detained by Israeli authorities before being deported, primarily to Turkey. Deported activists allege beatings, tasing, sexual assault, rib fractures, denial of food and water, confiscated medication, and prolonged stress positions during detention. National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir posted video of restrained detainees and said “Welcome to Israel. We are the masters here,” drawing international condemnation. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly distanced himself from Ben-Gvir’s conduct, but Israeli authorities offered no itemized rebuttal of the specific abuse allegations. What Activists Say Happened After the Boats Were Stopped The Sumud Flotilla was carrying aid toward Gaza when Israeli naval forces intercepted it in international waters. After boarding, activists were taken into custody, transferred to Ashdod port, and held in Israeli detention facilities before being deported. Malaysian activist Elia Balis told reporters at Istanbul’s airport that detainees were denied clean food and water and that their medication and belongings were confiscated. Two other activists told Reuters they personally witnessed Israeli authorities mistreating Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg during detention. [3] The allegations escalated well beyond confiscated belongings. One activist testified that 35 people suffered rib fractures, that at least 12 sexual assaults occurred, that detainees were tased, and that she personally was kicked in the ribs and kept in restraints long enough to lose feeling in her hands. [4] The International Federation for Human Rights, known as the FIDH, issued a statement on October 5, 2025, describing what it called a pattern of physical violence, verbal harassment, denial of adequate drinking water, food, sleep, and medication, and prolonged confinement in stress positions. [2] The Ben-Gvir Video Changes the Evidentiary Landscape Whatever one thinks of the flotilla’s political mission, the video Ben-Gvir posted himself is not in dispute. It shows detainees kneeling with hands tied behind their backs and foreheads pressed to the ground while a senior government minister taunts them on camera. [1] That footage does not prove beatings or sexual assault on its own, but it makes a blanket Israeli denial of harsh treatment nearly impossible to sustain publicly. Netanyahu called the conduct inconsistent with Israel’s values, but a prime minister’s verbal rebuke does not constitute an independent investigation. [6] Israel’s public response has stayed at the level of general legal defense, characterizing the activists as Hamas supporters and defending the blockade interception as a lawful security action. [5] What Israeli authorities have not produced, at least in the public record, is anything resembling a custody chain review, a use-of-force log, a prison intake medical file, or a direct answer to the claims of sexual assault and rib fractures. That silence is not proof of guilt, but it is a significant gap in the counter-narrative. Where the Evidence Is Strong and Where It Falls Short The allegations carry real evidentiary weight in some areas and real vulnerability in others. The Ben-Gvir video confirms degrading treatment at the official level. Canada summoned Israel’s ambassador, and multiple Western governments issued formal condemnations, which signals that diplomats with access to their own intelligence found the claims credible enough to act on. [4] The advocacy group Adalah reported what it called systemic violations of due process and widespread physical and psychological abuse. [1] These are not fringe voices making noise on social media. Time to dismanle the Apartheid abusive pariah regime. Gaza flotilla activists allege abuse, sexual assault in Israeli detention https://t.co/FS7Z8aE84C via @AJEnglish — Free Speech? Take this! (@LobsterChai) May 22, 2026 The harder problem is that the most severe allegations, specifically the rib fractures, the tasing, and the sexual assaults, currently rest on unsworn activist testimony without accompanying hospital records, forensic examinations, or independent medical documentation. [3] [4] That does not make the claims false. It means they are unverified. The activists were deported and are now outside Israeli jurisdiction, which creates a practical obstacle to the kind of Istanbul Protocol forensic examination that could turn testimony into clinical findings. Until that gap closes, both sides can claim the evidentiary record supports their position, and neither will be entirely wrong. This Story Has a Historical Twin That Should Inform How You Read It The 2010 Mavi Marmara interception produced the same two-layer dispute: first, whether the boarding was lawful under blockade rules; and second, whether the treatment of detainees afterward crossed into unlawful abuse. A United Nations Human Rights Council fact-finding mission concluded that Israeli forces used excessive and unreasonable force. Israel disputed the mission’s legal framing and evidentiary basis. [9] Fifteen years later, the structure of the argument is identical. The activists are alleging abuse. Israel is asserting lawful security enforcement. The forensic record that would settle the factual dispute remains locked inside Israeli institutions that control the relevant documents, video, and medical files. What is different this time is that a senior Israeli official handed the world a video of himself doing it and called it a victory. Sources: [1] Web – Gaza flotilla activists deported after abuse in Israel custody [2] Web – Israel subjects Flotilla participants to abuse and mistreatment [3] YouTube – ‘Treated like an animal’: Deported Gaza flotilla activists … [4] YouTube – Sexual assault, extreme violence reported by Gaza aid flotilla … [5] YouTube – Deported Gaza flotilla activists allege abuse in Israeli … [6] YouTube – Gaza flotilla detainees deported to Turkey, describe … [9] Web – Gaza Freedom Flotilla – Wikipedia

11 Killed on GROUND—Terrifying Jet CRASH Details
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11 Killed on GROUND—Terrifying Jet CRASH Details

The engine did not just fail; it departed the airplane in plain view, and that single moment may define the whole investigation. What The Video Shows And Why It Matters The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has released still images and video from the UPS Flight 2976 crash investigation showing the left engine and left pylon separating from the wing shortly after takeoff . That detail matters because it changes the question from “what caused the fire?” to “what caused the engine to leave the airplane?” On an aircraft, that is not a cosmetic failure. It is a structural event with immediate aerodynamic and safety consequences [1][2]. The airplane was a Boeing McDonnell-Douglas MD-11F flying a cargo route from Louisville, Kentucky, to Honolulu when it crashed shortly after takeoff from runway 17R . Investigators say the aircraft was destroyed after impact, and the death toll reached 14 on the ground and in the airplane combined? No: the NTSB’s published summary states three crewmembers and 11 people on the ground were fatally injured, with 23 others on the ground injured . That kind of wreckage count underscores how quickly a cargo accident can turn a city block into a disaster zone. Why Investigators Focus On Metal Fatigue And Maintenance History Broadcast reporting tied to the hearing says investigators believe fatigue cracking played a role in the hardware that attached the engine to the wing [1][3]. That is the kind of failure that often develops quietly, over time, through repeated stress cycles rather than one dramatic event. If the cracks existed before takeoff, then the crash becomes a story about missed warning signs, not random bad luck. That distinction matters to anyone who believes safety depends on routine discipline, not corporate reassurances. The incident happened on Nov 4, 2025. UPS Flight 2976 (MD-11F cargo jet) crashed shortly after takeoff from Louisville, KY when the left engine + pylon detached. 3 crew + 11 people on the ground were killed; 23 others on the ground were injured. NTSB investigation is ongoing… — Grok (@grok) May 19, 2026 Common sense tells you that an engine should not be able to separate from a transport aircraft because someone hoped an inspection would hold. The hearing coverage says the NTSB showed airport surveillance footage of the engine falling away and then examined the structural parts that failed . That is exactly how serious aviation work should proceed: watch the tape, inspect the metal, and follow the evidence where it leads instead of chasing a convenient headline. In transport aviation, physics always gets the last word. Why This Crash Resonates Beyond One Airline This crash hits a nerve because it combines three things the public hates to see together: a cargo jet, a sudden fireball, and a failure visible on video. People do not need an engineering degree to understand the danger when a large engine tears loose at takeoff speed. They understand instinctively that something fundamental has broken. That is why early visuals can shape public reaction so powerfully, even before the final probable-cause report is finished [1][2]. NTSB releases slowed surveillance footage of UPS Flight 2976 crash. MD-11F’s left engine and pylon detached during takeoff from Louisville on Nov 4, 2025 → plane caught fire and crashed, killing 15 people (3 crew + 12 on ground). Fatigue cracks in engine mount suspected. UPS… pic.twitter.com/ngZtsDXOb6 — Inside the conflict (@InsidConflict) May 19, 2026 The conservative instinct here is the correct one: respect the facts, hold the responsible parties to the standard, and do not let glossy corporate language bury accountability. If the investigation ultimately confirms fatigue cracks, overstress, or maintenance shortcomings, then the lesson is not abstract. It is that complex machines still depend on human competence, honest inspection, and an unwillingness to cut corners. Aviation rewards rigor. It punishes complacency. This crash may become a harsh reminder of both. What Still Has To Be Proven The NTSB has not finished its work, and that matters. Preliminary evidence can show what happened first, but it does not automatically settle every question about why it happened or who missed what along the way . Investigators still have to connect the physical failure to the maintenance record, the design of the part, and the sequence of loads during takeoff. That final chain is where the truth usually lives, and where public certainty often arrives too early. Sources: [1] YouTube – NTSB releases new images of UPS plane moments before crash [2] YouTube – NTSB releases new images and preliminary report on UPS cargo … [3] Web – UPS Flight 2976 Louisville crash new CCTV footage …

Justine Bateman SLAMS Newsom: Boycott Fiasco!
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Justine Bateman SLAMS Newsom: Boycott Fiasco!

One blunt call to boycott Chevron exposed a much bigger California fight: who gets blamed when gas prices anger voters. Quick Take Justine Bateman attacked Governor Gavin Newsom’s office after news spread that he urged Californians to avoid Chevron gas over Memorial Day weekend . The clash turned a fuel-price complaint into a political argument about responsibility, sincerity, and public trust [1][3]. Supporters of Newsom point to California’s taxes, fuel rules, and refining structure as real price drivers [5]. The record provided here shows heated commentary, but not a technical finding proving Chevron caused the disputed prices [1][5]. Bateman’s Attack Landed Because It Sounded Personal Justine Bateman did not frame her criticism as a dry policy dispute. She accused Newsom’s office of pretentiousness, dereliction of care, and a failure to protect ordinary Californians, then said he needed to be removed before “something worse” happened [1]. That tone matters. Voters often tune out policy jargon, but they remember contempt. Bateman’s outburst worked because it turned an energy complaint into a moral accusation. The political force of her message came from timing as much as wording. Memorial Day weekend is when many Californians notice fuel prices in the most annoying possible way: at the pump, while trying to get somewhere else. Newsom’s reported boycott message gave critics a simple frame. Bateman seized it and said, in effect, this is what happens when leaders prefer theater to accountability . Justine Bateman RIPS Gov. Newsom's 'Press Office' a New You-Know-What Over Call to Boycott Chevronhttps://t.co/9nj9K1GnKb Jumpin Jerk Newsom,He’s so gruesome. — gtslade (@gtslade) May 22, 2026 Why Chevron Became the Target Chevron makes a convenient villain because it is visible, familiar, and easy to name in a sound bite. But California gasoline pricing does not begin and end with one company. State materials describe a retail fuel system shaped by taxes, fees, special fuel standards, and compliance costs that sit inside the price Californians pay [5]. That does not exonerate any company from scrutiny. It does mean political blame should not outrun the evidence. The supplied record does not include a refinery audit, antitrust finding, or other forensic proof showing Chevron set “excessive” prices in response to Newsom’s call [1][5]. That gap is important. California’s gas-price fights often feature confident public accusations and far less hard pricing analysis. Common sense suggests that if a governor wants to point a finger, he should expect people to ask for receipts, not just outrage. What the Available Evidence Actually Supports The strongest factual claim in the materials is narrow: Newsom publicly urged Californians to boycott Chevron gas, and that prompted backlash . The broader claim that Chevron alone drove California’s pain is much weaker. The record here offers commentary and political reaction, not an independent economic breakdown of crude costs, refining margins, distribution expenses, and state compliance burdens [1][5]. That difference separates a slogan from a case. California’s fuel market has long been a perfect stage for this kind of conflict because it already carries high prices, tight refining capacity, and heavy regulatory pressure [5]. That environment invites blame-shifting from every direction. Politicians blame oil companies. Oil companies blame policy. Critics call the whole thing performance art. The public usually ends up stuck between them, paying more and trusting less. Why the Backlash Resonates With Conservative Readers Conservative readers usually recognize a familiar pattern here: elite officials announce a moral crusade, then ordinary people absorb the cost. That does not prove every corporate complaint is correct, but it does explain why Newsom’s message drew instant pushback. If a governor tells drivers to avoid a brand while his state’s own policies help shape the price structure, people will see posturing before they see leadership [5]. Bateman’s insult hit a nerve because it sounded like what many frustrated voters already think. She did not need a white paper to make the point emotionally; she needed only to say the quiet part loudly. The unresolved question is not whether the backlash was real. It was. The unresolved question is whether California leaders can keep using corporate blame as a substitute for solving the state’s deeper fuel problem. Sources: [1] Web – Justine Bateman calls for Gavin Newsom to be removed amid LA … [3] Web – Governor Newsom’s Press Office Gets Ratioed INTO THE SUN by … [5] Web – Deflection Level: Expert. Newsom Blames Chevron for Prices His …

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