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‘F–k The National Guard!’ Another DOJ Hire Is Out Of Work … For Flipping Off Federal Officers
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‘F–k The National Guard!’ Another DOJ Hire Is Out Of Work … For Flipping Off Federal Officers

Another Department of Justice worker has been dismissed for attacking federal law enforcement, by messaging if not physically. Earlier, Sean Charles Dunn, a DOJ paralegal, was canned after throwing a…
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Hurricane Season 
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Hurricane Season 

[View Article at Source]Twenty years ago, Katrina ravaged a place I’ve left but still love. The post Hurricane Season  appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future
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Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future

[View Article at Source]Round one of the upcoming presidential election will feature one candidate from the left and four from the right. The post Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future appeared…
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Pennsylvania Couple Purchases Home with a Surprise Swastika Built into the Basement’s Tile Floor
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Pennsylvania Couple Purchases Home with a Surprise Swastika Built into the Basement’s Tile Floor

A Pennsylvania woman is so upset at finding a surprise swastika in her recently purchased home that she and her husband are suing the seller. The Nazi symbol is part of the tile floor in the basement,…
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 w

Speculation around Albanese-Trump relations stew as PM ‘avoids’ meeting
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Speculation around Albanese-Trump relations stew as PM ‘avoids’ meeting

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 w

Hurricane Season 
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Hurricane Season 

Culture Hurricane Season  Twenty years ago, Katrina ravaged a place I’ve left but still love. “I came in with Halley’s Comet in 1835,” said Mark Twain one year before his death in 1910. “It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it… The Almighty has said, no doubt, ‘Now there are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in together, they must go out together.’” A different sort of natural phenomenon bookended my years as an honorary Louisianan: In October 1985, Hurricane Juan hit Louisiana a few short weeks after my family—my father, my pregnant mother, and me, then age 2½—moved to the state from Ohio. Then, in September 1998, Hurricane Georges rumbled through Louisiana about two months before we were to move back to Ohio. Blessedly, neither resulted in our family suffering damage or even much inconvenience—nor did the many other hurricanes that periodically formed in the skies during the thirteen years between Juan and Georges—but we always considered it fitting that both our arrival and our departure were accompanied by powerful, intimidating storms.  Twain reckoned that God paired him with Halley’s Comet because both were “unaccountable freaks”; I have come to think that the Lord ushered us into Louisiana and out of Louisiana with hurricanes because He wanted to remind us that we were strangers in a strange land. Perhaps the first hurricane was a warning to stay away; maybe the second was an encouragement to hurry up and return to the land of Ohio State football, Jack Nicklaus, and butter cows. I have no recollection whatsoever of Hurricane Juan, but I vividly remember growing up with the knowledge that hurricane season was something to regard with dread. Maybe this is why I still have no particular affinity for the summer months. I loved living in Louisiana, especially in such close proximity to a city as distinctive, historic, and flat-out bizarre as New Orleans; during my youth, we bounced between two towns on the Northshore—that is, north of Lake Pontchartrain—but we were in the city all the time. Yet during hurricane season, I very much wished we were back in Ohio, a state of which I had no memory and little knowledge. But I knew enough to know that summers in Ohio were not conducted under the threat of hurricanes.  Of course, I neglected the fact that other terrible natural disasters—tornados, floods, lightning strikes—happen in states not generally susceptible to hurricanes. Even so, I remember well the peculiar menace of a named storm system whose ominously rotating movement could be so easily visualized on a weatherman’s radar screen. I remember wincing at the formation of each new tropical depression in the Atlantic, and I remember being genuinely—and rightly—fearful on those occasions when one entered what was then known as the Gulf of Mexico. For me, to live under the threat of hurricanes was to reckon, at an early age, with the possibility of losing property, possessions, and even life and limb.  By the grace of God, it never came to that. The worst storm I remember experiencing was Hurricane Andrew in August 1992, but, despite the damage it did throughout Florida and Louisiana, we got through it OK. By the time of Hurricane Georges, I was 15 and had either become acclimated to the annual danger or was affecting adolescent indifference: In the run-up to Georges making landfall in our state, my father was battening down the hatches at home—I remember him affixing long strips of duct tape to the windows, and managing numerous bags of sand in the driveway—while I went to the movies. (Just before the hurricane hit, I took my mother with me to see John Frankenheimer’s Ronin, a top-notch action movie starring Robert De Niro. In my memory, there was no one else in the theater, but I sure did love the car chases.) My indifference was vindicated when, once again, we were spared anything more serious than a few days without power. My family had been back in Ohio for seven years when Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans in August 2005—some 20 years ago this weekend. We watched what unfolded on TV with horror, and we watched President George Bush’s lumbering, insufficient response with bewilderment. Yet, even accounting for the passage of time and the distance between the Crescent City and the Buckeye State, we still felt connected to the place: We had walked those streets, we had gone to the Superdome, we had feared, more than once, what might happen with such a hurricane, even on the Northshore. And we still had many friends down there. Some years after Katrina, my father tried to find a picture online of our beautiful, beloved last house in Louisiana—the one we had lived in during Georges, the one that my mother had poured her energies into furnishing and decorating—and he apparently found one on an early version of Google Street View or some similar internet technology. When he reported to my mother that our house, as near as he could see, looked OK after the hurricane, she breathed a sigh of relief. We were not in Louisiana, but we still were of it, and we—or, rather, our one-time house in that exceptional state—had escaped once more. The post Hurricane Season  appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future
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Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future

Latin America Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future Round one of the upcoming presidential election will feature one candidate from the left and four from the right. Campaign season is well underway in the South American country of Chile, which is closing in on the first round of its presidential election in mid-November. This election is particularly unusual, with four of the five major candidates in the running coming from the Chilean right. The past five years have been chaotic for Chile. Frustration with the high cost of living and the poor condition of public services led to a massive wave of protests and generalized social unrest in late 2019 and early 2020 and subsequently to the election of the left-wing youth movement darling Gabriel Boric, leader of the democratic socialist party Frente Amplio and the youngest ever Chilean president. Boric came into office with a popular mandate to rewrite the Chilean constitution along broadly left-wing lines. The resulting document, a cumbersome affair that totalled nearly 400 articles, was a reductio ad absurdum of Millennial intersectionality, enshrining special privileges to every identifiable minority identity group and sporting a ludicrous Bill of Rights containing—among a very many other propositions—a “right to progressive autonomy of children and adolescents”, a “right to consumption and respect for it”, and a “right to a digital space free of violence”. The document was thoroughly rejected by the public in the constitutional referendum, 62 percent against to 38 percent in favor. A second attempt to rewrite the constitution led to yet further confusion, when the right-wing Republican Party dominated the elections to the Constitutional Council. This draft of the constitution, which was dominated by conservative priorities, was also rejected by the public in 2023, albeit by the narrower margin of 56 percent against to 44 percent in favor. The Chilean populace has proven unimpressed by Boric and his social democrats’ management of the country, which has been characterized by identitarian excesses and anemic economic growth. With Boric’s approval rating hovering just above 20 percent, the political momentum has moved sharply rightwards. The 2025 election appears now to be just a question of which right-wing movement will be given charge of the country. The favorite to win both the right-wing vote and the election is José Antonio Kast, leader of Chile’s Republican Party and the boogeyman of the secular Chilean left for the past decade. Kast, of German extraction, courted controversy by publicly declaring his support for the dictator Augusto Pinochet, whose popular legacy in the country is decidedly mixed. “If he were alive, [Pinochet] would vote for me,” Kast proclaimed.  A devout Catholic with nine children, Kast’s political approach is decidedly that of the social conservative: Opposition to abortion and gay marriage are key planks in the Chilean Republican Party’s platform. This makes him a favorite with not only fellow Catholics but also with the small but powerful bloc of Evangelical voters—a group that is only growing as a proportion of Chile’s population. Much of Kast’s stump appeal to the non-religious, though, is his strident opposition to illegal immigration and his advocacy for harsh measures against crime to secure public order. The center-right’s postulant for the presidency is Evelyn Matthei, a fixture of Chilean right-wing politics since Chile’s return to democracy in 1989. Matthei, an economist by education, eschewes the hard social conservatism of Kast’s Republican Party and offers a vision of governance focused on economic development that appeals to the upper-middle class Chilean right. Matthei promises to overhaul the Chilean tax system and create a million new jobs, tempting voters who have shown themselves unhappy with Chile’s recent lack of economic growth. Her advocacy for same-sex marriage and legalizing abortion in cases where the health of mother is deemed at risk make her a more attractive option for Chile’s secular urban population, but she lacks the aggression, and therefore the perceived toughness, of her male competitors—a difficult situation in an election where law-and-order is a key concern for the electorate. Academic-turned-politician Franco Parisi rounds out the already battle-tested candidates of the right. Parisi powered to third place in the 2021 election despite campaigning only virtually from the United States, a better-than-expected showing that is generally attributed to the populist appeal of his open disgust for the Chilean political class, which he denigrates as a passel of corrupt liars whose only interest is lining their own pockets. This anti-establishment rhetoric won his party a small but solid showing in legislative elections, but its ideological incoherence and lack of organization led to all six of its representatives in the chamber of deputies to resign, a performance that has probably reduced his appeal. His policy proposals maintain a consistent focus on reducing government waste and fraud, improving the cost-of-living for Chileans, and extreme measures to crack down on illegal immigration and crime—he has even proposed placing anti-tank mines along the border to prevent criminals from bringing vehicles across illegally. Parisi considers himself a social liberal, but has little interest in the cultural issues of either the right or left. The dark horse of Chilean politics is the magnificently-named Johannes Maximilian Kaiser Barents-von Hohenhagen—popularly known as just Johannes Kaiser—who represents the growing strain of the Chilean right influenced by neighboring Argentina’s President Javier Milei. Originally a member of Kast’s Republican Party, Kaiser left and founded the National Libertarian Party in 2024 after deciding that Kast and his followers were too enamored with state action. Kaiser combines a radically minimalist approach to government with fierce opposition to immigration both legal and illegal and a pointed cultural conservatism. Kaiser remains an unlikely prospect for this November, generally polling around 10 percent of the vote, but the success of Javier Milei’s La Libertad Avanza in Argentina is a promising sign for the young libertarian’s future political career. Standing essentially alone against the four candidates of the Chilean Right is Jeannette Jara of the Communist Party of Chile, former minister of labor under President Boric and now sole candidate for the majority of the Chilean left. Jara prevailed in a primary election held among the major left-wing Chilean political parties. Her principal appeal to the Chilean public is the institution of a universal basic income program to supplement Chile’s welfare state, along with the continuation of many of President Boric’s left-wing social programs. Polling at less than 30 percent against a deeply divided right, Jara will have a steep battle to make the second round of voting competitive. After a promising beginning under the young and idealistic Gabriel Boric, the shine has worn off of socialism in Chile. Now the right will have its chance at the presidency. The post Chile’s Right Brawls for the Country’s Future appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 w News & Oppinion

rumbleBitchute
Australia's proposed 'spare bedroom' tax is LAUGHABLE
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When Brittany Howard performed with Paul McCartney: “He’s good at making you forget he’s a Beatle”
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When Brittany Howard performed with Paul McCartney: “He’s good at making you forget he’s a Beatle”

"Super nice." The post When Brittany Howard performed with Paul McCartney: “He’s good at making you forget he’s a Beatle” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Intel Uncensored
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Good Morning Infowars: Bill Clinton Clinging To Life! Hillary Spotted With Husband’s Mysterious Defibrillator Bag As Globalist Elite Hide Clintons’ Crumbling Health!
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Good Morning Infowars: Bill Clinton Clinging To Life! Hillary Spotted With Husband’s Mysterious Defibrillator Bag As Globalist Elite Hide Clintons’ Crumbling Health!

Good Morning Infowars: Bill Clinton Clinging To Life! Hillary Spotted With Husband’s Mysterious Defibrillator Bag As Globalist Elite Hide Clintons’ Crumbling Health! Plus, Bondi Fires DOJ Employee For Disrespecting National Guard – Must Watch/Share Full Saturday Broadcast! pic.twitter.com/G42iPg9yhy — Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) August 30, 2025
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