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100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
4 w

Gavin Newsom’s ‘Bestseller’ Exposed: His PAC Bought Two-Thirds of All Copies Sold
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Gavin Newsom’s ‘Bestseller’ Exposed: His PAC Bought Two-Thirds of All Copies Sold

Gavin Newsom wanted America to believe his memoir was a hit. He toured. He promoted. He hit the bestseller lists. The whole thing looked like a legitimate cultural moment for a man openly running for the White House. There was just one problem. The numbers were fake. Federal disclosure records have now revealed that Newsom’s own super PAC, the Campaign for Democracy Committee, spent $1.5 million to purchase roughly 67,000 copies of his memoir, “Young Man in a Hurry.” Total print sales for the book since its February 24 release? About 97,400 copies. Do the math. That means nearly two out of every three copies sold went to his own PAC, not to actual readers. Libs of TikTok put the numbers out there for everyone to see. BREAKING: Gavin Newsom’s PAC used $1.5 million to buy 67,000 copies of HIS OWN BOOK. Total book sales were around 97,400. His PAC’s purchase accounts for about two-thirds of all sold copies pic.twitter.com/mnBaHl7ZFf — Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) April 17, 2026 The details are even more embarrassing than the headline. The PAC ran a promotion last November and January asking donors to contribute “ANY AMOUNT” and they would receive a copy of the book when it dropped. Federal filings show the PAC paid $1,561,875 to Porchlight Book Company to fulfill those orders, making it the committee’s largest expenditure in the first quarter of 2026. Strip out the PAC purchases and Newsom’s memoir sold approximately 30,000 copies over six weeks. For context, that is not bestseller territory. That is a mediocre launch for a sitting governor running for president. The New York Times reported on the discrepancy: Approximately 97,400 print copies of Mr. Newsom’s memoir have been sold since its publication on February 24, according to the book industry sales tracker Circana BookScan. Federal disclosures reveal that roughly 67,000 of those copies were purchased by his super PAC, the Campaign for Democracy Committee, which paid $1,561,875 to Porchlight Book Company. The New York Times marked the book with a dagger symbol on its bestseller list, which the paper uses “when it has reason to believe that sales of a book include a mix of organic and bulk sales.” That dagger symbol is essentially the Times admitting they know the bestseller status was manufactured. And they put it on the list anyway. The reaction online was exactly what you would expect. And now you know how crappy books become NYTimes bestsellers… https://t.co/3mW0Ws4yzF — John Λ Konrad V (@johnkonrad) April 17, 2026 Newsom’s team has tried to spin the numbers, claiming the promotion “generated net revenue” and “deepened supporter relationships.” That is one way to describe using donor money to buy your own book so you can call yourself a bestselling author. The Megyn Kelly Show laid out the implications: In March, Newsom’s team had claimed more than 91,000 copies had been purchased through “organic, in-person and online, non-bulk purchases.” That claim now appears to have been misleading at best. The PAC’s bulk purchase of 67,000 copies means the overwhelming majority of early sales were anything but organic. After the initial PAC-driven surge, subsequent weekly sales have been modest, with approximately 6,400 organic copies sold in the six weeks following the book’s launch. So Newsom’s team claimed 91,000 “organic” sales. The real number of organic copies sold? Around 6,400 in six weeks. That is not a rounding error. That is a fabrication. This is the man who wants to be President. A man who cannot even sell a book without rigging the system. If he will spend $1.5 million in donor money to fake a bestseller list, what would he do with actual power? California voters already know the answer to that question.Do you agree?
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100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
4 w

Conservative Lawmakers Stage Midnight Revolt, Block Government’s Warrantless Spying on Americans
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Conservative Lawmakers Stage Midnight Revolt, Block Government’s Warrantless Spying on Americans

A group of conservative House Republicans just did something that rarely happens in Washington anymore: they said no. In the early hours of Friday morning, more than 20 Republican members voted to block two separate attempts to ram through a long-term reauthorization of FISA Section 702, the controversial surveillance program that allows the federal government to collect Americans’ communications without a warrant. The rebellion killed both proposals dead on the House floor, handing GOP leadership and the White House a rare defeat. The Freedom Caucus-led revolt centered on a simple demand: if the government wants to spy on American citizens, it needs to get a warrant first. That’s not a radical position. That’s the Fourth Amendment. Rep. Thomas Massie laid it all out after the late-night showdown: Last night between midnight and 2am, they tried to pass two bad versions of FISA… Both would have allowed Feds to unconstitutionally spy on Americans.We stopped both versions, but the fight isn’t over. Eventually, it was decided to give them two more weeks to fix FISA. https://t.co/VkckZwH5j4— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) April 17, 2026 The battle lines were clear. Speaker Mike Johnson and the White House wanted a clean 18-month extension with no changes. Privacy hawks in the party, led by Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris and members like Massie, Lauren Boebert, and Chip Roy, demanded amendments that would require a warrant before querying Americans’ data. Twenty Republicans voted against the 18-month extension in the procedural vote, tanking it 197-228. A second attempt also failed. The leadership simply didn’t have the votes. Massie revealed he had personally reviewed classified documents that shaped his opposition: I just viewed 2 Top Secret FISA docs.1) FISA Court opinion that raises serious concerns about FBI implementation of FISA 702.2) letter by Senator Wyden describing a secret government interpretation of FISA law.The Constitution requires I vote No on FISA 702 reauthorization.— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) April 16, 2026 Fox News reported on the scale of the conservative opposition: Speaker Mike Johnson faces conservative opposition over reauthorizing Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, set to expire April 20. Trump and Johnson support an 18-month clean extension, while conservatives demand privacy safeguards. Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Harris predicted the procedural vote would fail without additional privacy reforms. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna pledged to vote no unless the SAVE America Act was included. CIA Director John Ratcliffe told Fox News: “There’s a lot at stake.” The intelligence community’s argument was straightforward: losing Section 702 during the ongoing Iran conflict would be a national security risk. Gen. Dan Caine warned it would “significantly impair” U.S. security capabilities. CNN detailed the aftermath: More than a dozen rank-and-file Republicans rejected the long-term reauthorization. Twenty Republicans later helped block the 18-month clean reauthorization. GOP privacy hawks demanded floor consideration for warrant-requirement amendments before querying Americans’ communications, demands leadership could not satisfy. Congress ultimately approved a 10-day short-term extension through April 30, 2026, after the long-term deal collapsed. President Trump was expected to sign the measure. So in the end, Congress kicked the can down the road. FISA gets a 10-day lifeline through April 30 while lawmakers try again to hash out a deal that actually includes privacy protections. The Freedom Caucus made their point loud and clear at 2 AM on a Friday morning: the Constitution doesn’t take a break just because it’s politically convenient.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
4 w

Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr to duet on Macca's new album The Boys of Dungeon Lane
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Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr to duet on Macca's new album The Boys of Dungeon Lane

The two surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr sing on ode to Liverpool called Home to Us
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
4 w

Patel Unleashes On The Atlantic Over ‘Categorically False’ Report Including ‘Locked Room’ Claim
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Patel Unleashes On The Atlantic Over ‘Categorically False’ Report Including ‘Locked Room’ Claim

FBI Director Kash Patel is preparing for a full-scale legal battle against The Atlantic after the outlet published a bombshell report he says is riddled with falsehoods, and he’s making clear he intends to take it to the mat. “Print it, all false, I’ll see you in court — bring your checkbook,” Patel told the magazine ahead of publication, a warning that has now escalated into an imminent lawsuit. The Friday article by Sarah Fitzpatrick, titled “The FBI Director is MIA,” levels a barrage of allegations against Patel, painting a picture of a senior law enforcement official allegedly plagued by instability, heavy drinking, and internal dysfunction. The report claims Patel engaged in “erratic” behavior, suffered bouts of paranoia about his job security, and was frequently absent or unreachable during key moments. Among the most explosive claims: that Patel is “known to drink to the point of obvious intoxication” in front of colleagues, that members of his security detail have struggled to wake him due to alleged inebriation, and that officials once considered using breaching equipment to access a locked space when he could not be reached. The piece also alleges that meetings had to be delayed due to his condition and suggests his behavior could pose a “national security vulnerability.” Patel’s legal team has forcefully rejected every one of those claims. In a pre-publication letter, his attorney Jesse Binnall called the allegations “categorically false and defamatory,” emphasizing that most rely on anonymous sources using vague phrasing like “people familiar with the matter.” Binnall argued that such sourcing “could not possibly possess firsthand knowledge” and accused the magazine of reckless disregard for the truth, a key component in proving defamation involving a public figure. He also pointed to what he described as glaring factual holes, including the alleged “breaching equipment” incident, which he said has “no corroborating public record whatsoever” and appears to be either fabricated or based on a single unreliable source. Reaction on X was immediate and sharply divided, with Patel allies and critics clashing over the credibility of The Atlantic’s reporting. FBI media adviser Erica Knight blasted the article as a recycled collection of rumors that “every real DC reporter chased, couldn’t verify, and passed on,” while laying out a lengthy defense of Patel’s record. She pointed to internal metrics under his leadership — including tens of thousands of arrests, major increases in violent crime enforcement, and large-scale fentanyl seizures — while dismissing the report’s central claims outright. “The so-called ‘intoxication incidents’ The Atlantic breathlessly reports have happened exactly ZERO times,” Knight wrote, adding bluntly: “Lawsuit is being filed.” Others with direct ties to Patel echoed that pushback. Clint Brown, who described himself as a “sherpa” during Patel’s transition into the role, said he spent months working closely with him, and never witnessed any of the behavior described in the report. “Your anon sourced story is BS,” Brown wrote, adding that Patel was consistently responsive, detail-oriented, and deeply engaged in his work, often reviewing briefings at all hours. Patel himself leaned into the fight, framing the controversy as proof he’s doing his job. “Memo to the fake news — the only time I’ll ever actually be concerned about the hit piece lies you write about me will be when you stop,” he posted, adding that criticism would not deter the FBI from “making America safe again.” On Capitol Hill, the reaction broke along predictable lines. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) seized on the report, saying it confirmed Patel is “completely unfit to serve” and calling for his resignation. But Tom Cotton (R-AR), who works directly with Patel as chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, dismissed the story as a “dishonest smear” and pointed instead to what he described as tangible results from the bureau. Cotton followed up, adding, “Here’s what’s really happening: Liberal reporters and disgruntled deep state leakers — who have zero knowledge of what the story alleges — are bitter that the FBI is no longer targeting Catholic parents and pro-lifers.” The clash underscores what is quickly becoming more than just a media dispute: a political and legal showdown that is now playing out in real time across both the press and the courts. Inside the administration, Patel has drawn swift and public backing. “Patel has accomplished more in 14 months than the previous administration did in four years. Anonymously sourced hit pieces do not constitute journalism,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said when reached out to by The Atlantic for comment. FBI Assistant Director of Public Affairs Ben Williamson, who pushed back on the allegations when first contacted by the outlet, didn’t mince words in his response. He dismissed the report as a reheated collection of long-circulating rumors that had never held up under scrutiny, saying: “This article is a compilation of pretty much every obviously fake rumor I’ve heard the last 14 months except the Atlantic is the only one dumb enough to actually print it.” Patel himself has gone further, publicly accusing the magazine of acting with “actual malice,” the high legal bar required in defamation cases involving public officials. He went further, saying, “See you and your entire entourage of false reporting in court.” His team is also demanding that The Atlantic preserve all internal communications, drafts, and source materials related to the story, a clear signal that litigation is not just a threat, but imminent. For her part, Fitzpatrick is standing by her reporting, citing interviews with more than two dozen sources and insisting the story is accurate. Neither side is backing down and so the high-stakes collision between a top federal law enforcement official and a major national publication seems imminent. If Patel follows through, the case could become a major test of modern media practices, particularly the reliance on anonymous sourcing in stories involving national security figures, and whether courts are willing to scrutinize those standards more aggressively. The next round seems likely to play out in court, where both sides will be forced to back up their claims under oath, and where the consequences could be far more serious than a war of words.
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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
4 w

‘Shut The Whole Thing Down’: Bill Maher Wants ‘On The Spectrum, Sociopath’ Tech CEOs To Pump The Brakes On AI
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‘Shut The Whole Thing Down’: Bill Maher Wants ‘On The Spectrum, Sociopath’ Tech CEOs To Pump The Brakes On AI

AI CEO's don't impress Maher at all
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
4 w

ABC News Runs Obama’s Campaign Video for VA Gerrymandering as a News ‘Exclusive’
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ABC News Runs Obama’s Campaign Video for VA Gerrymandering as a News ‘Exclusive’

ABC News Runs Obama’s Campaign Video for VA Gerrymandering as a News ‘Exclusive’
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
4 w

WIRED Reports That Much of MAGA Is Convinced Butler Assassination Attempt Was Staged
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WIRED Reports That Much of MAGA Is Convinced Butler Assassination Attempt Was Staged

WIRED Reports That Much of MAGA Is Convinced Butler Assassination Attempt Was Staged
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
4 w

Iran Regime Miscalculates Again - Now Another Country Is Furious With Them
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Iran Regime Miscalculates Again - Now Another Country Is Furious With Them

Iran Regime Miscalculates Again - Now Another Country Is Furious With Them
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
4 w

320,000 ‘Anchor Baby’ Births Now at Center of Supreme Court Fight Over Citizenship
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320,000 ‘Anchor Baby’ Births Now at Center of Supreme Court Fight Over Citizenship

320,000 ‘Anchor Baby’ Births Now at Center of Supreme Court Fight Over Citizenship
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
4 w

Is Samsung Care+ Worth It? Here's What Consumer Reports Says
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Is Samsung Care+ Worth It? Here's What Consumer Reports Says

Planning to get a Samsung Care+ subscription for your brand-new Galaxy smartphone? Here's whether it's worth spending the extra few bucks on it.
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