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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
7 w

A nation cannot survive treason from within
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www.sgtreport.com

A nation cannot survive treason from within

by General Paul E Vallely and Lt. General Thomas McInerney, America Outloud: It is beyond criminal what the Democrats and their supportive leftist ideologues are doing to continue their attack against America and the government. The Democratic Party is showing no respect to the American people as they demean America at every opportunity and entice foreigners […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
7 w

Stop Lying, The Guardian, the World’s Oceans Aren’t Becoming Dangerously Acidic
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www.sgtreport.com

Stop Lying, The Guardian, the World’s Oceans Aren’t Becoming Dangerously Acidic

by H. Sterling Burnett, Watts Up With That: The U.K.’s The Guardian ran an article claiming that the world’s oceans have surpassed a critical tipping point in acidity threatening sea life. This is false. The pH content of the world’s oceans varies by time and place throughout the day, rising and falling modestly, but the average pH […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
7 w

Surgeon Linked to Brigitte Macron Transgender Speculation Found Dead
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Surgeon Linked to Brigitte Macron Transgender Speculation Found Dead

from AlexandraBruce: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Pet Life
Pet Life
7 w ·Youtube Pets & Animals

YouTube
Pregnant Feral Cat Won't Let Anyone Near Her | The Dodo
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
7 w

Riley Green Called Ella Langley Out for That Infamous Wink
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tasteofcountry.com

Riley Green Called Ella Langley Out for That Infamous Wink

Yep, Riley definitely saw this moment on social media. Continue reading…
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
7 w

Lynyrd Skynyrd Honored Gary Rossington's Final Wishes
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tasteofcountry.com

Lynyrd Skynyrd Honored Gary Rossington's Final Wishes

Before Gary Rossington died in 2023, he told his Lynyrd Skynyrd bandmates exactly how he wanted his legacy to continue after he was gone. Continue reading…
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
7 w

27 Truly Unique and Cool Country Music Baby Names
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tasteofcountry.com

27 Truly Unique and Cool Country Music Baby Names

In recent years, stars have reached outside the box when choosing names for their offspring. Continue reading…
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
7 w

83 Percent of Jewish Students Face Campus Hate—How Much More Will Colleges Allow?
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www.dailysignal.com

83 Percent of Jewish Students Face Campus Hate—How Much More Will Colleges Allow?

I walked into that house meeting with a knot of anxiety, a strange sense of paranoia. An hour later, I was running into the freezing Ohio night, barefoot and coatless, tears blurring my vision. My paranoia, it turns out, was simply an instinct for survival.  During my last year at Kenyon College, my roommates, all members of Students for Justice in Palestine, called a meeting. There, I sat for an hour, stunned, as they hurled baseless accusations at me.   When I couldn’t stop the tears, I said, “I’m sorry, I have to go now, I’m starting to cry.” No apologies came. Only cold stares from my housemates, one even smiling as I desperately blinked back tears.  I rushed out, too ashamed and afraid to grab a coat or shoes, preferring the biting winter air to another minute inside. I stayed out for hours, then moved into emergency housing two days later. My roommates never apologized or contacted me.  Though my name is Yael and I wear a small Star of David necklace, I never mentioned my beliefs to them. Yet simply existing in their orbit seemed enough to ignite their ire. While I can’t definitively say they attacked me because of antisemitism, their SJP membership—a group notorious for its antisemitic and anti-Zionist views—and one girl’s disturbing Instagram “reflections” suggest otherwise.   Her posts openly declared sentiments like, “If the West wants an Israel so bad, split Germany in half,” and, ominously, “If you think this is justified, live every day knowing your spirit is sick.”  My dorm nightmare mirrored a larger, pervasive campus environment. On campus, Zionist views and basic human decency were suppressed, at least when it came to Israel. Last year, I plastered hostage posters around campus daily. They were torn down almost immediately.  But apparently calling for the release of babies stolen from their beds or those kidnapped while dancing at a music festival on Simchat Torah—the happiest day in the Jewish year—was controversial. So controversial, in fact, that I once saw a professor ripping down a poster of four-year-old Ariel Bibas. But that wasn’t enough for him. He literally scrubbed the wall afterward, ensuring no trace of Ariel remained at Kenyon.  SJP hosted many outspokenly antisemitic speakers, especially after Oct. 7. Among them: Miko Peled, notorious for his refusal to condemn the Hamas terror massacre on James Whale Unleashed. There, Whale directly confronted him: “They’re terrorists. They went into a town and they massacred every man, woman, and child. Are you saying that was false?” Peled was unable to answer.   Despite Peled’s shameful behavior, the college’s Asian and Middle East Studies and English departments directly sponsored his event. SJP may have orchestrated it, but Kenyon was more than willing to fund the antisemite.  SJP, however, didn’t just amplify the voices of antisemitic adults. They also featured Kenyon students, notably during their “Vigil for Palestine” on the one-year anniversary of October 7th. This vigil was described as a “vigil to honor the tens of thousands killed before, on, and after Oct. 7, 2023, and the countless Palestinians who have been displaced and dispossessed since 1948.”   But what about the hostages taken on Oct. 7? As one student speaker eloquently put it, “Who is applying pressure to Israel to release their hostages too?” A disturbing moral equivalency.  And where was the Kenyon Hillel, the only designated Jewish space on campus, during all of this? It failed to live up to the promise of Hillel International: to “always be a safe space for all kinds of Jewish students—a place where they feel welcomed and included.” I certainly didn’t feel that way. Attempting to “be open to everyone,” it refused to associate itself with Israel, which felt like a rejection of a core part of my identity.   While that was difficult, it paled in comparison to the Hillel’s reaction, or lack thereof, to the worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust. The Hillel failed to condemn, or even acknowledge the massacre, at least online, until one year after the tragedy. Then, it hosted a poetry reading “to commemorate the anniversary of the hostages being taken and the current conflict that is taking place between Israel and Gaza.” This was hardly the condemnation of Hamas’ pogrom I had hoped for. Sadly, my experience at Kenyon College isn’t unique. In fact, it pales in comparison to what many students across the country have endured since Oct. 7. No one screamed “Death to Israel!” in my dorm, nor did a rock shatter my window and strike my head on Holocaust Remembrance Day.   I consider myself lucky—but what a tragic measure of luck for a Jewish college student. To emerge relatively unscathed after Oct. 7 is a relief that itself underscores a profound campus crisis. According to a February poll by the Anti-Defamation League and Hillel International, an alarming 83 percent of Jewish college students have experienced or seen antisemitism on their campuses since Oct. 7. How much more must Jewish students endure before enough is enough?  The post 83 Percent of Jewish Students Face Campus Hate—How Much More Will Colleges Allow? appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
7 w

FTC Trial Reveals Meta Disregard for National Security, Innovation
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FTC Trial Reveals Meta Disregard for National Security, Innovation

For years, Meta has claimed that it carefully manages access to its platform’s data to benefit users and developers alike. But internal documents from its Federal Trade Commission trial paint a different picture—one of strategic exclusion and economic sabotage cloaked in user protection. Specifically, documents reveal that Meta has been weaponizing its application programming interface, or API, to crush American competitors while maintaining an open door for foreign hostile nations—a double standard that undermines both U.S. innovation and national security. An API is like a digital bridge that allows different software systems to communicate with each other and enables apps and services to share data easily with one another. For tech startups and businesses, API access to major platforms like Facebook is often essential for survival, as it connects them to wider markets. But the lack of that API access can prove deadly. In 2013, Circle, a promising social networking startup, was gaining traction—that is, until Facebook terminated Circle’s API access, saying that Circle was spamming users. Yet internal emails show a different motivation: an attempt to keep Circle from competing with Facebook. Path, another social networking competitor, met a similar fate in April 2013, when Facebook abruptly cut off its API access. According to court documents, Path’s growth “slowed significantly” afterward. Similarly, Vine, Twitter’s short-form video service, was denied API access after a couple of days which could have accelerated its growth. The pattern holds firm. Throughout 2013, Facebook systematically blocked API access to multiple mobile messaging apps, with internal communications stating they would not communicate with developers “in any way about these restrictions.” Facebook acknowledges the detrimental effect that restricting API access has. An internal slide deck in early 2014 states that changing API access would be “killing prospects of many startups.” The message was clear: If you threaten Meta’s dominance, you’ll be digitally excommunicated and your business will die. Yet while American innovators were being systematically cut off, Meta maintained an open and permissive approach to developers from hostile foreign nations. Before the 2014 API change, over 240,000 software developers in hostile countries could access Facebook users’ data. That included nearly 90,000 developers in China, over 42,000 in Russia, 76,000 in Vietnam, and thousands in Iran, Cuba, and North Korea. More specifically, Chinese developers—including those from Huawei—could access users’ profile data, photos, and even private messages. Facebook’s API structure was so permissive that developers only needed consent from one user to access that person’s entire network of friends’ data. A single compromised account could expose hundreds of connections. And Meta knew about these risks. Internal documents show the company was aware that foreign developers could exploit this access for intelligence gathering and espionage. Yet the company continued providing broad access to actors from adversarial nations while simultaneously choking off American competitors under the banner of user protection. Although a court opinion has stated that Meta restricting API access from competitors doesn’t constitute an illegal “refusal to deal” under antitrust law, legal permissibility doesn’t equal ethical behavior. Meta’s selective enforcement puts foreign countries first and America second. The broader implications extend beyond individual company grievances. APIs enable interoperability, increase efficiency, and foster innovation by allowing new services to build upon existing platforms. But when dominant companies like Meta use API access as a competitive moat rather than a bridge to innovation, they effectively tax the entire U.S. ecosystem’s growth potential. Even worse, Meta’s actions aid U.S. enemies. If protecting users were truly the priority, the company would have implemented consistent standards choking off security threats alongside competitive threats. Instead, Meta created a system that protected its market position while leaving users genuinely vulnerable to foreign manipulation and data harvesting. The solution isn’t complex regulation of every API decision, but rather consistency and transparency in how these powerful gatekeepers operate. When platforms achieve the scale and influence of Meta’s ecosystem, their infrastructure decisions effectively become public infrastructure decisions, affecting innovation, competition, and security across entire industries. Congress and federal enforcement agencies should hold these companies with monopolistic reach accountable to their own standards. Meta’s API practices reveal a company that views user and developer protection as a convenient excuse rather than a genuine commitment. Until that changes, we should view Meta’s claims with the skepticism they deserve. After all, a company that protected Chinese developers’ access while blocking American innovators has already shown us where its true loyalties lie. The post FTC Trial Reveals Meta Disregard for National Security, Innovation appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
7 w

Whoever Runs the DHS Account on X Is a Trolling Genius - Mexico Has to Be Furious
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www.westernjournal.com

Whoever Runs the DHS Account on X Is a Trolling Genius - Mexico Has to Be Furious

The Department of Homeland Security’s X account trolled the left into oblivion over the weekend. On Sunday, DHS posted a viral image of a Mexico City protest from a day earlier in which one Mexican man held a sign aimed at Americans. The sign read, “PAY TAXES. LEARN SPANISH. RESPECT...
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