15 thoughts on “News/Politics 4-3-26

  1. Here you go Kathaleena…

    Ellison cleared conspired with the fraudsters to cover their crimes, and get the fraudsters political donations, of course.

    https://x.com/i/status/2039412109084152156

    “Exclusive: convicted Feeding fraudster recalls Keith Ellison 2021 discussion:

    Sharon Ross, of the House of Refuge nonprofit, writes of discussing the free-food program with Ellison in October 2021.”

    https://www.americanexperiment.org/exclusive-feeding-fraudster-recalls-keith-ellison-2021-discussion/

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Finally!

    https://x.com/i/status/2040057507364696564

    “TWO SOMALI-AMERICAN JUDGES ARRESTED IN MINNEAPOLIS DAWN RAID: 3.25 TONS OF COCAINE & $1.5 BILLION JUDICIAL FRAUD NETWORK EXPOSED

    At 4:18 a.m., over 200 federal agents stormed 17 locations across Minneapolis and St. Paul, shattering the sanctity of the justice system.

    The targets: sitting federal judges Amina Hassan and Khaled Osman — a married couple who allegedly used their courtrooms to shield the Sinaloa and CJNG cartels.

    Agents discovered hidden stashes of cocaine, firearms, and encrypted devices mapping drug shipment routes.

    The judges were accused of systematically dismissing cases, destroying evidence, delaying warrants, and clearing paths for massive cartel operations while laundering over $1.5 billion through shell companies and fake nonprofits.

    They didn’t just fail to deliver justice — they allegedly sold it.

    A trusted judicial dynasty turned the bench into a cartel shield.

    The gavel has fallen.

    The robes are off.

    The empire of corruption is collapsing.”

    Liked by 2 people

  3. ~ “A correction will appear in tomorrow’s print edition: “A headline with an article on Friday about President Trump’s threats to leave NATO misstated the full name of the body. It is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, not the North American Treaty Organization.” ~

    https://x.com/NYTimesPR/status/2040142477215056082

    ISTM that that is an easy mistake to make, and using a similar-ish word accidentally is quite a common mistake. We’ve probably all done it at times. Too bad, though, that it was not caught before going to press. Quite frankly, it took me a couple moments to realize that the mistake was.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. Oops! Re-reading that, I see that I let a similar mistake go by me, even after proofreading. In my last sentence, it should be “what the mistake was,” not “that the mistake was.”

    Liked by 1 person

  5. For a much touted trusted news source of the leaning left NYT should have caught that one… proofreaders anyone?😁

    I will say I tend to read too quickly and find myself reading something way different than what is actually written at times. But I wouldn’t expect proofreaders to be like me😂

    That is some crazy stuff going on with the Somali judges!! Bet ya that is going on in many areas of this nation… now for more to be busted!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. NJ – I, too, sometimes read a word wrong, and often the mistaken reading is quite humorous! 😀

    From what I have read about the newspaper business, the availability of content online, free or for a subscription price usually less than the print price, newspapers have slashed their staffs, so more mistakes like that get through.

    Like

  7. That article with the “easy” mistake to make went thru anywhere between 3 and 6 editors, including at printing.

    That’s pathetic.

    Like

  8. Thank you Sec. Hegseth, for removing this viper.

    https://x.com/i/status/2040168098276454581

    “So SecWar Pete Hegseth just fired Maj. Gen. William Green Jr., the US Army’s (now former) Chief of Chaplains.

    I have zero insider information on this, but I have my own theories as to why it happened.

    Green’s most important event as the Chief of Chaplains was to produce the United States Army’s “Spiritual Fitness Guide.”Published in July of 2025, Stars & Stripes wrote an article on this with a link to the guide.(I’ll put all related links in a comment email one below.)

    I’ll save you the trouble of clicking on that link — it goes to the US Army’s website, and it’s “404 Page Not Found.”

    That kind of explains a lot, doesn’t it?

    So I went and found a full copy of that “Guide” elsewhere (in, of all places, a “Military Atheist” website; link in the post below).

    Go check it out. Do a word search for the word “God.” Go ahead. Do it. It shows up exactly ONCE. How can you have a guide to spiritual fitness without mentioning God?????

    But what that “guide” DOES TALK about is a bunch on New Age gobbledygook.

    Let me give you a taste:

    “The Soldier’s Spirit lies at the intersection of external influences (stimulus) and applied behavior (response). It is the vital junction that supports the weight of life and drives Soldier action. In a relatable way, the Soldier’s spirit is much like a compass in life, providing substance to the direction that they take in life and the decisions they make. This reality makes understanding and developing the Soldier’s spirit crucial, as the direction of a Soldier ultimately shapes the direction and well-being of the Army.”

    The primary mission of the Chaplain Corps is to “provide religious support” to soldiers (from their official mission statement).

    Yet the US Army’s “Spiritual Fitness Guide” reads like it was written by John Lennon and Yoko Ono on a bender—not a word of encouragement for a soldier’s faith, but pages upon pages of New Age nonsense that makes Universalism sound like rational thought and really does imagine no religion.

    Yeah, one does not need to understand why a man of faith like Pete Hegseth fired a wishy washy New Age Pharisee like Green.”

    Liked by 1 person

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