Just how dirty was Joe Kent in his operation of the National Counterterrorism Center? Did he have a hand in hiding details about the Charlie Kirk political assassination?
How did he manage to maneuver the CIA and FBI to keep them off the path to discovering the truth? Did the Joint Terrorism Task Force play a role? Were the assassins Egyptians or Syrian rebels?
George Webb offers some possibilities, drawing from the research of Candace Owens while also looking backward at another political assassination — the attempted murder of President Donald Trump at Butler, Pennsylvania a summer ago. Quite the quagmire here!
Criticism of Operation Epic Fury continues to come in from the usual suspects… and some of the unusual ones as well.
In this episode of Right Angle, Scott Ott, joined by Steve Green and Bill Whittle, wrestle not with strategy and objectives but rather morality and historical wisdom.
Many times, life is not about good and bad options. Many times, it’s about bad and worse ones.
By all traditional methodology and criteria, Iran is now inert: Naval and air forces eviscerated, missile defenses offline, and an army rendered largely useless, as no one is fighting on the ground. However, tactical success is not necessarily equivalent to strategic victory.
It is hard to think of a single battle lost in Iraq or Afghanistan, yet the United States lacked a plan for strategic resolution in either theater. With this in mind, Iran’s current strategy is as follows: The mullahs can afford to lose their military because, ultimately, without U.S. troops on the ground, the regime will remain intact.
This, and many other factors, begs the question: Where does Trump go from here? asks Victor Davis Hanson on today’s edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In a Few Words.” “In other words, they’re saying as long as we have oil, Kharg Island, and as long as we have these huge oil fields, when you get tired of pounding us into rubble, you’re going go back to the United States. Israel’s going go back and be quiet, and we’re going get all of our oil revenues and we’re going have them. “
And we are going to buy from Russia, North Korea and China missiles, drones, recreate our own drone industry, and we probably have enough fissile material that you didn’t get, and nobody could get. It’s hidden deep in the mountains, that we will make bombs. And this time we’re going to use them because we understand what you will do next time.”
The Iranian regime lied about their capabilities, and on Saturday, they proved it. The regime fired tyo intercontinental ballistic missiles Saturday at Diego Garcia, the joint American-British military base located on a remote island in the Indian Ocean. Neither missile reached the base — one was struck down in flight, while the other one fizzled.
Still, if the Tranians can reach Diego Garcia, they have the capability to strike targets at a similar range across Europe. Praise God, President DonaldTrump struck Iran before they could strike the USA bases in the area, or our European allies. Here’ s more from Lori Colley.
Iran is now signaling plans to target the United States indirectly via Venezuela. Tehran is using the Strait of Hormuz as leverage, while their commanders signal threats against desalination plants and energy infrastructure. President Donald Trump has responded by promising “total destruction” if Iran crosses the line again.
Here, Stephen Gardner walks through Operation Epic Fury, the massive U.S. and allied campaign degrading Iran’s missile, drone, and naval assets. He also discusses what new intelligence reveals about enriched uranium, Iran’s long‑range strike capability, and the true level of danger to U.S. bases in Europe and the eastern seaboard. You’ll see how Trump quietly positioned forces in the Gulf, Red Sea, and Mediterranean before striking, and how his State of the Union hints now look like a clear warning in hindsight.
Gardner also tackles what everyone feels at home: gas prices and inflation. Kevin O’Leary says the real danger isn’t a short‑term price spike. It’s 90 days of oil stuck around 90–100 dollars a barrel. That’s when inflation locks in and families get crushed at the pump. Right now we’re about three weeks into this Iran‑driven surge. Markets are betting this gets resolved closer to 30 days than six months. If Trump and U.S. allies can break Iran’s terror chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz, some economists believe energy prices could actually fall as the “terror tax” comes off global oil.
President Donald Trump called on NATO allies to help with Iran and re-open the Strait of Hormuz. This is something they need more than us. Most said no but are now mildly interested.
Trump complained that they wouldn’t show up for us when we needed them but we always show up for them. The US spends roughly $1.53 Trillion on NATO annually.
Do you see President Trump pulling us out of NATO and using that money to bolster our military, our border, our security and use it on making life and the economy better for Americans or is he just blowing off steam or using this guilt as leverage?
Here, Tony Schafer joins Stephen Gardner to discuss NATO’s waffling. Shafer is a former U.S. Army Reserve lieutenant colonel, best known for his claims about intelligence mishandling contributing to our lack of preparation for the 9-11 attacks.
Something historic is unfolding in front of our eyes — and it’s not really about a game.
For years, 143 million people thought they were just catching Pokémon, but they were helping build one of the largest real‑world visual datasets in history. In this clip from my SUNDAY LIVE WITH SETH show, I walk through how “fun” consumer tech has become the engine for mapping our world with military‑grade precision. That hidden data pipeline connects to Palantir and Maven’s AI warfighting system now helping pick targets in Iran.
The question is simple: What happens when the same machinery used to find “terrorists” abroad is turned inward on us? Here’s more from Seth Holehouse on Man In America
It’s spring break, and the Democratic Party’s consistency is going wild. Glenn Beck reviews just a few of the insane stories from the past week:
An armed man in tactical gear with a very suspicious name tried to enter an elementary school in Texas. The man, 39-year-year-old Kyle Chris is originally from Iraq, where he born under the name of Muhi Mohanad Najm. He gained entry into Zwink Elementary School in Klein, Texas, a suburb of Houston.
The fake news media tried to paint the Michigan synagogue shooter, Ayman Mohamed Ghazali, as the real victim. He was shot dead by a security guard at the West Bloomfield, Mich., synagogue, looking out for a pre-school at the synagogue. Ghazali worked at a restaurant in Dearborn, Michigan. He apparently picked up a few tricks of the terrorist trade visiting his brother, Ibrahim Muhammad Ghazali, a Hezbollah terrorist in Lebanon.
Rep. Jasmine Crockett’s head of security was killed in a standoff with police, He went by the name Mike King, but his actual, full identity was Diamon-Mazairre Robinson. He dropped that name because he had been arrested many times, primarily for thefts, in the vicinity of Dallas, Texas.
To top everything off, the corrupt Democrats are still refusing to fund the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. This is precisely what happens when a large chunk of a party’s backing consists of crooks and illegal aliens. Here’s more from Blaze TV.
On this episode of “The Liz Wheeler Show,” Liz explains why the escalating conservative podcast mudslinging distracts from important issues and has major national ramifications ahead of the midterm elections in November.
She’s talking about the hot and heavy mudslinging between the likes of Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly versus the pro-Israeli contingent, led by Mark Levin and Ben Shapiro. Are Carlson and Kelly truly independent or are they just mouthpieces for Qatar, just as Levin and Shapiro carry water for Israel?
How much foreign money is being spent on this rancorous civil war across social media platforms? Will anyone arise who can make peace between the two camps? Is it necessary, or can voters see past the puffery?