Someone leaked a glaring oddity in Brian Harpole’s story about how far in advance they plan security.
I have a real-life horror story about what happened at an evangelical University. Charlie Kirk had been scheduled to appear the day after his assassination at Charis Bible College in Woodland Park, just up the road from Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Yet Harpole’s security team had not worked out security arrangements for that event, set for September 11 2025 Why hadn’t arrangements been secured? Did they know in advance Kirk would never make that appearance? And, if so, who knew what in advance?
And the the Daily Wire crash-out continues. Here’s more from Candace Owens.
Did Charlie Kirk’s opposition to more funding for the Ukraine War kill him? Is this a modern-day repeat of the storyline found in Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom The Bell Tolls?
Here, veteran investigative journalist George Webb offers a shoe-leather investigation into teams, recruitment lanes and why the focus belongs on networks, not lone shooters.
Researchers into the Charlie Kirk political assassination, say Webb, must leave the amphitheater behind. The key now: We must focus on his larger support team. You can’t solve the story inside the bowl. You’ve got to walk out, nose to the wind, and follow the footprints. That means transportation, money, safehouses, and comms. It means the team.
Webb believes the assassination of Kirk opened a door for the placement of American military “advisors” in the Ukraine. Kirk opposed greater military involvement in that conflict. But, now, President Donald Trump has suddenly done an about-face, suggesting he might send military advisors into Ukraine. It’s not what Charlie wanted at all, but it’s what we might get, given the pressure from the assassins.
“Trump did a 180 degree turn on Ukraine the day after Charlie Kirk got killed,” says Webb. Now, we have the Secretary of War Pete Hegseth summoning all of his generals and admirals, presumably informing them of what will come next in the Ukraine.
As for the citizen journalists trying to solve Kirk’s murder, the best approach now is to trace the team. “We’ve got to follow the team,’ says Webb. Toward that end, he will soon be revealing the millionaire, dark-money “donors” who financed the militant antics of the Armed Queers of Salt Lake City. Who are these benefactors floating the Armed Queers? What more can we learn about its leader, Ermiya Fanaeian? If she’s actually a transgender, how did she win so many beauty pageants in Iran? Or is she a femme fatale to lead armed queers down a bizarre and confusing path? Stay tuned.
Allegations of sexual misconduct have hit the Miss USA beauty pageant. Here, Natly Denise addresses the bombshell charges, drawing upon video evidence sent to her.
The winner of Thailand’s 2009 “Miss Tiffany” transgender beauty contest, Sorrawee Nattee, has removed her breast implants and decided to enter the Buddhist monkhood with a plan to stay there for the rest of his life.
The Miss Tibet beauty pageant draws attention to the plight of the Tibetan people as well as the brilliance of their lifestyle and culture. For Director Lobsang Wangyal, the event is not just a beauty pageant, but a political act, “celebrating our identity, our culture and our proud tradition,” whilst “implicitly asserting” Tibet as a nation and Tibetans as a people.
A Chinese beauty pageant has caused a ruckus by promoting some crazy new standards, including stipulating how far apart each contestants’ nipples should be. H/T SourceFed