NTD Newsroom
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 1 | Recorded May 15, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 34 Seconds
Episode 949 –The American Generals Speak (w/ Cpt. Bannon, Gaffney, LG Boykin, MG Harrell, BG Bolduc).
“I saw the biggest threat to our republic, our democracy, our form of government, everything I fought for,” Bolduc said. “I lost 72 men and women in combat over 10 tours in Afghanistan in 2 years as the special operations commander. Guests are: Cpt. Maureen Bannon, Frank Gaffney, LG Jerry Boykin, MG Gary Harrell, BG Don Bolduc.
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 2 | Recorded May 15, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 43 Seconds
Episode 950 – Marxism, With American Characteristics … Why Stacey Abrams is Saul Alinsky. “We don’t have democracy right now,” Navarro said. “What we have is a stolen election. Steal it they did, that’s what we’ve got.” Guests are: Cpt. Maureen Bannon, Frank Gaffney, LG Jerry Boykin, MG Gary Harrell, BG Don Bolduc, Dr. Peter Navarro, Brian Kennedy, Sam Faddis, Katie Hopkins.
May 14, 2021 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 51 Minutes 38 Seconds
Israel is going on a military offensive after the Hamas terrorist group launched thousands of rockets at the nation.
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik thanks former President Donald Trump in her new role as GOP conference chair.
Over 40,000 Chinese illegal immigrants await deportation in the United States.
More than 15,600 East Coast gas stations report out of fuel, after pipeline cyber attack
U.S. officials anticipate the gas situation will return to normal by the weekend.
FARRELL: Democrats Have Decided Every Part Of Their Big Government Agenda Counts As Infrastructure
From Chris Farrell’s Op-Ed for The Daily Caller:
Wednesday’s White House summit with congressional leaders on the $2.3 trillion infrastructure bill, officially known as the American Jobs Plan, made little headway in forging bipartisan consensus. A large part of the problem is that President Biden and Congressional Democrats have decided that virtually any aspect of their big-government agenda can be redefined as infrastructure and tossed in the mix.
For example, fighting climate change is now part of infrastructure. The bill would fund a “Civilian Climate Corps,” a nod to the old Civilian Conservation Corps from the FDR era, which seeks to “put a new, diverse generation of Americans to work conserving our public lands and waters, bolstering community resilience, and advancing environmental justice.” In other words, it will spend billions to underwrite make-work jobs with full health benefits for environmental activists who can’t find gainful employment in the private sector. There are also $175 billion in subsidies for electric vehicles, which could very well be a replay of the Solyndra solar panels debacle. And throughout the bill are nods to promoting green best practices and “environmental justice,” whatever that is.
Education is now part of infrastructure. There is $100 billion devoted to public schools, on top of the $128 billion from the COVID-19 relief bill. A further $12 billion goes to community colleges, in addition to the planned $109 billion in the American Families Act to provide two years of tuition-free education. And other billions are devoted to reducing “racial and gender inequities” in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) fields. . .
Guantánamo Detainee Agrees to Drop Call for C.I.A. Testimony
Under a deal with the military court, Majid Khan, who has admitted being a courier for Al Qaeda, will give up his chance to call witnesses to his torture in return for being released as soon as next year.
Psaki: Teaching ‘1619 Project,’ Critical Race Theory in College is ‘Responsible’
White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Thursday said it is responsible for colleges to teach the idea that racism is embedded in the American system, dismissing criticism that such teaching aims at indoctrinating American youth. . . .
Legacy Media Finally Calls Out the Experts for Their COVID-19 Misrepresentations
The coverage on COVID-19 has taken a strange turn in the legacy media. For a while now, cable news anchors have been pressing Dr. Anthony Fauci, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, and other administration members about continued mask-wearing and other restrictions for vaccinated individuals. Quite frankly, their answers never made any sense after the CDC put out guidance that vaccinated individuals who were exposed to a COVID-19 positive individual did not need to quarantine if they did not have symptoms.
That guidance meant that the vaccines effectively prevent illness from COVID-19, and data on breakthrough infections supported that idea weeks ago. The risk is approximately one in a million that a vaccinated individual will become ill and die from COVID-19. The CDC also noted in the reporting that the risk for this is in the expected demographic. That means the elderly with pre-existing conditions. So if you are under 65 and healthy and this news scares you, don’t ever get in your car, cross a city street, or use stairs or climb a ladder. Your lifetime odds of dying doing one of those is well under one in a thousand. . .
Covid UK: SAGE says Indian variant could lead to 1,000 deaths and 10k hospital admissions a day
SAGE says it’s a ‘realistic possibility’ the Indian variant is 50% MORE infectious than dominant Kent strain and could lead to 1,000 Covid deaths and 10,000 hospital admissions a day by summer
- SAGE model warns that up to 10,000 people per day could be hospitalised in summer in worst-case scenario
- But scientists are optimistic vaccines will work against the strain and still no evidence it is more dangerous
- Public Health England report showed cases in the UK more than doubled in a week from 520 to 1,313
‘Foot soldiers’ of Birmingham to BLM: ‘Keep on keeping on’

Veterans of the campaign that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. helped lead to eradicate racial segregation in Birmingham nearly 60 years ago remain firmly in the corner of racial justice now that they’re old and gray.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Charles Avery had barely started marching when police arrested him, forced him into a police vehicle and took him to jail for participating in landmark civil rights protests that helped change the nation in 1963. He spent days in custody and then lived decades haunted by a conviction for the most innocuous of offenses — parading without a permit — that he saw as noble yet others questioned with suspicion.
“I had to explain what it was, that it was from Birmingham,” said Avery, 76. “It always came up.”
Yet Avery said he’d do it again all these years later, and he has a message for the thousands of demonstrators who have been arrested nationwide during the months-long uprising over police violence and racism: Keep going. A lifelong mark in the name of justice is worth the trouble.
Veterans of the campaign that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. helped lead to eradicate racial segregation in Birmingham nearly 60 years ago remain firmly in the corner of racial justice now that they’re old and gray, with some joining in protests that followed George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police last year and others watching at home on TV.
Nonviolence was King’s way, and some are put off by scenes of burning buildings and rioting that accompanied some protests, including one in Birmingham. But foot soldiers who first advocated for the idea that Black lives matter decades ago now support the movement of the same name; The Associated Press interviewed some of them ahead of an online commemoration of the ‘63 Children’s Crusade protests held Friday that focused on challenges facing young people today. . .