Will Wilkinson is about as mainstream and conventional a thinker as one can find, and is unfailingly civil and restrained in his rhetoric. But yesterday, he was fired by the technocratic centrist think tank for which he worked, the Niskanen Center, and appears on the verge of being fired as well by The New York Times, where he is a contributing writer. This multi-pronged retribution is due to a single tweet that was obviously satirical and sarcastic and for which he abjectly apologized. But no matter: the tweet has been purposely distorted into something malevolent and the prevailing repressive climate weaponized it against him.
Neither Wilkinson nor his tweet are particularly interesting. What merits attention here is the now-pervasive climate that fostered this tawdry episode, and which has unjustly destroyed countless reputations and careers with no sign of slowing down.
During the Bush and Obama years, Wilkinson worked at the libertarian CATO Institute but, even then, he was not much of a libertarian. As he himself explained, he is far more of a standard-issue neoliberal that one finds everywhere throughout DC think tanks, the op-ed pages of large newspapers, and the green rooms of CNN, just with a bit wonkier style of expression and a few vague libertarian gestures on some isolated issues. That self-description was in 2012, and he since then has become even more of a standard liberal during the Trump era, which is why the Paper of Record made him a contributor opinion writer where he published articles under such bold and groundbreaking headlines as “Trump Has Disqualified Himself From Running in 2020.”
On Wednesday, the night of Joe Biden’s inauguration, Wilkinson posted this now-deleted tweet in which he was obviously not calling for violence. He was instead sardonically noting that anti-Pence animus became a prevailing sentiment among some MAGA followers over the last month, including reports that at least a few of those who breached the Capitol were calling for Pence’s hanging on treason grounds, thus ironically enabling liberals and MAGA followers to “unite” over that desire:
The next morning, a right-wing hedge fund manager and large-money GOP donor, Gabe Hoffman, flagged this tweet and claimed to believe that Wilkinson “call[ed] for former Vice President Mike Pence to be lynched.” Hoffman also tweeted at Wilkinson’s New York Times bosses to ask if they have “any comment on your ‘contributing opinion writer’ calling for violence against a public official?,” and then tweeted at Wilkinson’s other bosses at the think tank to demand the same.
It is unclear whether Hoffman really believed what he was saying or was just trying to make a point that liberals should be forced to live under these bad faith, repressive “cancel culture” standards he likely blames them for creating and imposing on others. This is how he responded when I posed that question:
I was not attempting anything. Numerous major news outlets reported on Wilkinson’s tweet, including Fox News. I simply documented the events on my Twitter feed yesterday. Clearly, many liberal journalists were outraged at his firing, noticed my documentation, and decided to inexplicably blame me for his firing. It’s ridiculous that many liberal journalists apparently had nothing better to do on Twitter, than blame a guy with less than 10,000 followers documenting events, for getting Wilkinson fired, considering many major news outlets reported on Wilkinson’s tweet.
When I pressed further on whether he really believed that Wilkinson’s tweet was an earnest call for assassination or whether he was just demanding that perceived “cancel culture” standards be applied equally, he responded: “I did not take a position either way on the matter. Wilkinson is perfectly capable of explaining the tweet and his intended meaning, since he wrote it. Clearly, given the content, the least one can expect is that he should give that explanation.”
Either way, intentional or not, Hoffman’s distorted interpretation of Wilkinson’s tweet produced instant results. That afternoon, Wilkinson posted a long and profuse apology to Twitter in which he made clear that he did not intend to advocate violence, but still said: “Last night I made an error of judgment and tweeted this. It was sharp sarcasm, but looked like a call for violence. That’s always wrong, even as a joke. It was especially wrong at a moment when unity and peace are so critical. I’m deeply sorry and vow not to repeat the mistake. . . . [T]here was no excuse for putting the point the way I did. It was wrong, period.”
At least for now, that apology fell on deaf ears. The president and co-founder of the Niskanen Center, Jerry Taylor, quickly posted a statement (now deleted without comment) announcing Wilkinson’s immediate firing, a statement promptly noted by Hoffman:
Wilkinson’s job with The New York Times is also clearly endangered. A spokesperson for the paper told Fox News: “Advocating violence of any form, even in jest, is unacceptable and against the standards of The New York Times. We’re reassessing our relationship with Will Wilkinson.”
So a completely ordinary and unassuming liberal commentator is in jeopardy of having his career destroyed because of a tweet that no person in good faith could possibly believe was actually advocating violence and which, at worst, could be said to be irresponsibly worded. And this is happening even though everyone knows it is all based on a totally fictitious understanding of what he said. Why?
It is important to emphasize that Wilkinson’s specific plight is the least interesting and important aspect of this story. Unlike most people subjected to these sorts of bad faith reputation-wrecking attacks, he has many influential media friends and allies who are already defending him — including New York Times columnists Ezra Klein and Ross Douthat — and I would be unsurprised if this causes the paper to keep him and the Niskanen Center to reverse its termination of him.
All of this is especially ironic given that the president of this colorless, sleepy think tank — last seen hiring the colorless, sleepy Matt Yglesias — himself has a history of earnestly and non-ironically advocating actual violence against people. As Aaron Sibarium documented, Taylor took to Twitter over the summer to say that he wishes BLM and Antifa marchers had “rushed” the St. Louis couple which famously displayed guns outside their homes and “beat their brains in,” adding: “excuse me if I root for antifa to punch these idiots out.” So that’s the profound, pious believer in non-violence so deeply offended by Wilkinson’s tweet that he quickly fired him from his think tank.
Whatever else might be true of them, the Niskanen Center’s president and The New York Times editors are not dumb enough to believe that Wilkinson was actually advocating that Mike Pence be lynched. It takes only a few functional brain cells to recognize what his actual intent with that tweet was, as poorly expressed or ill-advised as it might have been given the context-free world of Twitter and the tensions of the moment. So why would they indulge all this by firing a perfectly inoffensive career technocrat, all to appease the blatant bad faith and probably-not-even-serious demands of the mob?
Because this is the framework that we all now live with. It does not matter whether the anger directed at the think tank executives or New York Times editors is in good faith or not. It is utterly irrelevant whether there is any validity to the complaints against Wilkinson and the demands that he be fired. The merit of these kinds of grievance campaigns is not a factor.
All that matters to these decision-makers is societal scorn and ostracization. That is why the only thing that can save Wilkinson is that he has enough powerful friends to defend him, enabling them to reverse the cost-benefit calculus: make it so that there is more social scorn from firing Wilkinson than keeping him. Without the powerful media friends he has assembled over the years, he would have no chance to salvage his reputation and career no matter how obvious it was that the complaints against him are baseless.
Humans are social and political animals. We do fundamentally crave and need privacy. But we also crave and need social integration and approval. That it is why prolonged solitary confinement in prison is a form of torture that is almost certain to drive humans insane. It is why John McCain said far worse than the physical abuse he endured in a North Vietnamese prison was the long-term isolation to which he was subjected. It is why modern society’s penchant for removing what had been our sense of community — churches, mosques, and synagogues; union halls and bowling leagues; small-town life — has coincided with a significant increase in mental health pathologies, and it is why the lockdowns and isolation of the COVID pandemic have made all of those, predictably, so much worse.
Those who have crafted a society in which mob anger, no matter how invalid, results in ostracization and reputation-destruction have exploited these impulses. If you are a think tank executive in Washington or a New York Times editor, why would you want to endure the attacks on you for “sanctioning violence” or “inciting assassinations” just to save Will Wilkinson? The prevailing culture vests so much weight in these sorts of outrage mobs that it is almost always easier to appease them than resist them.
The recent extraordinary removal of the social media platform Parler from the internet was clearly driven by these dynamics. It is inconceivable that Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos and Google executives believe that Parler is some neo-Nazi site that played anywhere near the role in planning and advocating for the Capitol riot as Facebook and YouTube did. But they know that significant chunks of liberal elite culture believe this (or at least claim to), and they thus calculate — not irrationally, even if cowardly — that they will have to endure a large social and reputational hit for refusing mob demands to destroy Parler. Like the Niskanen and Times bosses with Wilkinson, they had to decide how much pain they were willing to accept to defend Parler, and — as is usually the case — it turned out the answer was not much. Thus was Parler destroyed, with nowhere near the number of important liberal friends that Wilkinson has.
The perception that this is some sort of exclusively left-wing tactic is untrue. Recall in 2003, in the lead-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, when the lead singer for the Dixie Chicks, Natalie Maines, uttered this utterly benign political comment at a concert in London: “Just so you know, we’re on the good side with y’all. We do not want this war, this violence. And we’re ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas.” In response, millions joined a boycott of their music, radio stations refused to play their songs, Bush supporters burned their albums, and country star Toby Keith performed in front of a gigantic image of Maines standing next to Saddam Hussein, as though her opposition to the war meant she admired the Iraqi dictator.
But two recent trends have greatly intensified this mania. Social media is one of the most powerful generators of group-think ever invented in human history, enabling a small number of people to make decision-makers feel besieged with scorn and threatened with ostracization if they do not obey mob demands. The other is that the liberal-left has gained cultural hegemony in the most significant institutions — from academia and journalism to entertainment, sports, music and art — and this weapon, which they most certainly did not invent, is now vested squarely in their hands.
But all weapons, once unleashed onto the world, will be copied and wielded by opposing tribes. Gabe Hoffman has likely seen powerless workers fired in the wake of the George Floyd killing for acts as trivial as a Latino truck driver innocently flashing an “OK” sign at a traffic light or a researcher fired for posting data about the political effects of violent v. non-violent protests and realized that he could use, or at least trifle with, this power against liberals instead of watching it be used by them. So he did it.
It’s exactly the same dynamic that led liberals to swoon over Donald Trump’s banning from social media and the mass-banning of his followers only to watch yesterday as numerous Antifa accounts were banned for the crime of organizing an anti-Biden march and how, before that, Palestinian journalists and activists have been banned en masse whenever Israel claims their rhetoric constitutes “incitement.”
Unleash this monster and one day it will come for you. And you’ll have no principle to credibly invoke in protest when it does. You’ll be left with nothing more than lame and craven pleading that your friends do not deserve the same treatment as your enemies. Force, not principle, will be the sole factor deciding the outcome.
If you’re lucky enough to have important and famous media friends like Will Wilkinson, you have a chance to survive it. Absent that, you have none.
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Montana Gov. Gianforte Signs Law Prohibiting Federal Ban on Gun Ownership
Montana passed a new law on April 23 that will prevent the federal government from placing prohibitions on gun ownership in the state, whether by new federal law, executive order, rules, regulation, or any new interpretations of existing law. “Today, I proudly signed Rep. [Jedediah] Hinkle’s law prohibiting federal overreach into our Second Amendment-protected rights, including any federal ban on firearms,” Gov. Greg Gianforte (R-Mont.) wrote on Twitter on April 24. “I will always protect our [Second Amendement] right to keep and bear arms.” House Bill No. 258 (pdf) titled “Montana Federal Firearm, Magazine, and Ammunition Ban Enforcement Prohibition Act” was passed under the authority of the second and tenth amendments of the U.S. constitution, as well as the Montana constitution, and Montana’s compact with the United States. The new law, which passed 30–20, means that no subnational government agency or official may cooperate in the enforcement of any federal ban on …
Smithsonian museums, National Zoo announce reopening dates
The Smithsonian Institution announced Friday that about half of its museums, along with the National Zoo, will reopen in May after shuttering in November because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Eight of the Smithsonian’s 19 locations in the Washington, D.C., area will open to the public next month but with COVID-19 restrictions in place. Guests will need to reserve a timed-entry pass, wear face mask and practice social distancing, Smithsonian officials said.
“We have a lot of signage keeping people moving in the right direction,” said Smithsonian COVID Response Coordinator Doug Hall. “All of the things are primarily geared toward social distancing, keeping people separate and of course cleaning at the end.”
BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: FBI Finally Releases Records on Murdered DNC Analyst Seth Rich – Via Attorney Ty Clevenger
The FBI on Friday finally released the requested documents on murdered DNC operative Seth Rich.
For years the FBI denied there were any documents on Seth Rich’s unsolved murder.
We caught them in this lie.
And now they release the documents but they are highly redacted.
The FBI cannot be trusted.
Today they finally released the documents to Attorney Ty Clevenger.
We posted the documents here at The Gateway Pundit after Clevenger’s website crashed.
As you can see, the FBI redacted most of the documents.
FBI Releases Records About … by Jim Hoft
The post BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: FBI Finally Releases Records on Murdered DNC Analyst Seth Rich – Via Attorney Ty Clevenger appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Outrage after professor displays ‘juicy’ bones of black child killed in 1985 police bomb at lecture
‘They are juicy’: Princeton professor is slammed for disrespecting the bones of a 14-year-old black girl killed by a bomb dropped by Philadelphia police in 1985 after members of her commune fired at cops
- Janet Monge, a visiting professor at Princeton University, led a highly-rated free course on forensic anthropology for the prestigious school
- In one video lecture, she is seen holding the bones of a child killed during a 1985 police bombing of a black liberation group and calling them ‘juicy’
- The teen and 10 other people – including five children – died after Philadelphia Police dropped a bomb from a helicopter onto a home being used by the liberation group MOVE
- The video lectures for the course were filmed in 2019 and posted onto the learning platform Coursera – but have since sparked outrage from current members of MOVE
So Many Americans Look Around and Know | We Are Still At War With The Greatest Enemies of Freedom | Video: 2 Minutes 51 Seconds
“Every generation of Americans needs to know that freedom exists not to do what you like, but having the right to do what you ought. And that is the freedom that I wish for you. Set yourselves apart from this corrupt generation. Be saints. You weren’t made to fit in. You were born to stand out. God bless you.” ~ Actor and speaker, Jim Cavaziel
New York posts major increases in rape cases, sharply up from last year’s lockdown lows
olice in New York City over the past month have been responding to vastly larger numbers of rape complaints than they were at the same time last year, reporting complaints that in many cases are numbering triple-digit increases over the same period last year.
The spike appears to be a unique artifact of last year’s once-in-a-century lockdowns, which decreased many crime rates across the board but appear to have had a uniquely depressive effect on sexual assault in the city.
From Mar. 15 through Mar. 21 of this year, the New York City Police Department recorded a 94% increase in rape complaints relative to the same time period in 2020. Significantly, that weeklong period in 2020 was one of rapidly growing concern over the emerging COVID-19 pandemic. The week culminated in New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s shutdown of the entire state, suggesting that last year’s sexual assault numbers were likely at least partly lowered by reduced public activity in the leadup to that lockdown.
MLB Survey Asks Fans if They’re Republicans or Democrats
MLB is under new scrutiny as a new survey shows fans are being about political affiliation in a ballpark experience in a post-game survey. In a report from National Review, MLB claims the questions asked regarding political affiliations are “part of the extensive fan surveys MLB is conducting this year around the ballpark experience.”
The league claims the surveys are for are to try trying to “gain knowledge about fan perceptions, preferences, and behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic.” Of course, according to a recent poll done by Morning Consult, it was found, their favorability levels have completely collapsed within the Republican base.
Bannon’s War Room |Saturday Edition Hour 1 | Recorded April 24, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 45 Seconds
The Den Mother of Disinformation … (w/ Dr. Peter Navarro). “What Rachel was doing was inoculating the left against the reality the high probability that they’re going to find of those 2.1 million ballots massive and different types of fraud,” he said. Guest is: Dr. Peter Navarro.
Bannon’s War Room |Saturday Edition Hour 2 | Recorded April 24, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 45 Seconds
Broken Window Election … Election Interference and How to Confront the CCP. Dr. Navarro says John Kerry is a “useful idiot on steroids.” And explains what the Chinese Communist Party’s strategy is to weaken the U.S. and why we must decouple from China. Our guests are: Dr. Peter Navarro, Ben Bergquam.
Ghislaine Maxwell pleads NOT GUILTY to two more counts of sex trafficking
- Ghislaine Maxwell, 59, pleaded not guilty Friday to new sex trafficking charges added to an indictment three weeks ago
- Maxwell, who has been jailed in what she calls ‘hell hole’ conditions in a Brooklyn prison, appeared frail with graying hair
- There was no sign of the hair loss her lawyers claimed she experienced in prison
- Today was the first time she appeared in person after nine months in Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center
- Maxwell was wearing a white mask and a blue prison-issue top and trousers
- A padlocked black sedan believed to be carrying Maxwell was seen driving to the Brooklyn prison
- Her sister Isabel was there for support, but Maxwell’s husband Scott Borgerson was a no show
(READ) Trump statement on Arizona election recount
– April 23, 2021 – Statement by Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States of America So many people would like to thank the brave and patriotic Republican State Senators from Arizona for the incredible job they are doing in exposing the large scale Voter Fraud which took place in the 2020 Presidential […]
Feds Charge Southern Illinois U. Prof with Grant Fraud over Secret Ties to China
A mathematics professor and researcher at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois, was indicted this week by a federal grand jury for grant fraud, after allegedly failing to disclose secret support he had received from the Chinese Communist Party and a Chinese university.
Rumble CEO says alternative video platform has huge growth, as users ‘fed up’ with big tech
CEO Chris Pavlovski says the Canadian-based online video platform is experiencing strong growth because uses are “fed up” with larger platform.
“That exodus has been happening in the last year at a pace that I think will set in stone for the long term,” Pavlovski told Fox Business on Tuesday. “Small creators are fed up with the larger platforms and are looking for an alternative solution. And I think they found it in Rumble.”
Pavlovski said Rumble, which has branded itself as an alternative to video-sharing behemoth YouTube, had about 1.6 million monthly users at about the time of 2020 election and reached 31.9 million by the end of the 2021’s first quarter.
‘What Are They Hiding?’: Democrats Try Last Attempt to Block AZ Election Audit & Cave In When Judge Asks For Million Dollar Bond
Democrats are in full panic mode.
“A pause on the Arizona Senate’s recount of Maricopa County’s general election ballots appears off.
A judge ordered the delay Friday morning amid mounting concerns about security and procedures for the unprecedented undertaking, but the order was conditioned on the Arizona Democratic Party posting a $1 million bond to cover any potential costs of the delay. The party had asked the court for the halt.”
They refused to post the bond indicating they did not have a valid reason to pause the audit.
US drop in vaccine demand has some places turning down doses

“It is kind of stalling. Some people just don’t want it,” said Stacey Hileman, a nurse with the health department in rural Kansas’ Decatur County, where less than a third of the county’s 2,900 residents have received at least one vaccine d
JACKSON, Miss. — Louisiana has stopped asking the federal government for its full allotment of COVID-19 vaccine. About three-quarters of Kansas counties have turned down new shipments of the vaccine at least once over the past month. And in Mississippi, officials asked the federal government to ship vials in smaller packages so they don’t go to waste.
As the supply of coronavirus vaccine doses in the U.S. outpaces demand, some places around the country are finding there’s such little interest in the shots, they need to turn down shipments.
“It is kind of stalling. Some people just don’t want it,” said Stacey Hileman, a nurse with the health department in rural Kansas’ Decatur County, where less than a third of the county’s 2,900 residents have received at least one vaccine dose.
Indian hospitals plead for oxygen as country sets daily coronavirus record
NEW DELHI — India put oxygen tankers on special express trains as major hospitals in New Delhi begged on social media on Friday for more supplies to save COVID-19 patients who are struggling to breathe. More than a dozen people died when an oxygen-fed fire ripped through a coronavirus ward in a populous western state.
India’s underfunded health system is tattering as the world’s worst coronavirus surge wears out the nation, which set a global record in daily infections for a second straight day with 332,730.
India has confirmed 16 million cases so far, second only to the United States in a country of nearly 1.4 billion people. India has recorded 2,263 deaths in the past 24 hours for a total of 186,920.
The fire in a hospital intensive care unit killed 13 COVID-19 patients in the Virar area on the outskirts of Mumbai early Friday.
The situation is worsening by the day with hospitals taking to social media to plead with the government to replenish their oxygen supplies and threatening to stop admissions of new patients.
A major private hospital chain in the capital, Max Hospital, tweeted that one of its facilities had one hour’s oxygen supply in its system and had been waiting for replenishment since early morning. Two days earlier, they had filed a petition in the Delhi High Court saying they were running out of oxygen, endangering the lives of 400 patients, of which 262 were being treated for COVID-19. . .
Soros Makes First Contributions of 2022 Cycle
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George Soros‘s first disclosed political donations of the 2022 cycle are out, giving an early glimpse into the liberal megadonor’s spending priorities now that Democrats regained power in Washington, D.C.
Soros’s only disclosed donations during the first quarter of 2021 were to two of the party’s newest faces, first-term senators Maggie Hassan (D., N.H.) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D., Nev.), as well as its oldest, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.). Soros gave the maximum allowed $5,600 to Hassan, $2,900 to Cortez Masto, and $7,900 total to Leahy’s campaign and PAC.
All three recipients are up for reelection next year. Hassan and Cortez Masto have both launched reelection campaigns and are top targets of Republicans, who need to gain one seat this cycle to regain control over the upper chamber. Leahy, on the other hand, is 81 years old and has yet to announce whether he will run for reelection. If he retires, it could put another state on the map for Republicans.
What Happened to $16 Million Georgia’s Secretary of State’s Office Received Before the 2020 Election?
Before the 2020 Election, some very strange moves took place within the Georgia Secretary of State’s Office. Why were these made and what happened to the millions in grants the office received?
We know that Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger has a propensity to not tell the truth:
We also know Raffensperger’s main man, Gabe Sterling, also has problems with the truth:
Of course, Raffensperger and Sterling were involved in giving the state of Georgia to Joe Biden by 11,000 votes when still to this day, over 350,000 ballots were counted where their legally required chain of custody documentation is still missing (which makes them invalid):
We don’t know why Raffenssperger and Sterling are not being honest about the results in Georgia. But we do know that the state received millions in grants before the 2020 Election and we don’t really know where it all went. For example, it was reported that the state received $11 million in COVID relief for the election through the Secretary of State’s office. . .
SpaceX Rocketship Launches 4 Astronauts on NASA Mission to Space Station
NASA and Elon Musk’s commercial rocket company SpaceX launched a new four-astronaut team on a flight to the International Space Station on Friday. . .
https://vs.youmaker.com/assets/2021/0423/3724caf9-5973-4a17-8916-453243d80bbd/playlist.m3u8The post SpaceX Rocketship Launches 4 Astronauts on NASA Mission to Space Station appeared first on NTD.
My, Oh, My. Some More Big Tech Pedophilia | “New Jersey man charged with sharing child porn through Facebook chat”
Ramos-Artigas allegedly requested and exchanged lewd videos showing children ranging in age from 4 to 13, authorities said.
“The investigation revealed that Mr. Ramos-Artigas utilized the social media platform Facebook to engage in a chat wherein he requested, received and sent videos of child pornography,” Valdes said.
Ron Johnson questions ‘big push’ to vaccinate ‘everybody’
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) in a Thursday podcast interview cast doubt on the importance of vaccinating the nation for COVID-19, saying he’s getting “highly suspicious” of the “big push to make sure everybody gets the vaccine.”
“The science tells us that vaccines are 95 percent effective, so if you have a vaccine, quite honestly, what do you care if your neighbor has one or not?” Johnson said during an appearance on “The Vicki McKenna Show.” He also asked “what’s the point” of striving to get “everybody” the COVID-19 shot.
“Why is this big push to make sure everybody gets a vaccine, and it’s to the point where you better impose it, you’re gonna shame people, you’re gonna force them to carry a card to prove that they’ve been vaccinated so they can just be in society,” he added.
SURVEY: 85% Disbelieve Allegations Against Rep. Matt Gaetz.
A whopping 85 percent of National Pulse readers disbelieve the allegations of sex trafficking and impropriety leveled – without proof – against conservative firebrand Congressman Matt Gaetz. Following a survey…
The post SURVEY: 85% Disbelieve Allegations Against Rep. Matt Gaetz. appeared first on The National Pulse.
One Time FBI Informant, Al Sharpton, States: ‘We Are Seeing the Absolute Time that Policing Must Be Defined by the Federal Government’
Friday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” network anchor Al Sharpton pushed for policing to be “defined by the federal government.” This call comes following the Derek Chauvin verdict and in the wake of the shooting of Ma’Khia Bryant in Ohio and Daunte Wright in Minnesota.
Norway’s Institute of Public Health Says, “Everyone in Norway will be at greater risk of disease and death by choosing the AstraZeneca vaccine than waiting for another”
Here’s how FHI calculates the risk of disease and death of AstraZeneca and COVID-19:
In Norway, five cases of serious incidents have been reported after vaccination.
Three of these have died.
Ale contracted the symptoms seven to 10 days after vaccination.
They were between 32 and 54 years old.
FHI has calculated the mortality rate (how many of the vaccinated people have died, red.amn.) in Norway of 2.3 people per 100,000 vaccinated.
In Norway today, there will generally be a greater risk of dying by being vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine than the risk of dying from the COVID-18 disease, according to FHI. . .
VIRGINIA: Attorney Who Helped Trump Fight 2020 Election In Court Announces Run For State Legislature

Wren Williams, an America First attorney who helped President Trump battle election fraud in court, is challenging incumbent Charles Poindexter for the GOP nomination to the House of Delegates in Virginia’s 9th District. In taking on Poindexter, Williams faces pushback from all ends of the local uni-party political establishment, which has come out in staunch support of his opponent. . .
Texas Sues Biden Administration for Allegedly Disregarding COVID-19 Rules at Border
The attorney general of Texas on Thursday sued President Joe Biden’s administration for allegedly flouting its own COVID-19 rules in handling the surge of illegal immigrants crossing from Mexico.
Administration officials “have abandoned the preexisting protections against the introduction into Texas and the United States of aliens infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus during a pandemic,” the 34-page lawsuit states.
The disregard for COVID-19 rules violates federal law, including the Public Health Service Act of 1944, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton charged. . .
8-Year-Old Saves Sister Choking on Chicken Nugget Using Tip From John Cena
An 8-year-old boy from Hazleton, Pennsylvania, is being hailed for saving his 20-month-old sister, Leila Dempsey, from choking. The young man had seen an episode of Nickelodeon’s “The Substitute” that featured wrestler and actor John Cena where he provided tips on how to save someone choking. The siblings were in a car with their dad going for a haircut when Leila started to choke on a chicken nugget. “I was just listening to music, I think. Then I heard her choking,” said Jaxson, Inside Edition reported. “I looked to my left and saw my sister’s face purple and red, so I patted her on the back, told my dad to pull over, then I started patting her on the back, and I dislodged a nugget.” Jaxson credits the TV show for teaching him how to save someone’s life. “It’s called The Substitutes on Nickelodeon, and in the very first episode, …
Behind Bitcoin’s Recent Slide: Imploding Bets, Forced Liquidations
Bitcoin’s rally appears to be running out of steam, at least for now.
The digital currency dropped again Friday, briefly falling below $50,000—a decline of more than 20% from its record of $64,829 on April 14.
Bitcoin’s high coincided with the stock-market debut of Coinbase Global Inc., the biggest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange. The two events marked the pinnacle of a heady rally for cryptocurrencies that began last year. Bitcoin’s price more than tripled in 2020 and doubled to start 2021 before slipping.
The rally cratered last Saturday when bitcoin suddenly fell as much as 17% to $52,149—with half the decline occurring in about 20 minutes. Although it recovered some of those losses by Monday, the price has steadily declined, sitting Friday afternoon at $50,620. . .
Judicial Watch Fights Hard Left “Critical Race Theory”
Not long ago, Critical Race Theory was the territory of far-left academics pushing the boundaries of Marxism and nihilistic counterparts such as radical feminism and post-structuralism. All the philosophies to one degree or another advanced the notion that objective truth and standards—in society, in institutions, in law—do not exist. All reality is contingent, all is in flux, all is a construct of language and illusion. One person’s truth is another person’s lies.
Critical Race Theory emerged from this philosophical train wreck in the 1980s to say that Western civilization—and the American experiment in particular—is suffused to its core by white supremacy, white privilege, and institutionalized racism, and must be dismantled. For a long time, CRT was dismissed as an esoteric academic fad. But ideas have consequences and today, in the mysterious alchemy of social upheaval, Critical Race Theory suddenly is everywhere, its poisonous agenda swiftly moving through universities and public schools, government, law, science, business, and the media.
Rooted in the Left doctrine of class struggle, CRT teaches that U.S. society—our culture, laws, beliefs, and modes of governance—are a racist system devoted to upholding the power of white people. CRT is closely linked the new cancel culture. Dissenters from this new orthodoxy are punished. Freedom of speech is dismissed, and open debate is canceled, as we’ll see below in the case of high school coach David Flynn.
The rhetoric of this radicalism is cloaked in the language of social justice, but if you “peel back the layers of ideology and you get to the core of this belief system,” notes writer Christopher Rufo, “they’re advocating for a kind of cultural revolution, steeped in Marxism, adjusted to identity politics, and now activated through Black Lives Matter, through Critical Race Theory, and absurdly through even corporate HR departments.” For more on CRT, see this Heritage Foundation special report.
Judicial Watch is fighting back. Three cases, in particular, illustrate the scope of the Critical Race problem. Tellingly, they all involve schools—a key battleground in this war of ideas. . .
Joe Biden Masks Up for Zoom Call with 16 Other World Leaders. He’s the Only One.

Please review the CDC mask guidelines at your convenience. It lays out when, where, and how we’re supposed to wear masks for totally unarguable sciencey reasons. At no point does it say you should mask up while on a conference call. Yet that’s what Joe Biden did on Thursday during a video conference with other world leaders, even after getting both his jabs. If you were wondering why Democrats are so uninformed about the ‘rona, wonder no more. It may very well be because this is their intellectual superior. Just a hunch.
They say a picture is worth a thousand words. It has to be twice as many in the world leader group text they don’t let Biden on.
Russia: Activists detained under absurd “sanitary” charges for social media posts in support of public protest
On Saturday, 23 January 2021, protest rallies against the arbitrary arrest and unfounded, politically motivated prosecution of Aleksei Navalny, a prominent anti-corruption activist and Vladimir Putin’s critic, erupted across Russia and continued for 10 days. Authorities described the protests as “illegal”, citing the country’s unduly restrictive legislation on assemblies, and responded by prosecuting individuals they perceived responsible for encouraging the protests. The Investigative Committee arrested 12 prominent activists in Moscow and Nizhny Novgorod. The Committee claimed the activists had violated COVID-19 related sanitary rules simply for calling for the protests, which in their view amounted to a crime. Russian authorities must stop denying and violating the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and expression, and must not use COVID-19 related restrictions to jail and silence their critics. All those detained solely for calling for, organizing, or participating in peaceful protests must be immediately released.
President Macron vows to ‘never give up the fight against Islamist terorrism’ after knifeman screaming ‘Allahu Akbar’ stabs woman to death before being shot dead by cops at French police station
- Stephanie, an administrative worker, 49, was killed as she walked into the lobby
- The knifeman is believed to be a Tunisian national who moved to France in 2009
- The savage attack took place in the leafy Paris commune of Rambouillet
- France’s counter-terrorism unit has taken over the investigation into the killing
‘I Am Nonviolent’: Maxine Waters Defends Call For Protesters To ‘Get More Confrontational’
Democratic California Rep. Maxine Waters defended her call for protesters to “get more confrontational” if former police officer Derek Chauvin was not found guilty in the death of George Floyd.
“I have been an activist participating in the civil rights movement and I have dealt with the issue of police abuse for many decades,” Waters wrote Thursday in a Los Angeles Times op-ed. Waters survived a censure resolution introduced by Republican California Rep. Kevin McCarthy in a party-line vote.
African Activists: The Earth Is in Peril If Wealthy Nations Don’t Slash Emissions & Pay Climate Debt
As President Biden convenes a major climate summit, we speak with two leading climate activists from Africa about the “climate debt” rich countries owe the Global South and the major emissions cuts still needed in order to avert the worst effects of the planetary emergency. “Given the scale of the crisis right now, the only thing that is going to get us out of it is not going to be baby steps in the right direction,” says Kumi Naidoo, special adviser for the Green Economy Coalition’s Social Contract Initiative, as well as the former head of Greenpeace International. “It’s going to be big, bold, courageous, structural and systemic change to every aspect of society.” We also speak with Dipti Bhatnagar, international program coordinator for Climate Justice and Energy at Friends of the Earth International, who says that while new pledges by the U.S. to cut emissions are “going in the right direction,” it’s still not enough. “We’re calling on the U.S. to do its fair share of emissions reductions, and what that means is four times of what the U.S. has put on the table.”
Caitlyn Jenner files to run for governor, done with one-party rule: This is not Gavin Newsom’s California

Reality television star Caitlin Jenner announced Friday she is running for governor of California as a Republican challenger to Democratic Gov Gavin Newsom. In a statement posted […]
Continue reading Caitlyn Jenner files to run for governor, done with one-party rule: This is not Gavin Newsom’s California …
April 23, 2021 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 51 Minutes 28 Seconds
Arizona’s audit of over 2 million ballots has been paused until Monday, 10 Republican attorneys general led by Louisiana have filed a lawsuit against President Joe Biden’s climate order, and every branch of government is called upon to address the unprecedented border surge.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded April 23, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 58 Seconds
Build Back Bad … Biden’s Virtual Great Reset and the Border Crisis. “If you have something to hide you’re going to put up as much resistance as possible,” he said. “I believe they’re afraid of what we’re going to find.” Guests are: Sonny Borelli, Boris Epshteyn, Todd Bensman, Bianca Gracia, Liz Harrington.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded April 23, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 54 Seconds
They Finally Blinked … Democrat Panic in Maricopa to Block Election Audit. “These idiots think we’re so stupid to believe that no illegal aliens voted in Arizona,” Giuliani said. “That’s impossible in Arizona.” Guests are: Rudy Giuliani, Boris Epshteyn, Kane.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded April 23, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 30 Seconds
Ripping the Cover Off Rules for Radicals … (w/ Finchem, Harrington, Harrison). “I’m just there to keep the place from exploding,” he said. “It’s the readers. They’re the ones who are really really making the difference.” Guests are: Mark Finchem, Liz Harrington, Ken Harrison.
Bannon’s War Room |Evening Edition Hour 2 | Recorded April 23, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 58 Seconds
Showdown in Maricopa … Democrats Last Attempt to Cover Up Nov. 3. Boris Epshteyn reports the Democrats will not put up the $1 million bond to pause the election audit, meaning it will resume. Epshteyn said this is a sign Democrat lawyers “believe that the audit is inevitable.” Our guests are: Boris Epshteyn.

