Friday, August 8, 2025

Why DEI was already dying ~ VDH


President Donald Trump's executive orders banning Diversity, Equity, Inclusion (DEI)-related racial and gender preferencing have ostensibly doomed the DEI industry. 

But DEI was already on its last legs. Half of all Americans no longer approve of racial, ethnic, or gender preferences. DEI had enjoyed a surge following the death of George Floyd and the subsequent 120 days of nonstop rioting, arson, assaults, killings, and attacks on law enforcement during the summer of 2020.

In those chaotic years, DEI was seen as the answer to racial tensions. DEI had insidiously replaced the old notion of affirmative action -- a 1960s-era government remedy for historical prejudices against black Americans, from the legacy of slavery to Jim Crow segregation. 

But during the Obama era, "diversity" superseded affirmative action by offering preferences to many groups well beyond black Americans. Quite abruptly, Americans began talking in Marxist binaries. On one side were the supposed 65-70 percent white majority "oppressors" and "victimizers" -- often stereotyped as exuding "white privilege," "white supremacy," or even "white rage." 

They were juxtaposed to the 25-30% of "diverse" Americans, the so-called "oppressed" and "victimized." Yet almost immediately, contradictions and hypocrisies undermined DEI. 

First, how does one define "diverse" in an increasingly multiracial, intermarried, assimilated, and integrated society? 

DNA badges? 

The old one-drop rule of the antebellum South? 

Superficial appearance? To establish racial or ethnic proof of being one-sixteenth, one-fourth, or one-half "non-white," employers, corporations, and universities would have to become racially obsessed genealogists. 

Yet refusing to become racial auditors also would allow racial and ethnic fraudsters -- like Senator Elizabeth Warren and would-be new mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani -- to go unchecked. Warren falsely claimed Native American heritage to leverage a Harvard professorship. Mamdani, an immigrant son of wealthy Indian immigrants from Uganda, tried to game his way into college by claiming he was an African-American. 

Second, in 21st-century America, class became increasingly divergent from race. Mamdani, who promised to tax "affluent" and "whiter" neighborhoods at higher rates, is himself the child of Indian immigrants, the most affluent ethnic group in America. 

Why would the children of Barack Obama, Joy Reid, or LeBron James need any special preferences, given the multimillionaire status of their parents? 

In other words, one's superficial appearance no longer necessarily determines one's income or wealth, nor defines their "privilege" or lack thereof. 

Third, DEI is often tied to questions of "reparations." The current white majority supposedly owes other particular groups financial or entitlement compensation for the sins of the past. 

Yet in today's multiracial and multiethnic society, in which over 50 million residents were not born in the U.S. and many have only recently arrived, what are the particular historical or past grievances that would earn anyone special treatment? What injustices can recent arrivals from southern Mexico, South Korea, or Chad claim, as they would know little about, and have experienced firsthand nothing prior from Americans, the United States, or its history? 

Is the DEI logic that when a Guatemalan steps one foot across the southern border, she is suddenly classified as a victim of white oppression and therefore entitled to preferences in hiring or employment as someone diverse or victimized? 

Fourth, does the word "minority" still carry any currency? In today's California, the demography breaks down as 40% Latino, 34% White, 16% Asian American or Pacific Islander, 6% Black, and 3% Other -- with no significant majority and whites fewer than the Latino "minority." 

Are Latinos the new de facto "majority" and "whites" just one of the four other "minorities?" Do the other minorities, then, have grievances against Latinos, given that they are the dominant population in the state? Fifth, when does DEI "proportional representation" apply, and when does it not? Are whites "overrepresented" among the nation's university faculties that are reportedly 75% white, when they comprise only about 70% of the population? 

Or, are whites "underrepresented" as making up only 55% of all college students and thus in need of DEI action to bump up their numbers? Black athletes are vastly overrepresented in lucrative and prestigious professional sports. To correct such asymmetries, should Asians and Hispanics be given mandated quotas for quarterback or point guard positions to ensure proper athletic "diversity, equity, and inclusion?" 

Sixth, DEI determines good and bad prejudices, as well as correct and incorrect biases. "Affinity" segregationist graduations -- black, Hispanic, Asian, and gay -- are considered "affirming." 

But would a similar affinity graduation ceremony for European-Americans or Jews be considered "racist?" Is a Latino-themed house on a California campus -- that is de facto segregated -- considered "enlightened," while a European-American dorm would be condemned as incendiary? 

In truth, DEI had long ago become corrupt. It is falling apart under the weight of its own paradoxes and hypocrisies. It is a perniciously divisive idea -- unable to define who qualifies for preference or why, who is overrepresented or not, or when bias is acceptable or unjust. And it is past time that it goes away. 



X22, And we Know, and more- August 8

 



RFK Jr. Launches Bold Plan to Block Food Stamps From Buying Soda & Candy

 

   |      |   The Daily Fetched

Health and Human Services Secretary RFK Jr. is now taking steps to ban the use of food stamps for junk food like soda and candy.

Kennedy said that taxpayer-funded SNAP is funding more than $40 million per day on sugary drinks.

Full remarks by Secretary Kennedy:

“We’re spending $405 million a day on SNAP. About 10% is going to sugary drinks, and if you add candies to that, it’s about 13 to 17%, and we all believe in free choice.

We live in a Democracy. People can make their own choice about what they’re going to buy and what they’re not going to buy. If you want to buy a sugary soda, you ought to be able to do that.

US taxpayers should not pay for it. The U.S. taxpayer should not be paying to feed kids foods, the poorest kids in our country, the foods are going to give them diabetes.

And then my agency ends up, through Medicaid or Medicare, paying for those injuries.

We’re going to put an end to that, and we’re doing that step by step, state by state.

I’m also working with Secretary Rollins on the dietary guidelines, which should come out next month—three months ahead of schedule. And the dietary guidelines that we inherited from the Biden Administration were 453 pages long.

They were driven by the same commercial impulses that put Fruit Loops at the top of the food pyramid.

And they were incomprehensible. We are going to release dietary guidelines that are four, five, or six pages long, that are understandable, that are simple, and will allow people to make good choices about their food.

They will drive changes in the school lunch programs, and prison lunches, and military food, and they will begin to change America almost immediately.

We’re also working on the release of the MAHA report. Brooke, especially, has been adamant about the issue that we need to keep farmers as partners in the MAHA movement if we’re going to have nutrient-dense food.

And that is what we care about. We’ve had over 130 meetings with farmers to understand their concerns, to learn from them, and to understand how we can help them transition toward more and more nutrient-dense food.

I also want to thank President Trump for the Big Beautiful Bill. If we’re going to save the American farmers, we need to save rural America.

Right now, Medicaid gives about 7% of its funds to rural hospitals, 7%.

This is about $20 billion a year. We are now going to add, through the rural transformation bill, we’re going to add another $50 billion over five years…”

Watch:

An Honest Review of South Park's Latest Season (So Far) From a Loyal South Park Fan


by Brandon Morse for RedState 

Loyal readers will know that I love Matt Stone and Trey Parker's work. There are very few things that I think they produce that could actually be considered bad. 

I tell you this — not just to make you aware of my bias — but to make it clear that I've been following their work since I was a kid sneaking recorded episodes of South Park on VHS behind my parents' backs. When I talk about this current season, I'm coming at it from someone pretty well-versed in their style of humor, not just someone who actually likes their brand. 

This season of South Park has been an interesting one, and it's safe to say that the show has made itself more relevant today than it has in a handful of years. That is, in itself, proof that Parker and Stone know what they're doing in terms of hitting the right vein after all these years. That said, they know where to hit, but how well are they hitting it? 

It might depend on who you ask, but as for me, it's a mixed bag. There are times when I'm laughing out loud, and there are times when I'm kinda wondering how the comedy duo let a joke that unfinished slip through to production. 

The first episode shocked everyone with just how anti-Trump it seemed. Many people were angry because the show didn't really come down on anyone in the Biden administration, but seems to be going in so hard on Trump that the jokes are grotesque. I'm not angry about this because South Park is not a political show. Biden didn't nearly have the same cultural relevancy that Trump does, and as such, Stone and Parker weren't all that interested. 

That's how they've always worked. The funniest joke about the most relevant topic is the one that gets told. It doesn't matter who the target is; it's getting made fun of. There are no sacred cows in the eyes of the duo. Become such a cultural force that you can't be ignored, and you will show up on an episode of South Park in an unflattering light.

With that in mind, some of the jokes they're telling just aren't landing, especially those about Trump. I'm not saying this as a guy who voted for Trump and largely still supports him, I'm saying this as a guy who usually sees a bit more cleverness out of their mockery. There's usually a joke behind the joke with Parker and Stone, and jokes about Trump having a tiny penis and having gay sex with Satan feel undercooked. The fact that he's a one-to-one of Saddam Hussein in past episodes — down to the voice, the catchphrases, the tiny penis and the gay sex with Satan — makes me believe the joke is still unfurling, but Parker and Stone are usually better about delivery. 

That said, there are moments that do have that well-polished Stone and Parker humor that had me laughing out loud, especially in the second episode. 

In particular, the storylines revolving around ICE, Cartman, and Mr. Mackey were so well done that any moment they weren't on-screen felt like a momentum loss. 

Cartman becoming Charlie Kirk and obsessing over becoming a "master debater" is well crafted, especially when fellow student Clyde Donovan becomes a podcaster who sounds more like Nick Fuentes and begins cutting in on Cartman's shtick. Cartman's mom, confusing what Cartman is doing behind closed doors as actual masturbation, adds another level of hilarity to it as she constantly tries to get him to stop. 

The other part that had me rolling was Mackey's quest of trying to get his "nut," which in this case, is being used as the slang term for a person's financial responsibilities. He's fired because there's no more funding for counselors in schools, and is forced to join ICE to pay his bills. He inadvertently becomes a fantastic ICE agent as the organization raids places like "Dora the Explorer" stage shows and, after hearing that there are likely many Mexicans in Heaven, ICE vehicles rush to it to arrest them there. 


It's these jokes that felt very well put together. The Kristi Noem jokes about shooting every dog and having a runaway face were also kind of funny, though this probably won't fly with a lot of people who don't like or misunderstand dark humor. 

But I noticed as the show got to Mar-a-Lago, it started to feel a bit underdeveloped. We return to Trump, who now has JD Vance in tow, and pays homage to the Fantasy Island intro of old, with Vance being more like a tiny servant that Trump abuses. That part was kind of funny, but then it devolves from there. 

Trump wants to make Mackey the new head of ICE because Noem freaks him out, and also wants to help him with his nut, which ends up being a gay sex with Satan joke. 

I think it's odd that Parker and Stone nailed this misunderstand trope with Cartman and his mom, but completely fell flat with it later between Mackey and Trump in the exact same episode. I can't help but feel like whoever is writing the Trump parts of the show is an entirely different, less-experienced writing team. 

Even the part where Noem shoots Superman's dog Krypto out of the air at Mar-a-Lago felt lazy at that point, almost like they were trying to bring in one more thing to make the show feel like it's up-to-date. 

Over the years, South Park has always been a happy warrior kind of show. If they really didn't like someone, they definitely came down on them with satire, but it rarely felt lazy or try-hard, and this season of South Park has those moments. Kristi Noem going into a pet store and killing the dogs off-screen while the credits were rolling just felt tired at that point. Parker and Stone like to push jokes to a point where they stop being funny, then push it further so it's funny again, but they just didn't get there. 

It'd be like if the focus were Biden, and they kept making the same joke about his incoherent speech throughout the show. It might've been funny the first couple of times, but without some actual end result of his speech being incomprehensible, it's just and-then storytelling... a kind of storytelling that Parker and Stone famously hate. 

With all that said, I'm not giving this season a thumbs up or a thumbs down yet. Like I said, I have a feeling that some of these jokes are still playing out, and they're delaying the punchline. My faith in Stone and Parker remains, and they are still doing what they've always done — which is make fun of the most talked about person/thing in the room, and I hope they never stop. 

My worry is that they will turn South Park into a political show, or at the very least, into a political season. They're no stranger to making jokes about politics or political issues, but the show was always culturally focused, even in those moments. Right now, conservatism is dominating the culture in a way that could be considered a landmark moment for our civilization, but my hope is that the joke will run its course, and the show can get back to talking about something else.  



The ‘Ghastly’ Gamble: How the Clinton–Obama Intelligence Op Risked War to Take Down Trump


They knew it could spark a geopolitical catastrophe. They did it anyway.

Let’s dispense with illusions: Vladimir Putin is not misunderstood. He is an autocrat. He lies, he invades, he suppresses dissent, and he trades ruthlessly in realpolitik. His regime has poisoned opponents, jailed journalists, and bombed civilians.

He has aligned himself—out of both strategy and necessity—with the Chinese Communist Party, America’s chief geopolitical adversary.

In short, he needs no fabrication to appear villainous—his record speaks for itself.

But that’s what he got. According to the recently declassified Durham annex, senior U.S. officials weren’t content to let Putin’s record stand on its own.

They sought to amplify it—to demonize him alongside Donald Trump and turn the Russian president into a political cudgel. The aim was to hang Putin like a leaden albatross around Trump’s neck as part of a broader strategy to bring Trump down.

This was a multi-pronged operation—inside and outside the government—with a domestic objective at its core: to destroy Trump before he could win or govern, by laundering a phony narrative through the Steele dossier and fabricated claims of collusion.

And by their own words, Putin was in the crosshairs too.

Which raises significant questions: What exactly were they trying to provoke? Were they attempting to drive U.S.-Russia relations into permanent hostility? A new Cold War—while risking a “hot” one?

To goad a nuclear adversary into miscalculation? Or were U.S.-Russia relations simply collateral damage—acceptable fallout in a calculated effort to legitimize a manufactured Trump-Putin narrative and politically cripple their chosen target?

Perhaps there was a hierarchy of objectives, undoubtedly with Trump’s destruction at the top. But the targeting of Putin was not incidental. It was deliberate, and it cannot be dismissed.

The Durham annex makes that crystal clear.

One of the most revealing suspected emails cited in the declassified Durham annex didn’t come from an intelligence officer.

It came from Leonard Bernardo, a top official at George Soros’s Open Society Foundations, reacting to internal Clinton-camp discussions about how to frame the Russia narrative.

Julie says it will be a long-term affair to demonize Putin and Trump.Now it is good for a post-convention bounce. Later the FBI will put more oil into the fire... Anyway, things are ghastly for US-Russian relations. —Leonard Bernardo, July 25, 2016 email (Durham Annex, pp. 9-10) [emphasis added].

The annex itself notes that “Julie” appears to refer to Julianne Smith, a foreign policy advisor to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign.

At the time, Smith was Director of the Transatlantic Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, where she served from 2014 to 2018. She later served as President Biden’s Ambassador to NATO from 2021 to 2024.

Let that sink in. As early as July 2016, a Soros-linked operative was acknowledging—privately—that the Clinton operation would weaponize intelligence, politicize federal law enforcement, and court geopolitical blowback—all to score a fleeting post-convention bounce, while openly admitting it was just the start of a long-term political operation.

And they knew the “ghastly” consequences it could have for U.S.-Russia relations.

The Durham annex notes that certain analysts and officers interviewed by the Special Counsel’s office assessed the Bernardo email—and others—as “likely authentic.” 

While Bernardo later denied some details, he reportedly acknowledged that describing U.S.-Russia relations as 'ghastly' was something he might say.

To grasp the recklessness of this operation, consider what Russia brings to the table:

  • Roughly 5,580 nuclear warheads—the largest stockpile on the planet.
  • A rapidly advancing arsenal of hypersonic missiles—including the Avangard, Kh-47M2 Kinzhal, and RS-28 Sarmat (NATO codename: Satan II)—engineered to bypass U.S. missile defenses and strike with near-unstoppable speed.
  • A fully modernized nuclear triad, comprising ICBMs, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and long-range strategic bombers.
  • A cyberwarfare force that has already disrupted NATO allies, global financial systems, and critical infrastructure.

Russia is not a country one antagonizes casually—least of all by fabricating evidence that its leader colluded with a U.S. presidential candidate.

Yet that’s precisely what Clinton allies—with Barack Obama’s tacit blessing—did.

And the Kremlin was watching. Russia had the memos. Given the timing and the content, it's reasonable to assume they had real-time or near real-time visibility into the fraud America’s political class was unleashing—not just on its citizens, but on the world.

So while American voters were being told that Donald Trump was a Russian asset, the actual Russians were watching U.S. officials knowingly promote disinformation about them.

They watched a sitting American president allow his agencies to be turned into political weapons against Trump.

And they realized something breathtaking: America’s political class was more corrupt—and more unstable—than they had imagined.

This was an elite political operation that weaponized the intelligence community, torched its credibility, and shredded America’s vaunted republican ideals and constitutional norms in the most Machiavellian way imaginable.

The very institutions entrusted to defend liberty and safeguard peace were commandeered for one purpose: raw political power.

It wasn’t the Kremlin destabilizing American democracy. It was the political leadership at Langley. Foggy Bottom. McLean. And 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

They injected deliberate disinformation into America’s political bloodstream. They turned national security into a domestic weapon. And they did it knowing the global consequences could be catastrophic.

Russia didn’t need kompromat on Trump. They had something far more damning: evidence that America’s ruling elite would jeopardize international stability to cling to power.

That is the real revelation of the Durham annex. Not just that Hillary Clinton greenlit the smear. Not just that Obama knew. Not just that the FBI and CIA leadership ran with it.

Those were long-held suspicions—now confirmed and surpassed by the disclosures themselves.

What’s new is this: They knew the risks were existential—and they did it anyway.

Because in their calculus, none of it mattered—so long as Trump lost or was destroyed.

On the extreme end of possible outcomes, they risked World War III. Yes—nuclear war. Armageddon.

And the irony is almost too rich to process: It was Democrats who warned—loudly and wrongly—that Trump’s election might lead to global war.

And yet it was they who risked exactly that, in their desperate effort to stop him from winning.

They knew the stakes. They knew the risks. They knew the consequences. 

They likely assumed the Russian government knew—or would soon find out. And it did.

After all, Moscow had the memos—and its intelligence services were more than capable of tracing the fingerprints of the Clinton-Obama-Soros operation straight back to Washington.

This wasn’t just reckless. It was peril unhinged—a devil-may-care plunge into geopolitical chaos, so long as they achieved their ends.

Simply put, it is hypocrisy, corruption, and treachery on a scale that should disqualify them from public office—and tarnish their legacy.

Forever.



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Birthright Citizen: The Little Conjunction That Explains Everything

When it comes to statutory interpretation, every word, including the little 3-letter ones, has a profound meaning.

I have been getting just enough email about “birthright citizenship” to suggest that there are some key misunderstandings about the concept and the implications of the Fourteenth Amendment to make one more exploration of the idea worthwhile. So as your resident “splainer,” I’ll try to ‘splain it for you.

The Fourteenth Amendment was adopted on July 9, 1868. It was the final product of a process that Illinois Senator Lyman Trumbull began in 1866. His Civil Rights Act of 1866 stated that “all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power…are hereby declared citizens of the United States…”

President Andrew Johnson didn’t like the bill, so he vetoed it, but Congress overrode his veto. The Fourteenth Amendment changed the language very slightly to “born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof,” but it kept that all-important conjunction, which I’ve highlighted.

That three-letter word means that there are two (another three-letter word) conditions that have to be met. They aren’t the same thing. That three-letter conjunction is the source of all the legal arguments. So that you can clearly understand it, let’s look at a unanimous Second Amendment decision called Caetano v. Massachusetts.

The Caetano case dealt with a lady who protected herself from an abusive boyfriend by acquiring a stun gun (similar to a Taser). The Supreme Court ruled that for Massachusetts to ban her stun gun, it had to be both dangerous and unusual. There’s that little three-letter “and” word again.

The state could ban it only if both conditions were met. Matching one wasn’t enough. If it was unusual but not dangerous, sorry, Charlie. Do not pass Go, do not collect $200. Your statute goes directly to Second Amendment jail.

As things turned out, because the stun gun was not unusual, the Supreme Court said they didn’t even need to ask if it was dangerous. It failed the “unusual” leg, so it didn’t matter if it was dangerous. There was no way it could be both if it flunked one of the tests.

Let’s look at Senator Trumbull’s work again. He wasn’t satisfied with just getting his Civil Rights Act passed. He also pushed the Fourteenth Amendment through the committee and finally to the full Senate on June 13, 1866. This was a key part of his legacy, and you may be dead certain that he wasn’t about to contradict himself.

So, when the final draft of the Amendment said that persons “born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof” were citizens, it meant exactly the same thing as “born here and not subject to any foreign power.” In fact, Senator Trumbull did the ‘splainin’ for me. His exact words were that the phrase meant “subject to the complete jurisdiction thereof” and “not owing allegiance to anybody else.”

The Founders were explicit in rejecting the idea that simply being born somewhere makes you a subject of that country. That key change was part of our great American experiment.

Being born in London used to mean that you were an English subject. But Americans weren’t going to tolerate being subjects anymore. They would forever after be citizens, with all the self-governing rights that status implied. And this is where modern Americans lose the plot. We simply don’t have the lived experience to automatically understand what was being said.

A lot of legal “experts” incorrectly assume that “subject to the jurisdiction” means that if you commit a crime, you can be punished for it. They push this error to eliminate those troublesome three letters by making the two separate and distinct qualifications into a single one. They don’t want to admit that there is a specific meaning for “and.” So they blindly push the idea that a baby’s first breath in the US makes it a citizen, even though the Founders and the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment explicitly rejected that concept.

At the same time, the Founders were willing to prosecute non-citizens. William Duane was one such defendant, although he avoided conviction. Pirates were also non-citizen defendants. And non-citizen immigrants were often prosecuted for minor crimes. Being “subject to prosecution” wasn’t the same as “subject to the jurisdiction” then, and it isn’t now. “Subject to the jurisdiction of a foreign power” means that you are a “subject of that foreign power” and owe your allegiance to that foreign country, not to the US of A.

Grammar is central to legal interpretation. Those three little letters mean that, just as with Caetano, the two specified items are different. Being in the US makes you subject to prosecution. If you smuggle cocaine across the border, your status as a Mexican citizen will be no help. The US legal system will determine your fate. As for birthright citizenship, the issue is different.

If you’re born here, you’re born here. That’s easy. But if your parents aren’t legally in the US, are you subject to the jurisdiction of the US? Most emphatically, no!  You don’t owe any loyalty to the US, and that’s what the term means. Let me put that in words that even those in Rio Linda will understand.

If you’re a Mexican citizen, you owe your allegiance to Mexico. It doesn’t matter whether you are traveling to Australia, Russia, or the US. Your allegiance is to Mexico. You are “subject to the jurisdiction of” Mexico.

And if your baby is born in any of those places, it’s still a Mexican citizen because you are a Mexican citizen. This is the principle of jus sanguinus, “right of blood.” Another country may also choose to grant you citizenship, much as Ted Cruz received dual US/Canada citizenship by being born in Toronto with US parents. But the US, whether by law or Constitution, has not made that grant.

Before you throw those rotten vegetables, recall that I discussed the Supreme Court’s decision in Wong Kim Ark, showing that it does not settle the argument. Rather, Wong Kim Ark was a citizen because his parents had established a domicile—something no illegal alien can do—by creating a lawful permanent residence, business, and so on. Since the immigration laws were different then, he became a citizen by being born to lawful permanent residents.

The key issue in the argument is simple. Those three letters, A-N-D, mean that “subject to the jurisdiction” is not the same thing as “born here.” When the Supreme Court reviews the issue, if it looks at the origin of the Fourteenth Amendment and the discussions by its drafters, birthright citizenship will disappear.

Case closed.



He Had Access to America’s War Machines—Then Tried to Hand It All to Russia

Townhall 

The authorities arrested an active-duty soldier at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, for allegedly sharing critical information with the Russian government.

The Justice Department on Wednesday announced the arrest of Taylor Adam Lee.

According to court documents, Taylor Adam Lee, 22, holds a Top Secret (TS) / Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) security clearance. From approximately May 2025 through the present, Lee sought to establish his U.S. Army credentials and send U.S. defense information to Russia’s Ministry of Defense. In June 2025, Lee allegedly transmitted export-controlled technical information on the M1A2 Abrams Tank online and offered assistance to the Russian Federation, stating, “the USA is not happy with me for trying to expose their weaknesses,” and added, “At this point I’d even volunteer to assist the Russian federation when I’m there in any way.”

In July, at an in-person meeting between Lee and who he believed to be a representative of the Russian government, Lee allegedly passed an SD card to the individual. Lee proceeded to provide a detailed overview of the documents and information contained on the SD card, including documents and information on the M1A2 Abrams, another armored fighting vehicle used by the U.S. military, and combat operations. Several of these documents contained controlled technical data that Lee did not have the authorization to provide. Other documents on the SD card were marked as Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI), and featured banner warnings and dissemination controls. Throughout the meeting, Lee stated that the information on the SD card was sensitive and likely classified.

During and after the July meeting, Lee discussed obtaining and providing to the Russian government a specific piece of hardware inside the M1A2 Abrams tank. On July 31, 2025, Lee delivered what appeared to be the hardware to a storage unit in El Paso. After doing so, Lee sent a message to the individual he believed to be a representative of the Russian government stating, “Mission accomplished.”

US Attorney Justin R. Simmons for the Western District of Texas said, “Our enemies, both foreign and domestic, should be aware that we diligently investigate and aggressively prosecute these cases.”

Another service member named Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins, a former US Army Special Forces officer, was convicted in 2021 for conspiring with Russian intelligence operatives between 1996 and 2011. He provided national defense information to Russia's GRU, including details about his unit and the names of team members for possible recruitment.



Bitter Hillary Clinton Is Inconveniently Fact Checked Over Statement on New WH Ballroom


RedState 

Every once in a while, I see the name Hillary Clinton spelled "Hilliary" Clinton, and the more you know about her, the more you understand that it's not a typo to spell it that way. It's just that she's a notorious teller of falsehoods (to put it mildly), dating all the way back to her days of being the First Lady of Arkansas.

While some of the whoppers are more obvious, like the treacherous ones she's told (and appears to have authorized to cook up) about "collusion" between Donald Trump and Russia during the 2016 presidential campaign, there have been others about her email server, her handling of the Benghazi matter, Whitewater, her claim that she really won in 2016, and the list goes on and on.

There are also the little ones she tells pretty much every day on social media, where the twice-failed presidential candidate and bitterly spiteful Democrat public figure conveniently limits replies to those whom she tags in her tweets, which is usually nobody, and those whom she follows.

The latest comes in the aftermath of the end-of-July announcement that a new grand ballroom will be constructed at the White House, starting in September. As we reported, President Trump had previously teased the news for weeks, but the details were finally made public last Thursday during a White House press briefing:

"The White House state ballroom will be a much-needed and exquisite addition of approximately 90,000 total square feet of innately designed and carefully crafted space with a seated capacity of 650 people," Leavitt told the press. "Which is a significant increase from the 200-person seated capacity in the East Room of the White House."

She said, over the last few weeks, Trump has held meetings with numerous departments to discuss design features and planning. Leavitt said he's also chosen McCrery Architects as the lead architect, which is based in Washington, D.C. She said the company is well known for "classical architectural design."

The White House also said construction should be completed "long before the end of President Trump’s term."

Not surprisingly, the Usual Suspects have lined up to criticize the project, with Hillary Clinton being among them. Her hot take was that it shouldn't be funded with taxpayer money at a time when Americans still have concerns about grocery prices:

The problem here is that it's not funded by taxpayer money. As White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt shared in the press briefing where the details were revealed, "President Trump and other donors have committed to donate funds necessary to build this $200 million infrastructure."  Trump himself has also said he and private donors would be footing the bill.

Even left-leaning "fact check" site Snopes weighed in back on August 1st and found claims that the ballroom will be funded with taxpayer dollars sorely lacking:

However, we found no credible evidence that the Trump administration's proposed $200 million ballroom would be paid for using taxpayers' money. 

Rather, both Trump and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump and private donors would pay for the project. The Rapid Response 47 X account, an official account of the Trump administration, wrote (archived) in a July 31 post that the project would be "fully funded by President Trump and other private donors — not taxpayers."

Though I know it's been said many times before, it's worth saying again: Don't go away mad, Hillary Clinton. Just go away. Please.



Defiant Arizona Lawmaker Could Face Charges After Tipping Off Illegals To ICE Presence


State Sen. Analise Ortiz, a Phoenix Democrat, admits she ‘shared information about ICE’ — an act that a DHS official says ‘looks like obstruction.’



Arizona Republican lawmakers are calling for a federal investigation into a leftist state senator who tipped off her community about an Immigration and Customs Enforcement operation. It’s the latest case of a left-winger spouting incendiary rhetoric about ICE, a federal agency that has seen an 830 percent increase in assaults. 

Arizona State Sen. Analise Ortiz shot back at a LibsOfTiktok post accusing the Phoenix Democrat of “actively impeding and doxxing” immigration enforcement officials. The far-left lawmaker has posted alerts from local groups sharing locations of ICE agents attempting to apprehend illegal immigrants. The LibsOfTiktok post, which copied ICE Director Tom Homan and the Department of Homeland Security, urged federal officials to charge Ortiz. 

Ortiz defiantly responded, “Yep. When ICE is around, I will alert my community to stay out of the area, and I’m not f***king scared of you nor Trump’s masked goons,” the lawmaker wrote

‘Violation of Federal Law’

As of Wednesday evening, the post had received 10.7 million views. Among those watching was Arizona state Senate President Warren Petersen, who called Ortiz’s comments “deeply troubling.”

“I spoke with the U.S. Attorney for the District of Arizona and referred this matter to his office to investigate, as it appears she may be in violation of federal law,” Petersen, who is running for state attorney general, said in a statement. “Public servants have a duty to uphold the law and respect those who enforce it, not undermine them.”

In a statement to The Federalist, Petersen said his office has been in contact with federal authorities from the Trump administration to “alert them to the potential threat created by the Senator because being an elected official does not put you above the law.”

“An ethics complaint has been filed and will be investigated through the course of the normal complaint process at the legislature,” the Senate president added. “We will continue to work with law enforcement to ensure these types of threats do not go unanswered.”

Esther Winnie, executive assistant to the United States attorney, told the left-leaning Arizona Mirror that her office was aware of the Senate president’s request and will refer it to the right investigative agency for review. 

Travis Grantham, a former member of the Arizona House of Representatives and a Republican candidate for Arizona’s 5th Congressional seat, called Ortiz’s alleged conduct “a disgrace.”

“This behavior endangers law enforcement officer’s lives. I support investigating this and holding Senator Ortiz accountable to the fullest extent of the law and to the rules of the Senate,” Grantham wrote on X. 

‘Unequivocally Incompatible’

Ortiz did not return a Federalist email seeking comment. Her office assistant said she was at a conference. An automatic response from Ortiz’s legislative email address noted the senator would be “out of the office on business until Monday, May 19, 2025, without access to legislative email.” Obviously the message had not been updated in some time. Another legislative aide did not return a request for comment. She told CBS 5 that her actions were protected under the First Amendment.

In an Instagram tirade, Ortiz proclaimed that the “fascists and white supremacists in power in Arizona” are targeting her because she “shared information about ICE lurking outside an elementary school so our community could avoid the area and stay safe.”

“ICE is lurking outside schools in our community, disappearing people of all statuses, and causing unwarranted fear. Every individual has the right to know when and where law enforcement activity of any kind is taking place in an effort to protect themselves, in the same way people use popular apps to alert each other about speed traps,” the leftist wrote. 

She’s wrong on multiple accounts. Lawmakers take a loyalty oath to support the U.S. Constitution and the Constitution and laws of the state of Arizona “and defend the U.S. and Arizona against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and states they will faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of their office.” Interfering in the enforcement of federal immigration laws and doxing ICE agents would seem to be a serious departure from said oath. 

Petersen said as much in his statement. 

“As a duly elected state senator, she took an oath of office to support the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution and Laws of the State of Arizona. Obstructing federal law enforcement is unequivocally incompatible with that oath,” he said. “Our law enforcement agents place themselves in harm’s way every day to defend our liberties and communities. The least we can do as public servants is to stand with them as they stand for us.  She has proven herself to be incapable of this fundamental responsibility of her office.”

‘Siding with Vicious Cartels’

While she insists she won’t be intimidated, Ortiz apparently is not above raising some campaign cash off of her potential legal troubles. On X, she posted a link to ActBlue, the Democratic Party’s massive and controversial fundraising platform, seeking donations to help her “continue fighting fascism” in Arizona. 

She could be looking at some hefty legal fees in the days ahead. 

Tricia McLaughlin, assistant Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, told Fox News Digital that Ortiz’s conduct “looks like obstruction of justice.”

“Arizona state Senator Analise Ortiz is siding with vicious cartels, human traffickers, and violent criminals over American citizens,” McLaughlin told the news outlet. Make no mistake, sanctuary politicians like Arizona Sen. Analise Ortiz are contributing to the surge in assaults of our ICE officers through their repeated vilification and demonization of ICE.”

DHS reports that assaults on ICE agents have spiked by 830 percent. The most recent incidents include alleged arson at a Washington state ICE facility and an illegal immigrant with a history of child abuse accused of trying to drive over ICE agents rounding up illegals in Colorado Springs, Colorado. 

‘Not About Violence?’ 

But don’t count on accountability. As of Wednesday, Cudahy, Calif. Vice Mayor Cynthia Gonzalez has yet to face charges or reported discipline of any kind after posting a now-deleted video in late June calling on street gangs to defend their turf against U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement agents.  

“I wanna know where all the cholos are at in Los Angeles. 18th Street, Florencia. Where’s the leadership at? … Now that your hood is being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain’t a peep out of you,” Gonzalez allegedly said in the TikTok video, which, of course, has been captured for eternity. “Don’t be trying to claim no block, no nothing if you’re not showing up right now trying to help out and organize.”

If you’re scoring along at home, Gonzalez called upon some of the most violent gangs in America to confront ICE agents enforcing U.S. immigration laws in suburban Los Angeles community. 

An official in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California told The Federalist that he could neither confirm nor deny whether Gonzalez was under investigation. 

The leftist vice mayor has not returned The Federalist’s multiple requests for comment, nor have other Cudahy city officials. Last month, Gonzalez apologized for what she claimed was a “satirical” video, a message that “was not about violence.” 

“It was about regular people, us, claiming ownership of our streets in a time of great distress and asking others who I mentioned in my video, in organizing and protesting against the harm and violence being inflicted on our community,” she said. Gonzalez insisted that the video was “propagandized, but she promised to use her voice “in a more responsible and still powerful manner moving forward.”