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The Minnesota Anomaly: Why the Data Proves ICE Isn’t the Sole Cause of Unrest

If the presence of federal immigration enforcement were the primary driver of civil unrest,...

Ice Rhetoric And Officer Safety

Here we go again. A federal officer tries to do his job, someone gets...

Title IX, Reimagined (By Activists)

For anyone just tuning in, here is what is actually happening, stripped of slogans...

ICE Shooting | Legal Standard vs Public Outcry

On January 7, 2026, an ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations agent fatally shot 37-year-old...

Denying China and Russia Oil Is National Security, Not Controversy

Trump’s decision to take Maduro was the right call, and most of the outrage...
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Lions at the Gates | US Middle East Policy

Let’s be clear: American foreign policy in the Middle East is, at this point,...

Faster Than Ever: Is the Tour de France Quietly Entering a New Doping Era?

For decades, the Tour de France has captured the world’s imagination as both the...

Exposing the Red Flags: China’s Swimmers and the Doping Debate

The Olympics and the doping allegations surrounding Chinese swimmers have sparked much debate. Yet,...
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International vs American Shooters

Why don't Americans usually do well in the Olympic shooting competitions? I'll give you...
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Epic or Fraud

The smashing of the Men's 100m Freestyle World Record by Pan Zhanle of almost...

The Episode That Broke Star Wars

Prior to The Acolyte even being released, those having early access to several of...

Netflix’s Turning Point | Anti-American Trash

I watched Episode 1 of Turning Point on Netflix, a series about the Cold...

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Google Fitbit Air Review: The $99 Screenless Tracker That Changes the Wearable Game

Google has done something the fitness tracker market hasn’t seen in years: a product that forces a real conversation. The Fitbit Air — launching May 26, 2026 at $99 — is a completely screenless biometric band designed to go head-to-head with WHOOP, and it does so without requiring a subscription to unlock its core functionality.

80 Years of Secrets: What the 2026 AARO UAP Data Release Actually Shows

On May 8, 2026, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office released 162 documents, videos, and images covering eight decades of U.S. government UAP encounters. The release spans four agencies and runs from 1944 Germany to late 2025. This is not a collection of grainy civilian photos. This is the institutional record: military sensor data, FBI 302 interviews, SHAEF messages, State Department cables, and astronaut transcripts.

The Minnesota Anomaly: Why the Data Proves ICE Isn’t the Sole Cause of Unrest

If the presence of federal immigration enforcement were the primary driver of civil unrest,...