Friday, May 2, 2025

Sensitive Maryland Dad suspected of "getting paid" to traffic fellow illegal aliens, body cam suggests

Maryland dad chats about poetry and music with Chris Van Hollen

In a bombshell revelation, body camera footage from a 2022 Tennessee Highway Patrol stop exposes Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an illegal alien with MS-13 ties, as a likely human trafficker. The Trump administration deported Garcia to a Salvadoran prison, but the saga of this so-called “Maryland man” [he's also a 'dad'] just keeps unraveling like a sari in a twister.

Tennessee officers pulled Garcia over, suspecting he was smuggling people into the country. Driving a car crammed with eight other illegal aliens like himself, Garcia flashed an invalid Maryland license while his passengers had none, nada, zip. 

“He’s getting paid to haul these people, probably to Maryland, I would say,” one officer noted, pointing out the vehicle’s extra row of seats. 

Another officer warned, “Sometimes they come in with dope.” Garcia’s story flipped faster than a politician’s promises—first claiming he was headed to St. Louis for construction work, then admitting he was Maryland-bound but would return to Missouri. 

Oh, and the car? Allegedly his boss’s, straight out of Houston.

The officers, sharp as tacks, sat Garcia in their patrol car—no cuffs, mind you—and called the FBI and ICE. But in Biden’s America, ICE ghosted them, and the FBI advised against detention, despite the glaring red flags of trafficking. Fast-forward, and Garcia’s now rotting in El Salvador’s Terrorism Confinement Center, a mega-prison for MS-13 and Barrio 18 thugs. 

Democrats, ever the faux bleeding hearts, jetted to Central America, begging for his return. Good luck with that.

"A hundred bottles of cervesa on the wall . . . "

Court documents paint an even uglier picture. Garcia allegedly bragged he could murder his wife and skate free. “Me and my kids are afraid now. He kicked me, pushed me, slapped me in the face and threatened me,” his wife said, claiming she’s got a recording of him boasting to her ex-mother-in-law: “even if he kills me no one can do anything to him.” Charming guy, only a Democrat could love.

The Supreme Court, in its infinite wisdom, ruled Trump’s team must “facilitate” Garcia’s return. But Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, meeting at the Oval Office last month, laughed off the idea. “The question is preposterous, how can I smuggle a terrorist into the United States?” 

Checkmate.

This is what happens when borders are sieves and enforcement’s a suggestion. Garcia’s not just a deportee—he’s a walking case study in why the system’s broken.

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IDF prepares to deliver "decisive blow" against Hamas



In the hallowed halls of the President's Residence, where the weight of history presses upon every word, Lt. General Eyal Zamir, IDF Chief of Staff, stood before the nation’s finest at the Outstanding Soldiers Ceremony and delivered a message as unyielding as the stone of Jerusalem itself. His words, steeped in the clarity of purpose that defines Israel’s ceaseless struggle, carried the timbre of a man who knows the cost of freedom and the price of hesitation. 

The IDF, he declared, is poised to strike Hamas with a “decisive blow,” ready to escalate the tempo and ferocity of operations in Gaza should the need arise. No equivocation, no retreat—just the stark promise of a military that does not flinch.

Zamir’s speech was not merely a call to arms but a meditation on the soul of a nation, to use Sleepy Joe Biden's cliché. 

“The Hamas terrorists still hold fifty-nine of our brothers and sisters,” Zamir said, his voice a blade cutting through the fog of complacency. “But they, too, know their safety is not forever.” These are not the words of a man posturing for effect; they are the cold, hard truth of a commander who understands that sovereignty is not a birthright but a prize wrested from the jaws of history. “Our sovereignty and independence were not given to us as a gift,” he reminded us. “They were bought with blood and struggle, and they require us to defend them at all costs.” In an age where too many nations sleepwalk through their liberties, Israel stands awake, vigilant, its eyes fixed on the horizon.

The ceremony itself, a tribute to the IDF’s outstanding soldiers, was no mere parade of medals. Zamir redefined excellence with a precision that shames the shallow metrics of our time. “Excellence is not measured by who is the most talented or the most brilliant,” he said. “It is granted to the one who perseveres. It is a quiet, daily choice to act with responsibility, commitment, and integrity—even when no one is watching.” 

Here is a truth so elemental it ought to be carved into the bedrock of every society: greatness is not a gift of genius but the fruit of resolve, the stubborn refusal to yield to despair or distraction.

This year’s ceremony, Zamir noted, bore a “special significance,” unfolding against the backdrop of “a long and complex war, in multiple arenas, against numerous threats, which is still ongoing.” To honor soldiers in such times is to acknowledge not just their courage but their necessity. Israel’s enemies do not pause for reflection; neither can its defenders. 

Yet Zamir went further, weaving a thread of collective duty through his words. “For the State of Israel, this idea is essential to its existence and resilience, and no one is exempt—not individuals, not groups, and not tribes. We all enlist, we all fight together, and we all sacrifice together—for the sake of the state and for a better future. Because one shared destiny placed us here, in this land.” 

This is not the language of division but of unity, a rebuke to those who would fracture the nation’s resolve with petty tribalism.

Then came the stories of the awardees, each a testament to the indomitable spirit that courses through Israel’s veins. Avigdor, from a haredi family, who defied social pressures to serve; Dorian, a lone immigrant who conquered language barriers to excel in the Intelligence Directorate; Oria, a survivor of Hamas’s October 7 savagery, who returned to service with a strength that humbles us all; Lea, whose grandfather was murdered in Gaza, yet who rose from grief to shine; and Daria, sister to a hostage, whose fight for her sibling’s freedom did not dim her own brilliance. 

These are not just names but beacons, proof that even in the darkest hours, the human spirit can burn bright.

Zamir’s closing words were a defiant hymn to the enduring hope of Israel. “We, too, together with you, are adding a new verse to the long and glorious song of the life of the people of Israel,” he said. “From this place, in the heart of Jerusalem, our eternal capital, we send a clear message: The Israeli hope is alive and beating, and our actions will speak.” 

And with a final nod to the nation’s resilience, he wished all a “Happy and safe Independence Day.” In those words, we hear not just a promise but a vow: Israel will endure, not because it must, but because it will.

This is the truth Zamir spoke, and it is a truth worth fighting for.

Am Yisrael Chai!

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IDF hooks up three terrorists to 216 goats


South Lebanon got lit up like a cheap firecracker on Thursday when a pickup truck took a direct hit, blamed on Israel, between the dusty villages of Mis al-Jabal and Laida. 

Three unwashed guys—two Syrian civilians and a Lebanese local—were turned to ash in the blast. No confetti, no parade, just another day in the war zone.

Meanwhile, over in Gaza, the Israeli air show kept rolling with three strikes that left seven Palestinians dead and a bunch more nursing wounds, per local sources. The bombs dropped near Khan Yunis and Shuja'iya, where the ground’s already soaked with blood and bad decisions. 

Just another Thursday in the land of the slaves of Allah.

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Thursday, May 1, 2025

Iran executes alleged "Israeli spy" linked to assassination of IRGC officer



Alright, folks, strap in for another grim dispatch from the Middle East, where Iran’s mullahs are playing their favorite game: execute first, ask questions never. 

According to Iranian media, Mohsen Langarneshin, a 34-year-old network security specialist from Isfahan, was hanged at the notorious Evin prison Wednesday morning. His crime? Allegedly being a “senior spy” for Israel’s Mossad and helping pull off the 2022 hit on Hassan Sayyad Khodaei, an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officer with a rap sheet that reads like a Tom Clancy novel.

Khodaei, you may recall, got taken out by motorcycle-riding gunmen outside his Tehran home on May 22, 2022. The IRGC bigwig was supposedly behind plots targeting Americans, Israelis, and the French—because nothing screams “revolutionary guard” like international assassination schemes. 

Iran’s state-linked Tasnim news claims Langarneshin was Mossad’s guy on the ground, recruited in fall 2020 and cozying up with his handlers in exotic locales like Georgia and Nepal. They say he confessed to it all, which sounds super legit… until you hear his family’s side.

Langarneshin’s kin insist that he was no James Bond. They claim his “confession” was beaten out of him during 43 days of solitary confinement, complete with daily doses of physical and psychological torture.

 Color me shocked—Iran’s courts, those paragons of justice, rejected three appeals for a retrial. No surprise there; fairness isn’t exactly the regime’s brand.

On top of allegedly helping ice Khodaei, Langarneshin is accused of playing paparazzi for Mossad, snapping photos of senior Iranian officials and key sites. Oh, and he supposedly bought the motorcycle used in the hit—because nothing says “master spy” like running errands for assassins. 

Look, I’m not saying the guy was a saint, but Iran’s track record on truth-telling is about as reliable as a Yugo in a blizzard. This whole story reeks of the regime’s usual playbook: pin the blame, stage the execution, and keep the fear machine humming. Stay classy, Tehran.

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Ireland wins the European Anti-Semitism Award

                         Former Irish justice minister Alan Shatter/screen grab

Ireland’s got a problem, and it’s not just the usual rain-soaked misery. The narrative around the Israel-Palestine conflict here is so warped it’s like watching a play where half the script’s been torn out. 

The story begins and ends with October 7, 2023, framed as some “event” that kicked everything off. Some so called journalists call it an atrocity but wink and nod, saying it’s “perhaps understandable.” From there, the tale spins into Israel playing the cartoon villain, “arbitrarily bombing and murdering Palestinians” for revenge. Nuance? Context? Good luck finding either.

Alan Shatter, former justice minister, isn’t having it. He’s as angry as a cat in a bathtub about the free pass given to “Hamas using Palestinian civilians as human shields.” He’s banging his head against a wall, trying to get Ireland to see that “Hamas is still intent on destroying Israel, that it wants to resume its total rule of Gaza.” 

But Ireland’s media? Nothing, because it's hard to see the light when your head is in your nether regions. 

Shatter, once a regular in Irish papers, says Shatter’s been “cancelled” since October 7 for daring to offer a view that doesn’t fit the approved script.

Then there’s Kneecap, the Northern Irish rap crew who’ve made a career out of provocation, and anti-Semitism is right up their alley.

Shatter doesn’t mince words, calling them “attention seeking, looking for notoriety by presenting as rebellious and deliberately engaging in commentary that attracts media attention.” He’s scathing about their name, a grim nod to IRA violence: “It’s very name is a cynical use of a name in the context of appalling atrocities perpetrated by the IRA in Northern Ireland.” You see, they used to shoot the British law enforcement members in their knees to inflict maximum pain and lifelong damage.

The band has been caught on tape chanting for Hamas and Hezbollah, waving the flag of a Lebanese terror group. Now they’re backpedaling, denying support for either because it doesn't bode well for them.

Shatter’s not buying it. On social media, he tore into their anemic apology: 
“Still too stupid to utter a single word of condolences to the loved ones & relatives of those bereaved that day [speaking about the victims of the Nova festival] or of condemnation of that atrocity. Regardless of their ideological brainwashing & lack of sincerity, just as PR at the very least that might have convinced some of their good intentions. Their whining, disingenuous statement of victimhood seeking some sort of martyrdom deserves no credibility & shouldn’t derail any current investigation.”
Kneecap’s rise isn’t some random fluke. Shatter sees them as a symptom of an Irish nationalist scene that’s cozying up to far-left and Islamist rhetoric on the Middle East. It’s not just talk—it’s spilling onto the streets. “People proudly marching in Dublin with Hamas and Hezbollah and Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine flags, all chanting ‘from the river to the sea’ and calling for global Intifada.” That’s not a protest; it’s a parade of garbage ideas.

For Jews and Israel supporters in Ireland, it’s grim. Shatter’s blunt: “We have a real problem in this country. I think Ireland is not merely the most anti-Israel country in the European Union, or possibly in Europe. Unfortunately, the hostility to Israel has resulted in narratives being used on a regular basis that replicate the narratives in Nazi Germany in the 1930s.” He’s not pulling punches. “The only difference is the word Israel is substituted for Jew, or the word Zionist, is substituted for Jew.” Here, “Zionist” is a slur, and Kneecap’s riding that wave while the media nods along. “Part of the reason why the Irish journals – most of the Irish media – are uncritical of Kneecap is because Kneecap are simply saying stuff that most of them agree with.”

But it gets uglier. Shatter’s still reeling from a Holocaust memorial in Dublin this year where Jewish attendees were “man-handled and thrown out” for silently protesting President Higgins’ speech. 

“It never ever occurred to me that Jewish people would be man-handled and thrown out of a Holocaust remembrance, or a memorial event in Dublin City in 2025,” he says. He’s baffled that Higgins, a lifelong protester himself, just kept talking as Jews were being dragged out. 


“I cannot personally fathom how he continued to speak and watched Jewish members of that audience thrown out.” If Shatter had been speaking, he’d have stopped the show: “I would have stopped my speech and asked people not to so conduct themselves and to respect their protest.”

Is Ireland the most anti-Semitic country in Europe? 

Shatter doesn’t dodge: “There’s been an escalating problem of anti-Semitism, it already existed pre-October 7, 2023, it has escalated since then, and it is a continuing problem and concern.” He points the finger at Ireland’s leaders—every party, the Taoiseach, the foreign minister—who “never miss an opportunity to be critical of Israel” with “unnecessarily unbalanced” language. Hostages get a passing nod, but the narrative’s clear: Israel’s the bad guy, full stop.

Shatter’s worried—not just about now, but where Ireland’s headed. “I’m deeply concerned as to what’s happening in this country,” he says, both “what’s happening currently” and “where this country is heading to.” The only thing tempering the government’s rhetoric? Fear of crossing President Donald Trump. That’s how low the bar is.

A former Fine Gael man, Shatter ditched the party in 2018, fed up with its “moral compass” going AWOL, chasing headlines and tweets over substance. He’s not shocked by their current stance, but one thing does raise his eyebrow: Ireland’s cozying up to Iran. The embassy in Tehran reopened in October 2024, despite Iran’s government-level anti-Semitism and bankrolling of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. Shatter’s incensed: “At no stage have they ever criticized Iran for its endemic – at government level – anti-Semitic pronouncements and its commitment to Israel’s destruction.”

He’s no fan of Israel’s decision to pull its ambassador from Ireland last year, either. Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, called Ireland’s actions and “anti-Semitic rhetoric” a “de-legitimization and demonization of the Jewish state.” Shatter calls it a “massive diplomatic own goal,” one that handed Ireland’s anti-Israel crowd a win.

Trying to talk sense about Israel in Ireland? Near impossible, says Shatter. “I’m frequently, and the past have been and still remain, a critic of some of the conduct of the Israeli government. But in Ireland, there’s no differentiation. It’s Israel is basically vilified.” The media and politicians won’t grapple with October 7’s impact or the fear that Hamas could regroup in Gaza and repeat the carnage. Ireland’s stuck in a one-note chant, and it’s drowning out reality.

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Bibi Netanyahu says 18 arrested for starting fires: police surprised


The fires ravaging the Jerusalem Hills, scorching nearly 5,000 acres of cherished land, have exposed not only the fragility of nature but also the muddled narratives of those tasked with protecting it, not to mention the Hamas supporters who are attempting to destroy the land they pretend is theirs and which they love.

Prime Minister Benjamin 'Bibi' Netanyahu, speaking with the gravitas of a leader under siege, declared that 18 individuals had been apprehended on suspicion of arson—one, he claimed, caught "in the act" during Thursday’s International Bible Quiz. 

Yet, in a twist that underscores the chaos, police sources, speaking to N12, expressed surprise at the figure, insisting they knew of only three confirmed arrests. The truth, as ever, seems to flicker just beyond reach.

The origins of these devastating blazes, which have reduced Canada Park and its surrounding forests to ash, remain shrouded in uncertainty, at least to some extent. 

One suspect, detained on Wednesday, is believed to have attempted to spark yet another fire in southern Jerusalem, as if the inferno already consuming the hills were not enough. Firefighting teams, 98 units strong, toil alongside the IDF and Home Front Command, battling both flames and the inaccessibility of the fire’s starting points. The Fire and Rescue authority, with a sigh of cautious relief, announced late Thursday that the main blaze had been subdued. But with strong winds forecast, the battle is far from won.

Netanyahu, ever the rhetorician, seized the moment at the Bible Quiz’s closing to laud the heroism of the firefighting forces. Quoting scripture with a poet’s flourish, he said: "As fire burns the forest and as flame sets the mountains on fire," before adding, "I want to express my support for the firefighting forces and all those assisting in the protection of the land. We have detained 18 individuals, one of whom was apprehended while in the act." 

The words obviously carried weight, but the discrepancy with police reports casts a shadow over their certainty.

Then, of course, there is the matter of Palestinian incitement, a spark of a different kind. Netanyahu, with characteristic defiance, condemned those who, while professing love for the land, peddle rhetoric that seeks to set it ablaze. "We are the true lovers of this land," he declared, "and we are the ones safeguarding it." 

Palestinian media channels, he alleged, are fanning the flames of destruction, their calls for further fires a grim counterpoint to the physical devastation.

The Jerusalem Hills lie wounded, their scars a testament to both human failure and resilience. As the winds gather and the investigation deepens, one thing is clear: the land, beloved and contested, burns not just from fire but from the weight of competing truths: those of Israel, aka the actual truth; and those of the Arabs, aka the lie that everywhere they set foot on the planet belongs to Islam.

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Arkansas Gov. signs bill banning abortions on babies because of race, sex, or Down Syndrome



Last week Gov. Sarah Sanders signed a good law to prohibit certain abortions if Arkansas’ pro-life laws ever change.

In Arkansas, since 2022, the law has stood resolute: abortion is forbidden, except when a mother’s life hangs in the balance. This year, the state’s legislature, with a steely determination to fortify its pro-life ramparts, passed a measure to tighten any conceivable loopholes in its already robust framework.
 
Before the U.S. Supreme Court’s seismic 2022 ruling, which cast Roe v. Wade into the dustbin of history, Arkansas had already woven a tapestry of laws—dozens of them—designed to shield the unborn. These included noble statutes that barred the termination of a child’s life merely for being the “wrong” sex or for bearing the perceived burden of Down Syndrome. “Technically, those good laws are still on the books,” and they lie in wait, ready to spring into action should a federal court ever dare to tamper with Arkansas’ near-total prohibition on abortion.

Enter S.B. 591, championed by Sen. Clint Penzo (R, obviously — Springdale) and Rep. Karilyn Brown (R — Sherwood). 

This bill, now Act 973 of 2025, delivers a clear message: should Arkansas’ pro-life laws ever be weakened or struck down, no abortion shall be permitted on the vile grounds of an unborn child’s race. It is a law that speaks to first principles, to the unyielding truth that every life is sacred, regardless of the arbitrary markers we impose.
 
The measure sailed through the Arkansas House and Senate with a mandate that brooked no dissent, and on April 22, Gov. Sanders affixed her signature, enshrining it as law. The Family Council, stalwart defenders of the cause, rightly proclaimed their pride in collaborating with legislators to see this through. 

“We appreciate lawmakers’ continued dedication to upholding the sanctity and dignity of human life,” they declared, and who could quibble with that? Gov. Sanders, in signing this “good law,” has added another laurel to Arkansas’ crown as a bastion of moral clarity.

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Harvard unveils their Anti-Semitism Task Force report and apology from their president



Harvard’s finally coughed up its big, bad report on campus anti-Semitism, and it’s a 300-page beast that lays bare the ugly truth about how the Ivory Tower fumbled the ball on protecting Jewish students after Hamas’s bloody Oct. 7, 2023, rampage in southern Israel. Alongside it, interim president Alan Garber’s tossing out an apology, admitting the school’s leaders screwed up big time in tackling the hate that’s been festering on campus.

The report, dropped Tuesday, doesn’t pull punches—it’s a brutal catalog of anti-Semitic garbage that’s been stinking up Harvard’s hallowed halls. From the Harvard Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC) giving a thumbs-up to the Oct. 7 terrorist slaughter to some anti-Zionist faculty clique peddling a vile cartoon painting Jews as killers of people of color, it’s a mess. 

The report’s crystal clear: part of the problem is Harvard has been too spineless to give Jews the same anti-discrimination shield it hands out to other minorities like candy. It also has a laundry list of fixes to make Jewish life on campus less of a nightmare moving forward.

“I am sorry for the moments when we failed to meet the high expectations we rightfully set for our community. The grave, extensive impact of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas assault on Israel and its aftermath had serious repercussions on campus,” Garber said, laying it on thick in the statement tied to the report.

 “Harvard cannot — and will not — abide bigotry. We will continue to provide for the safety and security of all members of our community and safeguard their freedom from harassment. We will redouble our efforts to ensure that the university is a place where ideas are welcomed, entertained, and contested in the spirit of seeking truth; where argument proceeds without sacrificing dignity; and where mutual respect is the norm.”

The crew behind the report—the Presidential Task Force on Combating Antisemitism and Anti-Israel Bias—isn’t just whining; they’re demanding Harvard get its act together. They’re pushing for a total overhaul: tweak admissions to force kids to rub elbows with folks they don’t vibe with, use pre-orientation to prep newbies for the big leagues of elite academia, tighten up “time and place” rules on protests so things don’t spiral into chaos, and make sure the discrimination watchdogs have a specialist who actually understands anti-Semitism and anti-Zionist bullcrap.

“It is clear to the task force that anti-Semitism and anti-Israel bias have been fomented, practiced, and tolerated not only at Harvard but also within academia more widely,” the report says, not mincing words. “We urge Harvard’s leadership, including the president, provost, deans, faculties, and offices of equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging to become champions in the fight against anti-Semitism and anti-Israeli bias — first at Harvard, and then as a model for institutions of higher learning everywhere.”

They’re also saying Harvard needs to keep the task force around to make sure the school doesn’t just pay lip service to these changes. And they’re not stopping at anti-Semitism—they want the same fire in the belly to tackle anti-Muslim, anti-Arab, and anti-Palestinian hate, especially in hot-button fields like medicine, public health, and education. Perhaps if the Muslims, Arabs, and Palestinians would end their scripture-fueled anti-Semitism, this wouldn't be an issue. 

This report is landing as Harvard braces for a cage match with the Trump administration, which is choking off billions in federal funds over the school’s refusal to play ball on policies Team Trump says would make Harvard less of a woke dumpster fire and more merit-based. Trump himself hasn’t been shy, torching Harvard as a traitor to the American way.

“Harvard is an Anti-Semitic, Far Left Institute, as are numerous others, with students being accepted from all over the World that want to rip our Country apart,” Trump blasted on Truth Social Thursday. “The place is a Liberal mess, allowing a certain group of crazed lunatics to enter and exit the classroom and spew fake ANGER and HATE [sic]. It is truly horrific. Now, since our filings began, they act like they are all ‘American Apple Pie.’ Harvard is a threat to democracy.”


The school is scrambling to cover its bases, and this report—demanded by Trump’s crew on April 21—is part of that. They’ve already hit pause on a partnership with a West Bank school, shifted disciplinary processes to the president’s office (another Trump demand), and—get this—yanked funding for those segregated graduation ceremonies they’ve been running for years to prop up identity politics that spit in the face of American unity. 

Conservatives have been screaming forever that this woke nonsense is what’s been fueling campus anti-Semitism.

But the Harvard Jewish Alumni Alliance, born out of the post-Oct. 7 outrage, isn’t popping champagne yet. On Wednesday, they took to X, saying, “We appreciate the report’s identification of 3 problematic academic frameworks fueling campus anti-Semitism: denying Jewish connection to our ancestral homeland, embracing a distorted settler-colonialism framework, and refusing to recognize Jews as a historically vulnerable group. We now await concrete action plans from deans and meaningful implementation from President Garber, particularly regarding oversight of academic programs, accountability measures, and clear responsibility with metrics and public reporting.”

They’re not done: “We remain concerned that the report retreats to comfortable academic parlance about ‘balance’ and ‘constructive dialogue’ in the face of factually incorrect narratives. Let’s hope Harvard isn’t burying a serious problem in the spectacle of academia.”

Harvard’s got a long road ahead, and they're walking barefoot.

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Conservatives erupt after DNC attacks top White House Official with vulgarity in personal attack

The official Democratic National Committee X account decided Wednesday afternoon that the best way to win back the normies was to channel t...