The radical Left is going to vote against the Laken Riley Act, with a Squad member comparing Laken’s brutal murder to kids shoplifting chips. Unreal. pic.twitter.com/jlUi552ZNw
— Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) January 7, 2025
The radical Left is going to vote against the Laken Riley Act, with a Squad member comparing Laken’s brutal murder to kids shoplifting chips. Unreal. pic.twitter.com/jlUi552ZNw
— Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) January 7, 2025
I too prefer Brandon Herrera, foul mouth notwithstanding, but we’ve yet to see an actual nomination, so…..
For the times when you have nothing else better to do than relax and sit mesmerized for a few minutes
Prime Minister of Hungary (homeplace of the Warlord of ancient Wallachia; Vlad III Țepeș the real Dracula)
⚡🇭🇺 REMINDER: Viktor Orban at @CPAC in Texas:
“Leave our children alone, the mother is a woman, the father is a man, we don’t need genders, we need RANGERS.
Less drag queens and more Chuck Norris!” pic.twitter.com/nC2jjuELMb
— Adam Moczar (@AdamMoczar) December 21, 2024
Gonna find out who’s naughty………….
SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN
Video shows store employee shooting at armed robbery suspect in New Orleans East incident
NEW ORLEANS — Surveillance video reveals the tense moments leading up to a fatal shooting during an armed robbery at a convenience store in New Orleans East.
The shooting happened in the 8400 Blk of S I-10 Service Road around 7:50 p.m. Tuesday.
The store employee told WWL Louisiana that two young people walked in with guns and demanded cash. 16-year-old Cecil Batiz was killed in the incident. Police identified the other suspect as 18-year-old Teony Juarez.
Attempted robbery in New Orleans ends in both would be robbers receiving lead and copper injections 🇺🇸👌🏽
"Batiz and a second suspect, 18-year-old Teony Juarez, attempted to rob the business at gunpoint when the manager opened fire, striking both suspects."#CityLife #NewOrleans… pic.twitter.com/223wRj8JHD
— Mrgunsngear (@Mrgunsngear) December 5, 2024
UnitedHealthcare CEO Shot and Killed Outside Hotel in Gun-Controlled NYC
Fifty-year-old UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot and killed by a masked gunman outside the Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan as he arrived for a conference around 6:45 a.m. on Wednesday.
The New York Post reported the masked attacker fired “repeatedly” at Thompson then “fled eastbound off of 6th Avenue.”
Thompson was shot in the chest during the attack and rushed to the hospital thereafter, where he died.
ABC 7 noted police believe the shooting was targeted but they do not know a motive. The masked attacker is still on the loose.
Mike Bloomberg-affiliated Everytown for Gun Safety ranks New York the No. 2 state in the Union for gun control laws, making the Empire State second only to California.
New York has universal background checks, an “assault weapons” ban, a “high capacity” magazine ban, a red flag law, gun storage requirements, a microstamping requirement for new pistols, a ban on college carry for self-defense, a ban on campus carry on K-12 campuses for classroom defense, a “sensitive places” ban for licensed concealed carriers, and much more.
Raja Cholan, Chief of the Health Data Standards Branch at the U.S. National Library of Medicine for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has raised eyebrows with his candid remarks on COVID vaccines, global health strategies, and their broader implications.
Cholan admitted he has chosen not to receive the latest COVID vaccine boosters, citing mixed evidence of their efficacy: “I haven’t gotten the latest COVID shots, and I’m not going to… there’s mixed evidence about if it really does anything.” He also expressed concerns over the risks the vaccine poses to younger individuals, saying, “For people that are 30 or under, it really increases your risk for heart conditions. The data does show that… I’m close enough to 30 to where I don’t want to have a heart attack.”
Cholan further questioned the vaccines’ effectiveness, stating, “I don’t even know if these vaccines stop you from getting COVID. They don’t.”
Cholan also linked the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) to funding research in Wuhan, China, alleging, “There is some evidence out that the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases… they might have funded Wuhan, a lab in Wuhan, China, to make COVID.” He pointed to Dr. Anthony Fauci’s former role at NIAID, claiming, “That’s where Fauci was the director. Like they might have funded some labs to do vaccine studies and disease, like to prepare for an outbreak.”
Criticizing the expedited vaccine approval process, Cholan noted the contrast with the measles vaccine, which requires multiple rounds of testing: “The measles vaccine requires several rounds of approval, but the COVID-19 vaccines were accelerated through the approvals for all of us to get our boosters.” He also highlighted the financial motivations behind the vaccines, saying, “Pfizer and Moderna are just getting a bunch of money from it.”
Cholan concluded by commenting on the difficulty of implementing reform, even under an administration led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He pointed to the entrenched relationships between federal agencies and pharmaceutical companies, adding, “Anything that RFK would want to do probably would just, like, wouldn’t happen.”
O’Keefe Media Group reached out to Cholan for comment regarding his statements but did not receive a response. On release day of the first installation of the NIH Tapes, Cholan deleted his LinkedIn account, sparking further speculation about his involvement in the issues raised.
Hawkins: Self-Defense Is the ‘Central Component’ of the Second Amendment
The Second Amendment references a militia, “the security of a free State,” and two specific rights–the right to possess arms and the right to carry them–and all of this is bound together by a general, overarching right to self-defense.
To put it simply, the Second Amendment is multi-faceted.
It is multi-faceted in the following ways: It makes clear the importance of the people being able to come together in militia, noting that such a militia must be “well regulated.” In other words, that militia must be well ordered. It warns that “the security of a free state” rests on the reality and performance of such a militia and then points specifically to the people’s right to “keep” arms and to “bear” arms, that is, the right to possess arms and to carry them.
Despite the numerous and different aspects of the Second Amendment, it remains simple to understand because all the aspects of it are held together by a central component, and that component is self-defense.
In the majority opinion for McDonald v. Chicago (2010), United States Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito wrote, “Self-defense is a basic right, recognized by many legal systems from ancient times to the present day, and in Heller, we held that individual self-defense is ‘the central component’ of the Second Amendment right.”
I like to present it this way when speaking to groups and organizations around the country: “Self-defense is the hinge on which the door of the Second Amendment swings.”
What does this mean for the American people? It means that while the Second Amendment protects guns, it protects other tools that can be used for self-defense as well. The “central component” of the Second Amendment is not a 9mm pistol or a .357 Magnum revolver, but the right to defend one’s own life and liberty with whatever tools are in common use for such defense in each period of America’s existence.
For example, the Massachusetts Supreme Court recently struck down that state’s ban on switchblades and issued an opinion which said, in part, “While both Heller and Bruen involved handguns, Second Amendment protections subsume more than just firearms.”
Your life is your most valuable possession, and the Founding Fathers put the Second Amendment in place to protect your right to defend that life. The vast majority of Americans believe a firearm is the best way to protect their lives, and the Second Amendment has them covered. A number of other Americans believe a knife or other tool is the best means for protecting their lives, and the Second Amendment has them covered as well.
Completely baffled by everyones collective intentional ignorance on this. He has a studio with massive amounts of expensive equipment and staff. Everyone, *everyone*, comes to him. He's the biggest podcaster in the world. She needs him, not the other way around. https://t.co/SAyXr6zVVU
— John Ekdahl (@JohnEkdahl) October 30, 2024
Auschwitz survivor Jerry Warstki, 94, denounces Kamala Harris in a new Trump campaign video for endorsing claims that former president is a “fascist” akin to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.
“I know more about Hitler than Kamala will ever know in a thousand lifetimes,” he says. pic.twitter.com/hPWUQXrohN
— Josh Christenson (@jchristenson_) October 25, 2024
New Minnesota tourism ad dropped 🦅 pic.twitter.com/AALm8gdYCK
— Mrgunsngear (@Mrgunsngear) October 16, 2024