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Showing posts sorted by date for query region. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2025

JD Vance Drops Truth Bombs on Canada

Canada is being overrun by migrants. - David Strom
Almost half of all births are now to foreign-born mothers (42% currently, and rising), and one-third of the overall population is foreign-born.
One of the many terrible consequences of the liberal policies that have resulted in this replacement of the native population is stagnating economic growth.
  • ...it is undeniable that replacing a high-trust first-world citizenry with people from a low-trust, low-education, and low-productivity region is bound to make your society and economy lose vitality and eventually collapse...
Ask Rome about that, if you like....

Absolute MUST READ! -----'Jobs Americans Won't Do': The Lie That Broke a Nation and the Economic and Social Devastation It Hid

Charlotte, N.C., is making headlines this week because dozens of construction sites have gone silent. ICE swept through the region, and the labor force evaporated almost instantly. - Jamie K. Wilson 
A major American city discovered, in real time, that its building boom was being held together by workers who couldn’t legally be there. 
  • Watching that footage hit me hard, because I’ve seen it before — not on the evening news, but in the slow collapse of my own childhood community...
Too good to synopsize, read it all!

Sunday, November 02, 2025

'Democrats' Hitler talk': Concern over violent threats pushes Trump team into protected housing * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

'Democrats' Hitler talk': Concern over violent threats pushes Trump team into protected housing * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

Concern over violent Democrats, violent Democrat rhetoric and those who would act on those words is pushing a number of Trump administration officials into protected housing on military installations in the Washington, D.C., region.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

The Green Agenda Turned New England Into an Energy Price Punchline | RealClearEnergy

Every month, the electric bill arrives, and it’s larger than the month before. - Daniel Turner
The region pays more for electricity than almost anyone else in America—higher than the national average and, outside of Alaska and Hawaii, higher than anywhere else in the country
This is not a coincidence. 
  • It is the inevitable result of politicians who pushed the risky and unreliable green agenda while forcing reliable power plants off the grid.
Here's an inconvenient history lesson. 
  • When Joe Biden took office, electricity in New England cost 20.7 cents per kilowatt-hour. 
  • By the time he left, it was more than 28.2 cents. That’s a staggering spike of more than 36% in just four years...

Tuesday, September 02, 2025

Depending on government to save you??!!-----A Katrina Odyssey: A Reporter Recounts Devastation, Confusion, Moments of Grace | RealClearInvestigations

As a reporter for the New Orleans Times-Picayune in 2005, James Varney was on the front lines of the newspaper’s coverage as Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region.
Initially, New Orleans appeared to have been spared the storm’s full force. 
But a natural disaster became far worse because of human error as the levees failed, unleashing catastrophic flooding, submerging large swaths of the city...
  • Delayed and disorganized responses at local, state, and federal levels deepened the crisis...
  • Meanwhile, some police officers themselves were implicated in looting and abuses.
Nearly 1,400 people died and hundreds of thousands were displaced...

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

History for August 26

History for August 26 - On-This-Day.com 
Irving R. Levine 1922
  • 55 B.C. - Britain was invaded by Roman forces under Julius Caesar.
  • 1498 - Michelangelo was commissioned to make the "Pieta."
  • 1847 - Liberia was proclaimed as an independent republic.
  • 1920 - The 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution went into effect. The amendment prohibited discrimination on the basis of sex in the voting booth.
  • 1934 - Adolf Hitler demanded that France turn over their Saar region to Germany.
  • 1945 - The Japanese were given surrender instructions on the U.S. battleship Missouri at the end of World War II.
  • 1957 - The first Edsel made by the Ford Motor Company rolled of the assembly line.

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Blaze Media's Julio Rosas embeds with Noem's DHS as it slams shut South America's illegal migration pipeline | Blaze Media

Blaze Media's Julio Rosas embeds with Noem's DHS as it slams shut South America's illegal migration pipeline | Blaze Media

Rosas stated that Noem's DHS has plans to conduct a tour, beginning with Argentina and continuing to Chile and Ecuador, to sign new agreements with these countries to "help crack down on illegal migration from this region to North America."

Monday, June 23, 2025

Much, much here, read all!!-----Instapundit - ‘We Came, We Saw, He Died:’ Dems’ Breathtaking Hypocrisy On War Powers.

Obama never even bothered to formally report the action to Congress - 

ED MORRISSEY: ‘We Came, We Saw, He Died:’ Dems’ Breathtaking Hypocrisy On War Powers.

...All of this venting reveals very short memories on the port side of Capitol Hill. Fourteen years ago, they couldn’t get enough of presidential strikes on a nation in the very same region. Remember Hillary Clinton’s chortling over the fall of Moammar Qaddafi and the role she and Barack Obama played in it? “We came, we saw, he died,” she raved to Leslie Stahl after a joint US-EU bombing campaign decapitated Qaddafi’s regime, and left a failed state in its wake:

In March 2011, Obama ordered a series of military strikes on regime targets in Libya, not because of a clear and present danger to US security or assets, but because of a “responsibility to protect” doctrine promoted by Samantha Power. ...and without going to Congress conducted military attacks with the express purpose of collapsing his regime in favor of the rebels in and around Benghazi — a bitter irony, in the end.

Obama never even bothered to formally report the action to Congress...

Nancy Pelosi is in full “past performance is no guarantee of future results” mode:

The Squad is similarly Big Mad at – checks notes – Trump preventing Ayatollah Khamenei from acquiring a nuclear weapon...

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

‘MI is part of MISO grid!-----How does this happen?’ Power outages hit blue city on holiday weekend after months of warnings - Audrey Streb

New Orleans was plunged into darkness on Sunday afternoon when the region’s grid operator cut off power to reduce usage, a “last resort” measure to prevent a large-scale blackout
The Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO), a major electrical grid operator, directed the energy company Entergy to reduce power with only three minutes’ notice to prevent a blackout, affecting nearly 100,000 customers...
...President Donald Trump’s administration, energy policy experts and multiple North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) reports have signaled that MISO is at an elevated risk for blackouts due in part to phasing out coal-fired power plants...
  • “How does this happen?” New Orleans City Council member Joe Giarrusso told Nola.com. “There are lots of questions that need answering.”...

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Tennessee Valley Authority gets a Trump-style reckoning | Blaze Media

Tennessee Valley Authority gets a Trump-style reckoning | Blaze Media

For the first time in TVA history, the agency failed to produce enough electricity to meet demand. Rolling blackouts swept the region. Why? Because the TVA lacked enough baseline reliable energy. On those near-zero nights, solar energy produced exactly zero kilowatts.

That’s the future TVA customers would face under the fantasy energy plans pushed by climate zealots like Michelle Moore and Joe Ritch: blackouts in the dead of winter and no backup.

TVA leadership has failed in other ways too — most notably by outsourcing American jobs. In 2020, CEO Jeff Lyash tried to replace over 100 U.S. tech workers with foreign nationals on H-1B visas. While gutting working-class jobs, Lyash collected nearly $8 million a year, making him the highest-paid federal employee. One longtime worker said employees were expected to train their foreign replacements before being shown the door.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Hmm, I thought slavery was uniquely American… John L Hoh Jr

Between the 1600s and 1900s, North African pirates captured and enslaved up to 1.25 million Europeans who came to be known as the white slaves of Barbary.
May be an illustration of 2 people
Between the 1600s and 1900s, North African pirates captured and enslaved up to 1.25 million Europeans who came to be known as the white slaves of Barbary.
The Barbary slave trade involved the capture and selling of European slaves at slave markets in the largely independent Ottoman Barbary states...
The Barbary slave trade came to an end in the early years of the 19th century, after the United States and Western European allies won the First and Second Barbary Wars against the pirates and the region was conquered by France, putting an end to the trade by the 1830s...

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Coming to the Midwestsoon??!!-----This RTO Could See Blackouts By 2028

Save the coal, spare the blackouts - Surprise! It’s MISO 
In its 2024 Long-Term Reliability Assessment (LTRA), the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) identified the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) as the region most at risk of rolling blackouts, stating the regional transmission organization (RTO) “falls below established resource adequacy criteria in the next five years.”
NERC warns:
MISO’s capacity resource turnover continues to occur with coal unit contributions being primarily replaced by solar, wind, and battery facilities...
This prompted us to wonder: 
  • How soon could we reasonably expect the first blackouts to affect the region, based on announced coal retirements and historical fluctuations in hourly wind and solar generation, as well as electricity demand? 
  • And how bad might these blackouts be if more reliable power plants are retired through 2030?...

Saturday, February 01, 2025

Report: Soros-owned radio station doxes ICE agents hunting for violent gang criminals * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

Report: Soros-owned radio station doxes ICE agents hunting for violent gang criminals * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

A radio station that is owned by radical leftist and open borders advocate George Soros reportedly has doxed federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who were hunting for criminals in a region of San Jose, California, known for its violent gangs.

Such doxing – the public identification of vehicles or individuals – could allow gang member suspects to evade arrest, or even turn on the officers and injure them.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Report: Soros-owned radio station doxes ICE agents hunting for violent gang criminals * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

Report: Soros-owned radio station doxes ICE agents hunting for violent gang criminals * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

A radio station that is owned by radical leftist and open borders advocate George Soros reportedly has doxed federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who were hunting for criminals in a region of San Jose, California, known for its violent gangs.

Such doxing – the public identification of vehicles or individuals – could allow gang member suspects to evade arrest, or even turn on the officers and injure them.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Behind Trump’s Greenland Comment, Years of Concern Over Growing China, Russia Influence

Both the Trump and Biden administrations have warned about rising risks in the Arctic over the last 8 years. - Emel Akan 
“I’m not going to commit to that,” Trump said on Jan. 7 when asked if he would rule out using military or economic coercion to control both Greenland and the Panama Canal...
  • One of the benefits of Trump’s approach, whether intentional or not, is that it creates public discourse on issues that would typically be handled behind the scenes, Michael Walsh, a U.S. foreign policy expert, told The Epoch Times.
  • “It stirs discussion and debate. And you’re seeing that right now. You hear people on the metro talking about Greenland and Panama,” Walsh said...
During Trump’s first term, the State Department worked to deepen ties with both islands to counter Russian and Chinese activity in the Arctic. 
These concerns persisted under Biden, who introduced an Arctic strategy in 2022 to counter growing competition, especially China’s “Polar Silk Road.” Walsh noted that both administrations share similar views on the risks in the region...
  • China in recent years has been ambitiously developing its commercial and military capabilities in the Arctic. 
  • In addition, Russian and Chinese warships are operating together more frequently in the region...
“Greenland is important because the Arctic has become important,” Gordon Chang, political commentator and China expert, told The Epoch Times. “And China and Russia are seeking to control the Arctic.”...

Climate Expert: Media Are Falsely Blaming Climate Change For Calif. Wildfires - Climate Change Dispatch

Climate Expert: Media Are Falsely Blaming Climate Change For Calif. Wildfires - Climate Change Dispatch - Anthony Watts
The devastating wildfires in Los Angeles have once again become a rallying cry for those blaming climate change for natural disasters. [emphasis, links added]

Recent coverage, such as stories in Axios and by the BBC hastily and falsely connect these wildfires to a “rare confluence of climate factors,” a narrative that has become all too familiar.



However, any such connection is unsupported by data.

As is often the case, linking individual wildfires or even a single year’s wildfires to long-term climate change oversimplifies complex natural events, failing to address the broader context.

To truly understand these fires, we must consider history, meteorology, and land management—not just the latest climate narrative.

California has a long history of wildfires, the vast majority of which occurred well before human-induced climate change became a point of discussion. Historical records and studies show that the region has always been prone to cycles of fire.


For example, a study published by the U.S. Forest Service highlights the significant role of wildfires in the natural ecology of California, with fire-return intervals ranging from decades to centuries, depending on the ecosystem.

Native Americans set fires to manage vegetation and prevent catastrophic wildfires. However, these practices were abandoned after European settlement, contributing to the accumulation of fuel in forests.

Today’s fires, while tragic, fit into a long history of natural and human-influenced fire activity in the region.

The cause? Santa Ana Winds, which is weather, not climate.

The current fires in Los Angeles are largely driven by the infamous Santa Ana winds, a well-documented weather phenomenon. These dry, gusty winds blow from the inland deserts toward the coast, creating the perfect conditions for rapid fire spread.

The National Weather Service provides detailed explanations of the Santa Ana winds, describing how they are driven by high-pressure systems over the Great Basin. All it takes is a spark or an arsonist. to initiate a raging wind-driven wildfire.

In this satellite video below from the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, note how the Santa Ana wind, coming from the Northeast, is fanning the fire, and blowing the smoke out to sea at a rapid pace.



The Axios article frames the fires as being fueled by “climate factors,” but Santa Ana winds have not changed as the planet has warmed and are a textbook example of weather, not climate.

Weather describes short-term atmospheric conditions, while climate refers to long-term trends over decades or centuries. To conflate the two is to misrepresent the science.

Another critical factor in California’s wildfire problem is land management. Decades of fire suppression policies have allowed fuel – (aka dead trees, dry brush, and dense vegetation) – to accumulate, creating tinderbox conditions.

A report from Cal Fire explains the role of vegetation management in reducing fire risks and outlines how fuel accumulation has made fires more intense.


Why does every natural disaster now seem to come with a climate change label?

Meanwhile, urban expansion into wildland areas (the so-called wildland-urban interface) places more homes and infrastructure in harm’s way. Studies by the University of California, Berkeley, highlight the challenges posed by housing developments in fire-prone areas.

Historically, fires that would have naturally thinned forests and cleared underbrush were extinguished, leading to denser forests that burn more intensely.

These issues receive far less attention than the simplistic claim that “climate change” is to blame.

Why does every natural disaster now seem to come with a climate change label?

The media and policymakers have increasingly tied singular weather events—hurricanes, droughts, floods, and now wildfires—to global warming, aka climate change.

While it’s true that the climate influences weather patterns, the leap to blaming every fire or flood on climate change often skips over critical context.

The Axios article refers to “rare climate factors” but offers little in terms of specifics. Are these factors quantifiable, or are they speculative? Without rigorous data, these claims serve more as hyperbolic talking points than scientific evidence.

Blaming wildfires on climate change might make for an easy headline, but it distracts from real solutions. Improving forest management, enforcing sensible building codes, and investing in early detection and firefighting infrastructure could significantly reduce the risk and impact of wildfires.

The Little Hoover Commission, an independent state oversight agency, has been vocal about the need for better forest management practices in California (source).

Unblocking and stopping the removal of forest roads, for example, to allow easier access by firefighters to fires in distant wilderness areas before they become large conflagrations that reach populated areas would be one good policy response to reduce the land, buildings, and lives lost to wildfires.

Reinstituting large-scale logging on overcrowded forested areas to reduce the fuel available when fires start would be another.

Policies driven by the climate change narrative often prioritize symbolic actions over practical measures. For example, California’s focus on renewable energy mandates and electric vehicles (EVs) will have little or no impact on either the short- or long-term risks of wildfires.

Worse, these policies can siphon resources away from critical fire prevention measures.

California’s wildfires are tragic, but they are not unprecedented. The media’s rush to attribute these fires to climate change reflects a broader trend of politicizing natural disasters, often at the expense of meaningful solutions.

It’s essential to approach the wildfire issue with a clear-eyed understanding of history, science, and policy.

The fires in Los Angeles are a reminder not of climate doom, but of the importance of thoughtful land management and disaster preparedness—solutions grounded in reality, not rhetoric.