Friday, October 24, 2025

New York's Mafia families connected to NBA gambling scandal

New York's infamous crime families are making headlines again. - Josh Meyer
  • Gambino. 
  • Bonanno. 
  • Genovese. 
  • Lucchese. 
Meet the Mafia families in the NBA gambling scandal
Two sprawling and long-running investigations into illegal sports betting and rigged poker games were backed in some cases by four of the major New York Mafia families, federal prosecutors allege...

What ever happened to the left's lie, "if it saves just one life"??

 


Ken Blackwell - BREAKING NEWS: $300 Million Dark-Money Operation... | Facebook

A massive political operation disguised as a “grassroots movement” has just been exposed for what it really is… a billionaire-funded campaign designed to undermine Donald J. Trump before he even completes his transition back into office! - Ken Blackwell
Documents reveal more than 
  • $79.7 million funneled through the Arabella network, another 
  • $72.1 million from the Soros empire, 
  • $51.7 million from the Ford Foundation network, 
  • $45.5 million from Tides, 
  • $28.6 million from Rockefeller-backed organizations, and 
  • $16.6 million linked to Buffett foundations...
  • $100 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 
  • over $50 million from Mark Zuckerberg-affiliated groups, 
  • $20 million from Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, and nearly 
  • $245 million from Swiss billionaire Hansjörg Wyss — 
all flowing into the same infrastructure now powering the “No Kings” protests...

#1 This day 1965-----Yesterday

Overdue for De-NORKification of our Uniforms

It is just an opportunity to point out again a problem that a lot of us continue to hope for action on: the obscene bloat of awards, badges, and pins. CDR Salamander
In other words, how does the existing U.S. military awards program actively promote the Secretary of War’s call to restore America’s warfighting ethos? 
Unfortunately, the answer is that it does not.
No, not even close. 
  • Just the opposite, it has now become almost a joke.
  • The farcical “everyone gets a trophy” issue has to be at its peak. 
It has been an issue for decades and really can’t keep going like this...







They have no idea what they're protesting!

 


Report: Anti-Trump Accountant Opened Fire on MAGA Supporter's Home After Ripping Down Flag

Report: Anti-Trump Accountant Opened Fire on MAGA Supporter's Home After Ripping Down Flag

It was a case of Trump Derangement Syndrome that was nearly fatal.

A man who allegedly decided to rip down a sign supporting President Donald Trump outside a home in rural North Carolina, then apparently fired a handgun at the building, is facing charges that could put him in prison for almost 20 years, according to the U.K.’s Daily Mail.

On the other hand, he’s lucky to still be alive.

Tom Izzo crushes Louisville, NCAA for allowing G Leaguers to play college basketball: 'It's embarrassing.' - On3

Tom Izzo‘s thoughts?  - Jack Pilgrim
Well, the Hall of Fame coach at Michigan State is not happy about it. 
In fact, he’s pretty pissed at both Louisville for taking part and the NCAA for allowing such a thing.
Louisville wasn’t the first, but Pat Kelsey and the Cardinals made the loudest move yet in the recent trend of schools adding former G League players to their respective programs to play college basketball. London Johnson...
  • This comes after he spent two seasons with Ignite, coached by none other than Kentucky assistant Jason Hart, followed by a third season suiting up for the Cleveland Charge and Maine Celtics in the G League. 
  • Now, three years removed from high school at 21 years old, he’s going back to school as a Cardinal. He’ll enroll mid-year and sit out the rest of the season before taking the floor in 2026-27...


AM Fruitcake

 


History for October 24

History for October 24 - On-This-Day.com
Rafael Trujillo (Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Molina) 1891
  • 1632 - Scientist Anthony van Leeuwenhoek was born in Delft, Holland. He created the first microscope lenses that were powerful enough to observe single-celled animals.
  • 1795 - The country of Poland was divided up between Austria, Prussia, and Russia.
  • 1929 - In the U.S., investors dumped more than 13 million shares on the stock market. The day is known as "Black Tuesday."
  • 1939 - Nylon stockings were sold to the public for the first time in Wilmington, DE.
  • 1948 - The term "cold war" was used for the first time. It was in a speech by Bernard Baruch before the Senate War Investigating Committee.
  • 1992 - The Toronto Blue Jays became the first non-U.S. team to win the World Series.

Thursday, October 23, 2025

'This is a moral judgment': Leftist Colorado on trial, accused of continuing 'slavery' * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

'This is a moral judgment': Leftist Colorado on trial, accused of continuing 'slavery' * WorldNetDaily * by Bob Unruh

The new judge gave the two sides time to submit findings, questioning, "Do the plaintiffs have to prove that involuntary servitude is rampant throughout the state corrections system, or do they just have to prove that the current policies and practices enable involuntary servitude?"

The way we were-----How Hungary Rose Up Against Communism In 1956

Words of warning to the West: From the speaker of the Knesset

Welfare recipients go viral for freakouts over losing food stamps | Not the Bee

On November 1st, the people who take our money to get free food are going to face the horrible crisis of no free food. - Joel Abbott

The "Big Beautiful Bill," passed earlier this year by Congress and signed into law by President Trump, creates new work requirements for able-bodied adults. In order to continue receiving tax dollars for SNAP benefits, individuals must work or train for at least 20 hours per week...

Imagine the media if It was the Trump administration!!-----DAMNING NEW REPORT ADMITS: Biden's FEMA Abandoned Trump Supporters

'A game changer': Thousands of non-citizens on voter rolls in red state! * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff

'A game changer': Thousands of non-citizens on voter rolls in red state! * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump administration's decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

‘Payment Plan’ Offered to Patient was a Credit Card

Indonesian Rainforests Turned Into Open-Cast Mining Pits to Improve Range of High-End Electric Vehicles - THE DAILY SCEPTIC

Eco Smugs sitting in their top-of-the-range electric vehicles are probably unaware, or perhaps don’t want to know, about the unfolding ecological tragedy in the virgin tropical rainforests of Indonesia. - Chris Morrison
Higher EV ranges have been achieved by adding nickel to lithium-ion batteries, an addition that has also boosted the performance of some public transport buses in cities like London. 
  • As with many green ‘advances’, the ecological cost is horrendous. 
Over half the world’s supply of nickel is located in Indonesia and much of that is to be found just a few feet below unspoilt rainforests. 
Cue massive deforestation and extensive rollout of smelters and even EV battery factories....

Lunch video-----Are the Anti-Fascists the Real Fascists?

Noon-toon

 


Teacher's assistant arrested in connection with Turning Point USA attack ahead of Alex Stein event at Illinois State Univ. | Blaze Media

Teacher's assistant arrested in connection with Turning Point USA attack ahead of Alex Stein event at Illinois State Univ. | Blaze Media

On Friday, a 27-year-old teaching assistant at Illinois State University allegedly attacked a TPUSA booth where students were advertising their group as well as their Oct. 20 event featuring BlazeTV host Alex Stein.

Operative word: BORROWING!

 


A veteran-built interactive map of Afghanistan plots memories

Built as an interactive map of Afghanistan, Project Athena is an archive that veterans can upload photos to, chronicling the war as they lived it next to the memories of others. - Clay Beyersdorfer
For a generation that lived the war in Afghanistan one grid square at a time, the war now feels like a series of dots on a map. 
  • A patrol base carved out of hardpan soil. 
  • A culvert on a highway that never felt safe. 
  • A ridge where the radio went quiet.
Nathan Kehler knows the pull of those dots. 
When he and a group of fellow veterans wanted to record the war they experienced, they knew all their stories would be easiest to see laid out on a map. 
“War is chaotic, and when you’re a soldier on the ground, you rarely see the full picture,” said Kehler.
But putting memories — photos, names, notes — onto a map, and adding the memories of others, can fill out a picture of that war...


Got 'em all riled up!