YubNub Social YubNub Social
    Advanced Search
  • Login
  • Register

  • Night mode
  • © 2025 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2025 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
28 w

Bitcoin Breaks $100K, Surges to Historic High
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

Bitcoin Breaks $100K, Surges to Historic High

Bitcoin smashed the $100,000 mark Wednesday evening! After peaking at $73,000 in March 2024 following SEC approval of Bitcoin ETFs, BTC steadily climbed. It reached $90,000 in November before shattering the six-figure milestone. The surge comes amid optimism over President Donald Trump’s pro-Bitcoin policies. This is including his plans for a BTC “strategic reserve.” It was only 8 years ago that Bitcoin sat under $1,000. Now it’s on, some say, an unstoppable path to 1 million. Bitcoin hits $100,000 for first time. Traders cheer Donald Trump’s decision to pick a crypto fan to head the US securities regulator, reinforcing optimism the new president will push through measures to deregulate the sectorhttps://t.co/wk5OMkLCgC pic.twitter.com/6R3jUubgz9 — AFP News Agency (@AFP) December 5, 2024 #Bitcoin makes history hitting $100k for the first time! pic.twitter.com/8uFBmY2rnK — HOT 97 (@HOT97) December 5, 2024 Breitbart reports: Bitcoin (BTC) sold for over $100,000 in Wednesday evening trading, hitting another all-time high benchmark value in its nascent bull run. The digital asset peaked around its previous 2022 record of $73,000 in March 2024, weeks after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved several exchange-traded funds (ETFs) for investors seeking to acquire it, according to data from CoinMarketCap.com. At the end of October, Bitcoin came close to that $73,000 record before retreating in the 60,000s range, then rocketing to a new all-time high of $75,000 before the end of the first week of November. Since then, BTC has sailed past new price benchmarks, first selling for $90,000 on November 13. In the course of an hour, BTC surged from roughly $98,500 to $103,000 Wednesday evening, smashing a six-figure price barrier that felt unthinkable a decade ago, when the asset spent an entire year under $1,000. Several factors may have contributed to the past month’s price action; investors may have been energized by President-elect Donald Trump’s victory over Kamala Harris (Trump vowed to create a BTC “strategic reserve” and appealed directly to Bitcoiners on the campaign trail) and the announcement that Gary Gensler — a villain in the eyes of many cryptocurrency fans — would step down from the SEC once Trump takes office. But one of the key elements in Bitcoin’s perennial rise is its “halving” — a 50% reduction in its issuance of new “coin” units — that occurs every four years, making the “mining” that secures the network that records the ledger of BTC transactions more competitive and costly. The latest Bitcoin halving occurred in April 2024. Just as it did in 2012, 2016, and 2020, BTC appears to be entering price discovery roughly five months after the latest halving. Historically, Bitcoin has grown in cycles of parabolic ascent and “crashes” down to prices far above the previous cycle’s highs. Bitcoin rose above $100,000 for the first time as the election of Republican Donald Trump as president of the United States spurred expectations that his administration will create a friendly regulatory environment for cryptocurrencies https://t.co/39aUulTWkQ pic.twitter.com/mcmybroYnA — Reuters (@Reuters) December 5, 2024 Thinking it will keep rising? Is a million mark in the near future? BREAKING: BITCOIN CROSSES $100k Source: @WatcherGuru pic.twitter.com/YHy7yCVJs4 — Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) December 5, 2024
Like
Comment
Share
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
28 w

DOJ Investigates Allegations Against Jack Smith
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

DOJ Investigates Allegations Against Jack Smith

So, here’s the latest regarding Jack Smith. The Justice Department just told the House Judiciary Committee about an investigation him. Turns out they were looking into wrongdoing claims against Smith and his team. But the details are a bit unclear. The DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) mentioned that the alleged misconduct happened back in June 2023. But they didn’t take action. Why? Well, they were too busy trying to get President Donald Trump. How did that work out for them? Yeah, a colossal waste of time and taxpayer’s dollars. JUST IN: DOJ Briefed House Judiciary Committee on Internal Investigation It Opened Into Jack Smith’s Office Over Misconduct Allegations https://t.co/ukuSKe8fSb pic.twitter.com/zdaonocmTm — The Gateway Pundit (@gatewaypundit) December 5, 2024 Time is ticking down for ol’ Jack Smith. Wonder how he feels now that the tables are turning? The Gateway Pundit reports: The Justice Department briefed the House Judiciary Committee about an investigation it opened into Special Counsel Jack Smith and his prosecutors over misconduct allegations, according to a letter obtained by The Washington Examiner. Details about the misconduct were not immediately clear. The DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) told Chairman Jim Jordan’s committee last month about a misconduct allegation that took place in June 2023. The OPR did not take any action against Jack Smith’s office due to the ongoing lawfare investigations into Trump. Both of Jack Smith’s cases against President Trump have been terminated since Trump won the 2024 presidential election. DOJ briefs House GOP on internal inquiry into Jack Smith misconduct allegationshttps://t.co/d3CP7JIPeV — Rep. Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) December 5, 2024 #BREAKING: DOJ briefed the Committee on prosecutorial misconduct by Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team. Chairman @Jim_Jordan demands the DOJ produce the requested documents and information. pic.twitter.com/FIpwnZVARg — House Judiciary GOP (@JudiciaryGOP) December 5, 2024 Washington Examiner adds: EXCLUSIVE — The Department of Justice recently briefed the House Judiciary Committee about an internal investigation it had opened into special counsel Jack Smith’s office, according to committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH). Jordan wrote Wednesday in a letter obtained by the Washington Examiner to Jeffrey Ragsdale, the DOJ Office of Professional Responsibility official who gave the briefing, that Jordan was unsatisfied with the information Ragsdale provided during it. Ragsdale had said during the briefing, which took place last month, that he opened the inquiry into possible misconduct by Smith’s office in June 2023 but that he had not been able to take any further investigative steps while Smith’s prosecutions of President-elect Donald Trump remained pending, per Jordan. Ragsdale had said any action he took would have interfered with Smith’s cases, both of which have been terminated since Trump’s election win.
Like
Comment
Share
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
28 w

VIDEO: Captured Moment United Healthcare CEO Fatally Shot, Police Say Targeted Attack
Favicon 
100percentfedup.com

VIDEO: Captured Moment United Healthcare CEO Fatally Shot, Police Say Targeted Attack

United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, 50, was shot and killed outside a Midtown Manhattan hotel Wednesday morning. The police believe this was a targeted attack. As Thompson walks on the sidewalk, a masked gunman calmly steps out of the shadows and raises the gun, with silencer, and fires into his back. After the shooting, he calmly walks off. No panic, just leaves. People have pointed out that the conference was at 8am, so how did this shooter know he was going to arrive early? Did someone leak info to the shooter? The suspect fled the scene on a bicycle and remains at large. Online sleuths think they’ve figured out what gun was used. It appears to be a weapon made around World War 2, a Welrod Mark IIA or a remake. UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was facing DOJ probe for insider trading when he was killed in targeted NYC shooting https://t.co/rOz3CPK88B pic.twitter.com/turuUiuPtM — New York Post (@nypost) December 4, 2024 Seems events like UnitedHealthcare’s Brian Thompson getting fatally shot only happen when CEOs are on their way to testify against democrats. #BigPharma pic.twitter.com/3bbPhwzrQi — Liberals Leaving (@LiberalsLeaving) December 4, 2024 The Gateway Pundit reports: United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot in the chest Wednesday morning outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan in what is believed to be a targeted attack. Thompson, 50, arrived before 7 am for a conference when he was shot at multiple times by a masked man who police say was waiting for him to arrive, the New York Post reports. Thompson was pronounced dead at the Mt Sinai Hospital. No suspects are in custody, and police are looking for a male with a cream-colored jacket, black and white sneakers, and a grey backpack. The shooter was not a guest at the hotel and was seen near the hotel prior to the shooting. And he’s off, on the getaway bicycle. It won’t be long before this person is caught. BREAKING: The person who shot and killed UnitedHealth $UNH CEO Brian Thompson used a silencer, arrived only minutes beforehand, suggesting this was a professional hit. pic.twitter.com/xeWFpTgYh2 — Financelot (@FinanceLancelot) December 4, 2024 #WATCH : NYPD releases more images of the suspect who shot and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Midtown, Manhattan, on Wednesday morning. #BrianThompson #UnitedHealthcare #murder #shot #Shooting #NYPD #Manhattan pic.twitter.com/AHTgbevytl — upuknews (@upuknews1) December 4, 2024 Shell casings found had been inscribed: BREAKING: Detectives discovered the words “deny,” “defend,” and “depose” inscribed on the shell casings found at the scene where Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare, was fatally shot. pic.twitter.com/ghw7u26R7d — The General (@GeneralMCNews) December 5, 2024 WARNING. Video captures the murder taking place: Chilling surveillance footage shows the moment UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot from behind outside the Hilton hotel in midtown Manhattan. Crazy how close a bystander was to Thompson when the mysterious gunman began firing: pic.twitter.com/e93cW4YKEK — Andrew Tavani (@andrewtavani) December 4, 2024 Here is the culprit ten minutes before the murder: Around 6:30 a.m., the man who fatally shot Brian Thompson, was seemingly on a phone call as he walks along the sidewalk about 175 feet from the spot where Thompson was shot. The video is 10 minutes before the shooting. pic.twitter.com/pIVaxnID3S — Nerdy ????? (@Nerdy_Addict) December 4, 2024 People are trying to determine what kind of gun was used. Turns out there are silencers that are quieter than an electric car turning on. Close up of the shooter and his gun: Warning, this is a clip of the shooter from the shooting of Brian Thompson today. This does not show the victim, only the gun. Just some interesting things I noticed. Look into it bro. #BrianThompson #Brian_Thompson pic.twitter.com/TMLRbKpRTG — DB (@TrueCrimeAudit) December 5, 2024 Is this the weapon? Here you have it! The pistol used to kill Thompson. It has to be reloaded after every shot like a bolt action. A classic WW II era weapon. This was a professional hit. pic.twitter.com/f6bt2HQGyw — BAY RIDGE and BEYOND (@ThomasHBROOLYN) December 5, 2024 The Brian Thompson hit gun looks like a Welrod assassin’s pistol from WW2, or a remake of it. The “silencer” is built-in. They can be tricky to operate which is why the shooter had trouble. pic.twitter.com/ijID8R1Zay — BillyInDallas (@BillyInParis) December 4, 2024 A similar model: @NYPDTips this is the handgun I believe the shooter used in the Brian Thompson shooting. pic.twitter.com/CAUhHoCjsi — Major Buzz (@OperationWTF) December 5, 2024
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
28 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
Military will be focused on defending the nation under Hegseth: Sen. Ron Johnson | Wake Up America
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
28 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
The Gerry Callahan Show LIVE (12/05/2024) | NEWSMAX Podcasts
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
28 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
Florida has created a model for how we should govern: Miami Mayor Francis Suarez | Wake Up America
Like
Comment
Share
Independent Sentinel News Feed
Independent Sentinel News Feed
28 w

This Is What We Know About the Brian Thompson Assassination & Possible Motive
Favicon 
www.independentsentinel.com

This Is What We Know About the Brian Thompson Assassination & Possible Motive

United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was murdered yesterday morning by a cold-blooded killer with a gun equipped with a silencer. The killer escaped. Healthcare agencies have tightened security around their executives, and United Healthcare has a house security team, but Mr. Thompson was only going to cross the street from one elegant hotel to another […] The post This Is What We Know About the Brian Thompson Assassination & Possible Motive appeared first on www.independentsentinel.com.
Like
Comment
Share
BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
28 w

Why So Hush-Hush About What's Going On In New Jersey?
Favicon 
www.blabber.buzz

Why So Hush-Hush About What's Going On In New Jersey?

Like
Comment
Share
Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
28 w

Secret Service Director To Promise ‘Accountability’ Over ‘Abject Failure’ At Butler Rally
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Secret Service Director To Promise ‘Accountability’ Over ‘Abject Failure’ At Butler Rally

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe is set to testify Thursday morning before a House task force investigating the attempted assassination of President-elect Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Rowe will be questioned by a 13-member independent panel that released a report in October finding the Secret Service responsible for the “preventable” attempt on Trump’s life. Rowe is expected to tell lawmakers that disciplinary actions are being taken for the lapses that allowed 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks to get within 150 yards of Trump and shoot him in the ear during a rally in Butler on July 13. “Employees receiving proposals of discipline will be provided due process under agency policy as well as any applicable laws and regulations. But, let me be clear, there will be accountability, and that accountability is occurring,” Rowe will say, according to a copy of his prepared remarks shared with ABC. “Consistent with applicable laws and regulations, I cannot comment further on specific disciplinary actions underway or being considered.” Rowe will also say that the agency has made several major changes to securing locations, including more coordination with law enforcement partners. At the Butler rally, numerous communication errors delayed law enforcement’s response to Crooks, who had been identified as a person of interest more than an hour before he opened fire.  “My goal is to improve our mission effectiveness and rebuild public trust,” according to Rowe’s written testimony. “One of the key systemic changes was the directive to mandate a unified command in a singular location for all protective sites, something that was not done on July 13th in Butler. This co-location enhances our communications and intelligence-sharing mechanisms with state, local and federal partners to better anticipate threats and respond to them more swiftly.” Other changes implemented, according to a copy of his remarks shared with Fox News, included using more drones, ensuring radios are in order, and increasing staffing levels for agents protecting Trump. CHECK OUT THE DAILY WIRE HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE Rowe’s prepared testimony says the Butler rally, where Trump was shot, supporter Corey Comperatore was killed, and two other rallygoers were injured, exposed “critical gaps” in the Secret Service’s operations and was an “abject failure.”  “July 13th was a failure of the Secret Service to adequately secure the Butler Farm Show site and protect President-elect Trump,” Rowe is expected to say. “While I cannot undo the harm that has been done, I am committed to doing everything in my power to ensure that the Secret Service never has a failure like this again.” In its report, the House panel faulted the Secret Service for failing to secure the roof from where Crooks fired at Trump and setting up a security perimeter that allowed people to get within around 150 yards of the stage where Trump was speaking without going through security screening.  Investigations by both the Senate and an independent panel formed by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have also found the Secret Service liable for the attack.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
28 w

Only 6% Of Feds Work From An Office Full-Time — And Some Aren’t Working At All, Audit Finds
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Only 6% Of Feds Work From An Office Full-Time — And Some Aren’t Working At All, Audit Finds

Only 6% of federal employees work from an office full-time, and a third are fully remote. And some aren’t actually working when they “work from home,” a Senate investigation found. “Washington is still operating as if it’s March 2020,” Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA), the chair of the Senate DOGE Caucus and the report’s author, wrote. “Just three percent of the federal workforce teleworked daily prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Today, six percent of workers report in-person on a full-time basis, while nearly one-third are entirely remote,” the report states. Government office buildings have an occupancy rate of only 12%, yet the government spends $16 billion a year to operate them. Even the head of the General Services Administration, which manages federal real estate, works from home in Missouri. “You may be more likely to see a ghost than a bureaucrat haunting the halls of some government buildings in Washington, D.C. these days,” Ernst continued. Office buildings are so empty that the water supply at the office of the Environmental Protection Agency — which is tasked with ensuring clean drinking water — was left stagnant for so long that it developed dangerous bacteria, according to the audit. But unions have demanded that full individual workstations for each employee be maintained for the rare occasions they are used, in addition to demanding that members be allowed to work from home. Elon Musk, co-chair of the incoming Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, has signaled that federal employees should have to work from the office — and those who don’t want to can quit, resulting in a leaner government. President Joe Biden used his 2022 State of the Union to say that federal employees must return to the office, and his chief of staff repeatedly demanded that cabinet officials follow through because “there’s no substitute for face-to-face.” Yet the Biden administration signed a contract, in the waning days of his presidency, with the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) union locking them into telework through 2029. That’s despite the fact that administration just completed a $120 million office renovation on a massive SSA headquarters that is 91% unused. One SSA employee ran a personal home inspection business for three years while supposedly doing his job from home, having his mother occasionally send emails from his computer “Apparently, the president of a public employees union, not the President of the United States, is currently deciding personnel policy for the U.S government,” Ernst wrote. Federal employees get paid more when their offices are in high cost-of-living areas. But at some agencies, up to 80% of teleworking employees now live in lower cost-of-living areas, while still collecting the higher pay. Some agency heads have told Congress that they have implemented policies requiring employees to come to work a few days per pay period, but reports from the ground suggest that’s not actually enforced. More than 90% of Department of Housing and Urban Development employees work from home and are not required to come to the office more than once a week. One HUD employee — a former union president — allegedly got a DUI while supposedly working from home. Remote work enabled another woman to hold two six-figure government jobs at the same time, with each employer thinking she was working full-time. The Patent and Trade Office considers itself a pioneer in teleworking, having widely done so since the 1990s. But in one nine-month period, it paid at least $8.8 million in hourly wages that “teleworking” employees didn’t actually work, its inspector general found. The federal government doesn’t have widespread systems monitoring whether employees log in to their computers, or from where, each day, Ernst said. When the Department of Health and Human Services did look at employees’ computer logins, it found that up to 30% of “teleworkers” on any given day were not actually working during the COVID pandemic, when the health department was presumably needed. The VA’s website advertises to prospective employees: “At VA, you can break away from the traditional 9 to 5, 40-hour workweek without sacrificing the opportunities and benefits that come with job security.” Despite an epidemic of veteran suicides, one-third of calls to a mental health hotline for veterans went unanswered in Atlanta, with “no sense of urgency.” Therapists didn’t show up for appointments with veterans, while the Veterans Affairs manager responsible for scheduling the appointments posted a photo online showing he was “working” from a bubble bath. The report said that only two of 76 local offices actually picked up the phone at the IRS, whose inspector general said “maximizing telework in response to the pandemic … may have contributed to declines in productivity.” The Biden administration has also made a massive number of new hires at the IRS, even though it’s not clear the existing employees are working to their potential. Ernst said, “If bureaucrats don’t want to return to work, make their wish come true.” She proposed that the government be required to sell off any real estate that is not being fully used, and that agencies should also be relocated across the country to lower-cost areas that have a connection to the work being done—with the Department of Agriculture, for example, being in farm country. The Strategic Withdrawal of Agencies for Meaningful Placement (SWAMP) Act, and several other pieces of proposed legislation, would do that.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 1119 out of 56666
  • 1115
  • 1116
  • 1117
  • 1118
  • 1119
  • 1120
  • 1121
  • 1122
  • 1123
  • 1124
  • 1125
  • 1126
  • 1127
  • 1128
  • 1129
  • 1130
  • 1131
  • 1132
  • 1133
  • 1134

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund