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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

This Flesh-Eating 'Terror Bird' May Have Stood Over 3 Meters Tall
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This Flesh-Eating 'Terror Bird' May Have Stood Over 3 Meters Tall

The tower of terror.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
34 w

The Deadliest Kind of Brain Cancer May Have a Promising New Treatment
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The Deadliest Kind of Brain Cancer May Have a Promising New Treatment

Hope is on the horizon.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

'ALARM BELLS ARE SOUNDING': RNC co-chair reveals why Dems are startled
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www.brighteon.com

'ALARM BELLS ARE SOUNDING': RNC co-chair reveals why Dems are startled

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Independent voters are not ‘buying’ Harris’ response to Biden’s ‘garbage’ remark
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Independent voters are not ‘buying’ Harris’ response to Biden’s ‘garbage’ remark

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Gutfeld: Biden can’t be trusted to not screw up the race
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Gutfeld: Biden can’t be trusted to not screw up the race

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

'MESSAGE OF PEACE': Muslim American mayor explains Trump endorsement
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'MESSAGE OF PEACE': Muslim American mayor explains Trump endorsement

Follow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos: https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

Trump’s Independent Media Election
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www.theamericanconservative.com

Trump’s Independent Media Election

Politics Trump’s Independent Media Election The Republican nominee is harnessing an important new force in politics that left elites can’t even acknowledge. Credit: image via Shutterstock As of this writing, Donald Trump’s interview with Joe Rogan is above 40 million views on YouTube. It is three hours long, expansive, substantive, and challenging, particularly regarding Trump’s 2020 election claims. Comparatively, Kamala Harris’s only interview with Fox News, consistently cable’s most popular outlet, outpacing rivals CNN and MSNBC, had 9.2 million viewers on their channel. Released in mid-October, it has 6.2 million views on Fox News’s YouTube. Also as of this writing, Harris is refusing to do Rogan’s show unless he travels to her and only for a 45 minute interview. Rogan says no, insisting that his format is always going to be anywhere from 90 minutes to three hours in his Austin studio, where he says he can get to know a person, including the Democratic presidential nominee, should she finally choose to join him. As the most popular podcaster in the world, Rogan doesn’t need Harris. She might need him, as her campaign now weighs that gamble. Some speculate her campaign might see a danger in voters really getting to know Kamala the person in an extended interview. They might have a point. J.D. Vance sat down with Joe Rogan on Wednesday. In fact, in addition to appearing on Rogan, both the Republican presidential nominee and vice presidential nominee have made a string of appearances on podcasts far beyond the world of cable news and traditional legacy media. Trump’s interview with the comedian Theo Von from late August sits at 14 million views on YouTube. Trump and/or Vance have also been interviewed by the comedian Andrew Schulz on his “Flagrant” podcast, WWE legend The Undertaker, the streamer Adin Ross, the YouTubers “the Nelk Boys,” and Barstool Sports’ “Bussin’ with the Boys” hosted by two former NFL players. Trump’s sit-down on the “Impaulsive” podcast with boxer and pro wrestler Logan Paul from June, now sits at 6.6 million views on YouTube. There are more interviews done by Team Trump of this sort. As the Trump campaign is aggressively hitting independent media, particularly podcasts with large male audiences, Harris has done limited interviews with establishment media. Harris’s single independent podcast appearance, her October 6 turn on “Call Her Daddy,” which boasts a large female audience, now has about 760,000 views on YouTube. Simultaneously, and somewhat unprecedentedly, some major traditional newspapers like the Washington Post, L.A. Times and USA Today have decided not to endorse a presidential candidate in 2024. Facing overwhelming anger from his vigorously anti-Trump reader base over this decision, Jeff Bezos, the Washington Post’s owner, listed some reasons for his paper’s non-endorsement in an op-ed titled “The hard truth: Americans don’t trust the news media.” “Most people believe the media is biased,” Bezos wrote. “Anyone who doesn’t see this is paying scant attention to reality, and those who fight reality lose. Reality is an undefeated champion… We must work harder to control what we can control to increase our credibility.” He continued, “Presidential endorsements do nothing to tip the scales of an election. No undecided voters in Pennsylvania are going to say, ‘I’m going with Newspaper A’s endorsement.’ None. What presidential endorsements actually do is create a perception of bias. A perception of non-independence. Ending them is a principled decision, and it’s the right one.” Bezos lamented that so many were now turning to podcasts instead of news institutions like his own. “Many people are turning to off-the-cuff podcasts, inaccurate social media posts and other unverified news sources, which can quickly spread misinformation and deepen divisions,” Bezos worried. “The Washington Post and the New York Times win prizes, but increasingly we talk only to a certain elite. More and more, we talk to ourselves.” You have to admire his sincere and brutal introspection. Bezos continued, “While I do not and will not push my personal interest, I will also not allow this paper to stay on autopilot and fade into irrelevance — overtaken by unresearched podcasts and social media barbs….” Bezos gets it. His staff? Washington Post editorial board members have stepped down, writers have quit, and subscribers have canceled. Which is precisely why so many of these “off-the-cuff” and “unresearched” podcasts have larger audiences now than the Post does. Bezos is right that sometimes these podcasters get things wrong. Obviously, most haven’t gone to journalism school. But plenty of supposed journalistic professionals have told us—with all the pomp, circumstance, and authority that they imagine they have—that Covid-19 absolutely did not come from a Chinese lab, that the Hunter Biden laptop story was Russian disinformation, and that Russia blew up the Nord Stream pipeline. We know how all that turned out. When the mainstream press lies to its readers time and again, and no one is ever held accountable after getting news so wrong, combined with the perception that these outlets only serve a certain subset of elites, people are going to stop paying attention or even having basic respect for what they do. People are going to look elsewhere. And they have, as Bezos acknowledges. Trump and his campaign have acknowledged this too, in a significant way. While elites like Bezos and the staff of the Post and other major outlets might look down on these podcasters and their large audiences, regular Americans see cable news outlets who lie to them and only talk about Trump in the context of January 6 and fascism, as if there’s nothing more to his candidacy. While someone like Rogan is willing to sit down with anyone from any political party and get to know them. He’s intellectually curious, like many people who don’t live and breathe politics. It’s genuine and relatable. The appeal of Rogan and some like him is not hard to understand. Unless figures like him are a threat to you. When it was announced that Trump would be appearing on Rogan last week, the New Republic, founded in 1914, went with the headline, “Trump Cancels All His Events in Favor of One of the Worst People Ever.” Envious much? In 2008, Barack Obama and his campaign were hailed for their ability to see the increasing importance of social media in elections at the time, and how deft they were compared to the Republican John McCain’s clunky, old-man campaign. In 2024, the oldest man in the race has been quick to take advantage of a new alternative media that has risen organically in the last few years, and that now serves as the media for large swaths of Americans. If he manages to win, don’t expect legacy media to point out how ahead of the curve Donald Trump was in harnessing independent media in this election. And it won’t be just because they hate Donald Trump. The post Trump’s Independent Media Election appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
34 w

The War on ‘Stupid-ism’
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The War on ‘Stupid-ism’

Uncategorized The War on ‘Stupid-ism’ In a recent podcast, Donald Trump identified the problem. The solution? Be less nice. We aren’t being smart. I want us to be smarter.  You want to win the culture war? Make America smart again.  Allow me to introduce “Smart-ism”—a cure to what Donald Trump so rightly named “Stupid-ism”  in his recent interview with the philanthropist Tom Klingenstein. Trump coined the term “Stupid-ism” while he and Klingenstein were trying to find the most fitting moniker to give to our left-wing opponents.  Stupid-ism is a virus of the mind, but it is infecting the heart, body, and soul of America. We have a rapidly spreading infection that is seeping into our cities, government, schools, health care, and culture—an infection that we must address with swift and serious antiviral action. Unfortunately, this is an easily spreading invisible pathogen.  In part, that’s because our political adversary is difficult to fend off. And that’s because they are usually very nice.  David French, for example, is a nice man. In fact, in his critique of French, Sohrab Ahmari went so far as to say in his piece Against David French-ism that it “isn’t easy to critique the persona of someone as nice as French.” French has been a constant critic and opponent of Trump in his quest to supposedly “Save Conservatism from Itself.” Once a former legal champion of religious liberty and conservative causes, proud pro-lifer, and evangelical Christian, French has caught the Stupid-ism virus. He is not alone. He and his allies—the Liz Cheneys, Mitt Romneys, Paul Ryans, John Boltons, Mitch McConnells, and Jeff Flakes—are so sick with Stupid-ism that they don’t understand the warmth they feel from the left isn’t admiration, but rather the feverish glee of discovering a useful idiot. Falling in and out of lucidity, they cheer with joy when the Steve Bannons are unjustifiably imprisoned and weep with sorrow when the assassin’s bullet misses a president’s head.  This is a pandemic that kills virtue with politeness. It is reshaping our culture. Ahmari wisely adds of French’s niceness, “it is in part that earnest and insistently polite quality of his that I find unsuitable to the depth of the present crisis facing religious conservatives.” The trend of a certain breed of conservative taking a sharp left turn without common sense is clearly contagious. Smart-ism is the cure. The latest study shows that human IQ has decreased for the first time since they started measuring it in 1905. Our education system is abysmal compared to other developed countries and people spend an average of seven hours a day staring or swiping on a screen. The average student no longer wishes to answer questions in classrooms because they are so concerned about what others think of them. Psychology Today reports that students are “afraid of even letting themselves think out loud about a position that might land them in trouble through social sanctions and accusations that they are racists, fascists, bigots, or sexists.”  The same article warns that if political science students become accustomed to having to keep their mouths shut, then it’s “only a matter of time until the mind shuts, too.” Our classrooms make things even worse. Twenty percent of adults in the U.S. can’t read a book written at a fifth-grade level. These shocking literacy levels are important because uneducated citizens are unable to fully participate in a democracy.  How can you make an educated decision about which candidate to vote for or policy to oppose if you can’t read? How can you be a productive citizen if you can’t comprehend anything above a ninth-grade level—like the 75 percent of welfare recipients? What are you contributing to society when the only thing you can understand is the number on your monthly check from the government?  Being stupid makes you dependent upon the government. This the left knows well. Heaven forbid we continue to read the old white men who taught us about the essentiality of tradition to human flourishing and created the foundations of Western civilization. Out with Plato; in with poorly-written postmodern queer, feminist, and minority fiction. Dead white men, after all, could be considered offensive. L’horreur!  Instead, everyone should feel represented! Everyone should be comfortable! Everyone should win! That’s the nice thing to do, right? And that’s the problem. Our culture of nice is making us dumb.  That is why people are drawn to Donald Trump. It’s why they tolerate or even like the mean tweets. He may not always be nice, but he’s usually right. Trump doesn’t confuse empathy with intelligence, as our Stupid-ism infected friends do. He doesn’t cower to the peer pressure of social norms if those norms are bad, unhealthy, or dangerous for America and its people. He runs on facts, not feelings. Perhaps most importantly, Trump doesn’t care whether you like him. Elon Musk feels the same way, saying in a recent interview that wanting to be liked is a real weakness. He is correct. But it’s all anyone seems to value these days. We want to be liked. An entire generation has been raised receiving their affirmation and dopamine hits through digital “likes” via social media. Our neural pathways have been rewired to have an overwhelming desire for approval. We have become a society desperate for popularity. Which is stupid.  Saturated in nice, we have been told that tolerating everyone and everything is kindness or empathy. Because Trump isn’t this empty brand of nice, because he refuses to go along with the absurd and ridiculous, the enemy depicts him as someone like Hitler. Klingenstein remarked, “We have to understand, we’re in a war… and in a war, you play by different rules… there’s no basis for compromise.”  Trump added “The Republicans have to get tougher…. They don’t fight like they should fight.” He’s right. We don’t fight like we should fight. We’re too nice.  We fight with rules. They fight with Rules for Radicals. We keep bringing knives to gunfights and expecting the other side to act honorably.  They won’t.  Even if Trump wins the 2024 Presidential election, unless we conservatives become willing to be perhaps a little less nice—fighting back against lawfare, dismantling the administrative state, reaching voters like college-educated women and GenZ, changing tactics, and invoking the courageous spirit of Sir Winston Churchill over that of appeasing Neville Chamberlain—we will lose the greater war. We must be courageous truth-tellers, championing tradition and virtue, not acquiescing to peer pressure. But we must also show up for each other, even if we don’t completely agree on everything. As Benjamin Franklin reminds us, “We must all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.” With Stupid-ism we are told to buy into the lies, the failed policies, the bad science, the outrageous government spending, the denial of the clear cognitive decline of a sitting president.  But no more. This is where we make our stand.  Help is not coming. We have to save ourselves from the infection of Stupid-ism. We must prioritize the harmonious health of our movement and act as one body. We must be unafraid to push back and reclaim our hitherto surrendered ground.  To eradicate Stupid-ism and make America smart again, we must stop being so terribly nice. That’s the cure.  It’s also how we win. The post The War on ‘Stupid-ism’ appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
34 w

The Final Case for Trump
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www.theamericanconservative.com

The Final Case for Trump

Politics The Final Case for Trump One TAC writer wants to stop the madness. A number of my friends and family members are surprised at my decision to support Donald Trump for president. Some others, quiet Trump voters themselves, seem even more surprised I am willing to do so publicly. I am not a Republican per se, having non-voted many times, having voted Democrat in some elections, and being aligned with one side or another on different issues across the spectrum. But this election seems clear. I keep a careful household budget and know exactly how much more food, gas, and minor luxuries such as a meal out have cost me over the past three years. I can see, to the dollar, what inflation has cost and know this wasn’t the case under Trump. The economy under Trump had ups and downs, largely due to Covid, but I fail to see anything on that scale driving Biden-Harris’s inflation. I instead see massive spending, loan forgiveness, and other policies which seem to have a definite negative effect. I see Harris promising to give away vast sums of money to various groups (childcare, small businesses, home buyers, black entrepreneurs), which will be likely to promote inflation. And never mind me—Biden-Harris introduced their economic policies and massively increased spending without regard to their impact on low-income Americans for whom all this is survival-level stuff, not mere headlines. We can’t afford another four years. It is easy to look up how many total migrants were allowed into the United States under Trump, legal green card recipients, gray-zone humanitarian paroles and Temporary Protected Status people, and estimated straight-up illegals. Under Biden-Harris the latter categories so grossly outnumber the first it raises concern. I hear from old friends in Ohio how their small town schools and social welfare systems face severe challenges taking care of new migrants imposed on them by policy decisions made without consideration. I read the news to see how New York City is scrambling to find and pay for hotel rooms for newly-arriving migrants. The system is out of balance, and it is because of decisions made by Biden-Harris regarding the southern border when they took office, not the failure of some Trump-torpedoed immigration legislation years later. I want to vote for Trump so that we can control the border once again. I am not anti-immigration—I am the son of an immigrant, the spouse of another, and father-in-law to a third, all legal arrivals—but fully in favor of a more orderly system which represents American needs instead of Biden-Harris campaign slogans. When you let people in by the millions—“most of whom are unvetted, most of whom you don’t know who they really are,” said J.D. Vance—you’re going to have problems with Venezuelan prison gangs. I want my vote to help fix the problem. I vote on foreign policy issues perhaps more than the average person, and here my support for Trump is clear. Russia invaded Crimea under Obama, and invaded Ukraine under Biden-Harris, and did not invade anywhere under Trump. The Middle East was at relative peace during his term, with the Abraham Accords a positive sign of things to come. Biden-Harris will hand over a weakened global deterrence, with major wars in the heart of Europe and in hotspots in the Middle East, including Israel attacking on the ground inside southern Lebanon again for the first time since 2006. Iran is ever-closer to being a nuclear-threshold state, and no one has talked to a nuclear-armed and angry North Korea for four long years. “Results matter,” says Foreign Policy, “and the relative peace and prosperity that prevailed during Trump’s first term may make him the most effective U.S. foreign-policy president in the post-Cold War era.” I vote Trump in hopes of more of that, and less of the kind of lack of planning and missing thought demonstrated in the evacuation of Afghanistan. I am not troubled by Trump’s interactions with Putin, Xi, and Kim Jong Un. One negotiates with one’s enemies for high stakes, not one’s friends. (Remember Reagan and Gorby?) It sickens me to see diplomacy thrown out the window under Biden-Harris in favor of two new Cold Wars (plus whatever is going on with North Korea). This will not be the last election in a democratic United States. Trump is far from the perfect candidate, his flaws more obvious than most of his predecessors. But the perfect candidate is elusive, and so one must accept much of the good and realize the imperfect is baked in. Trump is a boor at times, crude in his language and demeanor, but he is not a dictator. For all the noise about January 6, power transferred peacefully to Joe Biden days later. It was one bad afternoon, folks. Trump, a man who supposedly does not respect the rule of law, used the law to fight off two impeachments and multiple lawfare accusations. When he lost a case, he appealed, and did not call out any right-wing militia to overpower the court which found him guilty. He spends a lot of money on lawyers for someone who does not respect the rule of law, and a lot of money on campaigning for someone hoping to become a dictator. Like Russiagate, this is outright propaganda and does not give me pause when voting. I do not vote scared. J.D. Vance is capable of being president if need be. I doubt Tim Walz could step in; America is much bigger than the Minnesota he repeatedly called on for examples in the vice presidential debate. His court jester roleplay at rallies doesn’t help. He does not seem serious; stage-angry yes, ready to take on the great issues of America, no. I am weary of being called a fascist or racist because of my vote, and seeing good people disregarded as losers and deplorables for their considered democratic choices. I think the Democratic party has veered way too far left for me to even consider my vote, apparently not that they’d want it. I prefer to vote in the positive, for someone rather than against someone. But to spend a little time with Kamala Harris is to see she is not ready to be president. She was not really ready to be vice president, losing throughout the Democratic primaries and only being scooped up by Joe Biden as VP because she hit the right demographic buttons. Be fair—if she was such a catch, why didn’t she win any primary races? And remember how, during the first three years of the Biden administration, the vibe was how useless Kamala was proving to be. That was all swept away in the excitement of clearing the voting slipway of old man Joe and shoving someone young-ish forward as appointee not nominee. As with the vice presidency, Kamala did not earn her nomination to run for president, because she wasn’t qualified to do so. In addition to her almost entirely blank slate of accomplishments over three years, Kamala has steadfastly refused to explain her policy positions in detail, or tell us her plans foreign policy-wise other then to continue what Biden has done in regards to Israel and Ukraine (such as taking no serious action when 45 American citizens are killed by terrorists and 12 are taken hostage). She brings no vision to the people, and it is dead certain that we can expect more of the same if she were to be elected (she even told us so on The View). She is either trying to hide her real views on things or hide the fact that she doesn’t have real views; Harris is most likely an empty vessel waiting for the Deep State to tell her what to do, all appetite without substance. She lied to the American people about the mental health of the president and maliciously accused those who provided video evidence of his decline of sharing doctored videos. Thank goodness Biden likely at least fought back against the 25th Amendment in the Democratic coup against him. The post The Final Case for Trump appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Beyond Bizarre
Beyond Bizarre
34 w ·Youtube Wild & Crazy

YouTube
This Man Claims That Strange Black Georgia Guidestones Suddenly Appeared In The Desert
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