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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
35 w

5 Truths Hidden from Those Blinded by Satan
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www.crosswalk.com

5 Truths Hidden from Those Blinded by Satan

5 Truths Hidden from Those Blinded by Satan
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
35 w

Swing-State Showcase: Everything You Need To Know About The Race In Arizona
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Swing-State Showcase: Everything You Need To Know About The Race In Arizona

Arizona, with its 11 electoral votes, has flipped between the Republican and Democratic nominees in recent elections. This year, polling shows that either candidate could win on November 5th. Here’s everything you need to know about Arizona. Polling Current polling averages have former President Donald Trump with a slight, 2.2% lead over Vice President Kamala Harris, with the two candidates slated to receive 48.8% and 46.6% of the vote in the state, respectively. Trump has maintained a lead over Harris in Arizona since mid-September, when the two were tied in a dead heat. Harris held a lead over Trump in Arizona in August, hitting a high water mark of 1.4% on August 22nd. Recent polling from Gallup found that the economy and immigration are the top issues for Trump supporters, while Harris supporters name health care, Supreme Court appointments, and abortion as their top issues. What The Candidates Are Saying Both Trump and Harris are rallying in Arizona on Halloween, less than a week before the election, as they make their final pitches to voters in the state. Trump will be joining Tucker Carlson for a live interview in Glendale to benefit hurricane relief efforts, while Harris is hosting a “When We Vote We Win” rally in Phoenix. The two have visited the state numerous times throughout their campaigns, each highlighting their core policy positions. Harris spoke at a rally in Chandler, Arizona earlier this month where she focused on the economy, healthcare, and abortion access, topics that voters consistently say are among their top issues. “Ours is a fight for the future, and it is a fight for freedom like the fundamental freedom of a woman to make decisions about her own body and not have her government tell her what to do,” the Democrat said at her rally, also discussing the cost of living. “We will lower the cost on everything from health care to groceries, taking on, for example, the issue of corporate price gouging. I’ve done it before, and I’m going to do it again.” Harris went on to allege that if elected, Trump would impose “a 20% tax on everyday goods and necessities,” seemingly referring to his tariff proposal. Trump most recently appeared at a Tempe rally last week, where he railed against mass illegal immigration and blamed Harris for the “invasion” across the southern border. “She has eradicated our sovereign border and she has unleashed an army of migrant gangs who are waging a campaign of violence and terror against our citizens,” Trump said. “My message today is very simple. Kamala’s migrant invasion, given to us through gross incompetence, disqualifies her from even thinking about being president.” How Arizona Has Voted In The Past President Joe Biden won the state in 2020 by a razor-thin margin of just 11,000 votes. Trump carried Arizona in 2016 by about 90,000 votes. The state went to the Republican presidential nominees in 2012, 2008, 2004, and 2000. What Early Voting Shows Early voting has begun in the state, with Bloomberg reporting that “the data shows a decline in early Democratic voters from 2020,” and Republicans “outpacing” Democrats at the ballot box. While Republicans have cast more than 434,000 votes, Democrats are lagging behind at over 365,000 votes. Another 232,000-plus ballots have been cast by those with other or no party registration. When Can We Expect A Result? Americans may not know who won the key swing state until several days after the election. Maricopa County is the state’s most populous county, and includes the cities of Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Tempe. Maricopa County recently announced that counting ballots from election day might take anywhere from 10 to 13 days. The county contains nearly 60% of the state’s registered voters, underscoring its electoral importance. Republican Abe Hamadeh, the candidate for Arizona’s 8th congressional district, has criticized Maricopa County’s plan to administer the election, warning that it “fails to account the time voters need to complete the FOUR-PAGE ballot, setting the stage for long lines & chaos on Election Day.” ??BREAKING?? Today, I partnered with the Republican National Committee (@GOP) to call for an emergency meeting with Maricopa County to immediately review their flawed Election Plan. It fails to account the time voters need to complete the FOUR-PAGE ballot, setting the stage… pic.twitter.com/GWjXE9zA1I — Abe Hamadeh (@AbrahamHamadeh) October 24, 2024 The Washington Post is similarly warning that the Arizona ballot “could create election day problems” because of how long it is. One early voter said that it took her 35 minutes to fill out the ballot, which includes 13 statewide ballot measures. The multi-page ballots could also create logistical issues for election administrators, presenting a higher risk that machines become jammed and take longer to count. Voting Issues From 2020 To Now Arizona has been plagued by concerns of voting irregularities and potential fraud in recent years. The state, and Maricopa County in particular, was a major hub of Stop the Steal rallies after the 2020 election amid concerns of potential fraud. America First Legal, a conservative legal organization, is suing Maricopa and Yavapai Counties in what it calls “a landmark election integrity case.” The case alleges that Yavapai County’s “signature verification and curing procedures are unlawful, that it has been unlawfully canceling voter registration without their knowledge or consent, and that it maintains unstaffed drop boxes.” Now some are concerned that illegal alien voting in the border state could impact electoral outcomes. America First Legal is also suing all 15 counties in Arizona, accusing them of failing to remove illegal aliens from the state’s voter rolls. Undercover footage obtained by the Heritage Foundation in Arizona documents self-proclaimed non-citizens saying that they are registered to vote, with many explaining that they prefer Harris to Trump. Maricopa County is now also ramping up security at its voting centers, even preparing drone patrols, police sniper teams, and armed guards for election day as some election officials have received threats. Other Races To Watch Republican Senate candidate Kari Lake currently trails her Democratic opponent, Rep. Ruben Gallego, according to polling averages. Recent polling from the Trafalgar Group has Gallego up four points against Lake, with the two candidates receiving 50% and 46% of the vote respectively. Gallego has a wider lead according to the most recent polling average, however. The Democrat is estimated to have 49.8% of the vote compared to Lake’s 43.4%, giving Gallego a 6.4% lead. Democrats currently control the upper chamber of the legislature with a slim majority of 51 to 49. The two are running to replace outgoing Senator Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat turned Independent who announced earlier this year that she would not be running for re-election. Arizona has nine congressional districts, six of which are held by Republicans. Every Arizona congressman is up for reelection, with Republican Juan Ciscomani of the sixth Congressional district set to face Democrat Kirsten Engel in a rematch of the 2020 election. Ciscomani won the district, which encompasses the southeastern portion of the state, by 1.5 points in the last election. Campaign finance data shows that it has been the most expensive congressional race in the state, with nearly $14 million being raised for it. Arizonans will also have the opportunity to vote on ballot measures, including Proposition 314, which would create “a new state crime that prohibits a person who is an alien from entering or attempting to enter this state directly from a foreign nation at any location that is not a lawful port of entry.” There’s also Proposition 312, which would allow property owners to apply for property tax refunds if laws prohibiting illegal camping, loitering, public defecation, panhandling, and other similar crimes are not enforced. Proposition 313, meanwhile, would mandate that any individual convicted of child sex trafficking be imprisoned for life.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
35 w

Woman Turns Neighbors’ Litter Into Hilarious Halloween Decorations
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www.inspiremore.com

Woman Turns Neighbors’ Litter Into Hilarious Halloween Decorations

It’s not always easy to have roommates… and what is living in an apartment if not living with multiple, slightly distant roommates? A big difference with the latter, however, is that you don’t really have a choice in who those “roommates” end up being. Some of us manage to find ourselves next to some of the kindest people around. Other times, we find ourselves in a situation like Madison. As Madison has shared on social media, she lives in a downstairs unit at her apartment complex. Although her home is tucked neatly behind an exterior staircase, that somehow doesn’t stop her upstairs neighbors from littering right at her front door. More specifically, the neighbors will dispose of their dog’s hair directly in her own space. TikTok To get an idea of the layout, here is an image of where Madison lives. Her door is the farthest one away. Some folks on social media have wondered if the neighbors intend for the fur to be used for birds. After all, these creatures do use items like fur to build nests. But Madison explains that it would be easier, and make more sense, for them to toss the fur on the other side of the staircase if that was their goal. TikTok In that area, there is a tree and lots of grass. Madison shows off that area in the above image. Needless to say, this unwarranted pettiness bothers Madison — so she found a hilarious way to deal with it. How? By gathering the dog fur and adding it to some Halloween decorations! Turns out, dog fur makes for the perfect bushy eyebrows and mustaches on outdoor skeleton decor. TikTok Woman Uses Neighbors’ Petty Actions Against Them to Create the Funniest Halloween Decorations You may be wondering: What is the purpose, exactly? For starters, it’s possible that the neighbors will recognize the dog hair and find Madison’s creative use to be annoying. If they are trying to frustrate her, it could be a sign that their plans aren’t working — she’s choosing joy instead. TikTok But that’s not the only reason this “revenge” might be worth it. At the end of the day, we can only control ourselves. So, if Madison’s neighbors are going to be intentionally inconsiderate, why not have a little fun with it? “I can’t get mad if I make myself laugh,” Madison points out. You can find the source of this story’s featured image here! The post Woman Turns Neighbors’ Litter Into Hilarious Halloween Decorations appeared first on InspireMore.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
35 w

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www.classicrockhistory.com

10 Best Rock And Roll Movies Of All Time

We initially set out to divide rock and roll films into categories—concert films, documentaries, and Hollywood-style dramas—each deserving of its own list. But as we sifted through the classics, it became clear that the best approach was to merge these genres, focusing solely on the films that best capture the essence and energy of rock and roll. So, we set out to select the ten greatest rock films ever made, from concert films and documentaries to Hollywood reimaginings and even a mockumentary or two, each offering a unique perspective on the genre that changed music and culture forever. Woodstock (1970) The post 10 Best Rock And Roll Movies Of All Time appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.
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Reclaim The Net Feed
Reclaim The Net Feed
35 w

Joe Rogan Responds To YouTube Censorship of Trump Interview
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reclaimthenet.org

Joe Rogan Responds To YouTube Censorship of Trump Interview

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Joe Rogan has accused YouTube of making it difficult for users to find his recent interview with former President Donald Trump, saying that the platform initially only displayed short clips from mainstream media instead of the full episode. Rogan sarcastically remarked on YouTube’s actions, saying, “I’m sure it was a mistake at YouTube where you couldn’t search for it. Yeah. I’m sure it was a mistake. It’s just a mistake.” In episode 2200, Rogan explained that even though his team contacted YouTube multiple times, the episode remained difficult to find. X CEO Elon Musk intervened, contacting Spotify CEO Daniel Ek about the issue. (Spotify exclusively licenses The Joe Rogan Experience but allows the show on third-party platforms like YouTube.) https://video.reclaimthenet.org/articles/joe-rogan-responds-yt-censorship.mp4 Rogan noted the explosive viewership once the content was available, with the episode racking up “six and a half million views on mine and eight plus million on his.” Emphasizing the episode’s broad reach, Rogan expressed frustration with the initial suppression, stating, “You can’t suppress shit. It doesn’t work. This is the internet. This is 2024. People are going to realize what you’re doing.” He pointed to the significance of this episode’s reach, asking, “If one show has 36 million downloads in two days, like that’s not trending? Like what’s trending for you? Mr. Beast?” Describing the power of YouTube’s algorithmic influence, Rogan claimed the algorithm worked against the interview’s visibility, only showing clips instead of the full conversation. According to him, when YouTube initially fixed the issue, users had to enter highly specific keywords, like “Joe Rogan Trump interview,” to find the episode. Rogan argued that YouTube’s gatekeeping reflected an ideological stance, remarking, “They hate it because ideologically they’re opposed to the idea of him being more popular.” He suggested that major tech platforms, such as YouTube and Facebook, which hold significant influence, often push agendas that favor specific narratives, stating, “They didn’t like that this one was slipping away. And so they did something.” In a telling moment, Rogan noted the impact of the initial suppression, explaining how “the interactions…dropped off a cliff because people couldn’t find it.” He claimed that this caused viewers either to give up or settle for short clips, leading to a dip in views before the episode gained traction on Spotify and X. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Joe Rogan Responds To YouTube Censorship of Trump Interview appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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Homesteaders Haven
Homesteaders Haven
35 w

Best Loans And Grants For Preppers Or Homesteaders | Homesteading
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homesteading.com

Best Loans And Grants For Preppers Or Homesteaders | Homesteading

Get started with sustainable living by getting the best loans and grants. If money is the only thing holding you back, these options will get you started or give you the money you need to improve your homestead. Loans and Grants for the Self-Reliant You know you want to start or enhance a sustainable homestead or farm on a prepper retreat, maybe you have even found the perfect land at the right price – but you just don’t have enough money on hand to move forward with a loan or expand your existing farm. The low or no money down loans and grants available for use by preppers and homesteaders can be use to tear down or rehab aging farm structures or to build new ones on the property. Luckily for all of us who want to get back to basics and lead a self-reliant lifestyle, a plethora of grants and low money down agriculture loans exist. Even better, once you actually get your land, additional grants and program participation payments exist for many practices which you will be employing on your homestead anyway – more on those money-making opportunities in a future article. Agriculture grants are available to not only buy acreage for use as a homestead or prepper retreat, but to develop an agriculture business on the property, build necessary structures, improve the quality of the land, build fencing, and purchase livestock. You just have to know where to look and take the time to apply to help get your self-reliant dream off the ground and closer to becoming a reality. Homesteaders can use grants and loans to purchase livestock needed to further or enhance operations on the agricultural property. The United States Department of Agriculture is one of the main sources for very low or no money down residential loans for farmland and agriculture businesses. The federal government has a very vague definition for what exactly qualifies as a valid farm business, basically anything which is grown, raised, harvested from the wild, or made from natural materials found on the land qualifies. Unlike just several years ago, the agriculture business created when applying for a small business commercial grant or loan does not have to show a profit, only the presentation of goods for sale and an attempt to make money from the endeavor. Basically, setting up an “Eggs for sale” or “Horse Boarding” sign at the end of the road, or online, advertising a service or goods qualifies. Many of the grants and low money down loans can be used to cover startup expenses for starting an agri-tourism operation on the farm such as, hosting community events, such as a shooting contest, trail rides, weddings, outings for children. Some land grants are specific to state or county. Other funding aide is geared to help female farmers, beginning farmers (less than 10 years of agriculture experience) or minority or organic farmers. Some of the grants and loans have acreage minimums and maximums, so read the full eligibility requirements carefully before printing and filling out the applications downloaded from the internet. Finding the right grant or loan, or a combination of funding source right for you might take a little digging – but self-reliant folks are used to shoveling and doing the heavy lifting required to get things done! Top 10 Best Grants and Zero or Low Money Down Loans for Homesteading 1. Beginning Farms USDA Loan Farm loans and grants can be used to turn harsh land into pasture or to repair roads on the property to make them more passable and to reduce storm water run-off. The federal low money down with down payment assistance loan does not have any income restrictions. Beginning farmers and ranchers from anywhere in the country can apply for the annually allocated funds – in the tens of millions of dollars range. The property cannot be more than a specified percentage of the average farm in your county and the property not cost more than about $500,000. You must not have owned or worked for pay on a farm for more than 10 verifiable years to qualify for this program. 2. USDA Rural Development The Rural Development loans are a no or extremely low money down program offered around the country for agriculture land purchase. There are no income maximums but the land being purchased cannot total more than 20 acres – the acreage limits can and have changed during the funding cycles. 3. Fannie Mae Home Ready This loan does not have an acreage limit and allows the borrower to have a more than 45 percent DTI – debt to income ration. The HomeReady loan requires just a three percent down payment, very low-interest rates, and permits the down payment money to come from another government or non-profit program, a tax refund, or as a gift from someone not on the loan. Non-borrower household members, adults who are related or unrelated to the borrower but live in the home or are a tenant on the property, regardless of their credit score, can be considered as an income-boosting factor during the loan approval process. 4. Farm Service Agency Operating Loan Program The FSA low or no money down loan program offers up to $35,000 to farmers for necessary startup expenses such as the purchase of livestock, fertilizer, seeds, crop plants, fencing, and agricultural machinery. 5. National Sustainable Agriculture Commission The organization offers down payment assistance to beginning and socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers. The government program defines socially disadvantaged loan applicants as: Native Americans, women, Alaskan Natives, Hispanics, Asian Americans, African Americans, Native Hawaiians or any other Pacific Islander. A minimum of three years of farming or comparable experience is one of the requirements for the down payment assistance which can be used to cover the five percent down mandated by most government farm loans. 6. Minority and Women Farmers and Ranchers The homesteading grants and loans can be used for property clearing purposes to make the land more viable for residential use or for a commercial endeavor on the farm. The USDA low or no money down program offers funding for the purchase of farmland specifically to female and minority farmers. The applicants must still meet the 640 credit score required for all farm loans to qualify for the purchase and farm startup loan funds. 7. Agricultural Reinvestment Fund North Carolina farmers can request the $8,000 grants to invest in agricultural enhancement of their existing operation on an annual basis. 8. Missouri Beef Grants Farmers and ranchers in the state can apply for a $20,000 grant to be used for enhancements to an existing agriculture endeavor to expand their business or to modernize an operation with new equipment or related and necessary farm materials. 9. Farmers Market Promotion The program was launched to create an affordable route for farmers to market their goods and to support local and regional agricultural production. The money can be used to enhance existing or create new, farm products sales opportunities, for training, to build a roadside farm stand, to host farm events to showcase the goods and services on the homestead, and for agri-tourism events: community event, camping, trail riding, etc. 10. Organic Farming Research Foundation Grants The grants and loans can also be used to experiment with non-traditional crops, organic growing operations, or for agriculture business opportunities related to natural edibles foraged from the property. Small grants to aide organic farmers to enhance their operations, land, barns, fencing, and other production-related needs are available to citizens in all 50 states regardless of the size of their homestead or their income.   If you're curious on how poor people can buy a land with no money, then click play on this video from Becky's Homestead:   Getting the money you need to get started or expand your homestead shouldn't really be an issue. With the right knowledge and a bit of research, you can get the funding you need to always be self-sufficient. Do you know other loans or grants preppers and homesteaders can take advantage of? Share it with us in the comments below!  And if you want to do a little online shopping, or looking, you can check out these Off Grid Homes For Sale! Follow us on Instagram, twitter, pinterest, and facebook!
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
35 w

Where Do The US Presidential Candidates Stand On Climate Change?
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Where Do The US Presidential Candidates Stand On Climate Change?

The climate has attracted very little attention in the current US election, but that doesn’t mean it won’t be affected by the outcome.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
35 w ·Youtube Music

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AC/DC, Nirvana, The Beatles, Bon Jovi, Eagles, Queen Skynyrd? Top 100 Classic Rock Songs Of All Time
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
35 w

Fitzgerald's fight: January 6 prosecution steams ahead unabated despite terminal colon cancer
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Fitzgerald's fight: January 6 prosecution steams ahead unabated despite terminal colon cancer

JANESVILLE, Wisconsin — Michael K. Fitzgerald suffered two painful shots to the body on Jan. 6, 2021, one of which still represents a serious threat to his life more than 45 months later.The first shot struck him in the leg and neck at the U.S. Capitol — from explosive munitions fired and tossed into the crowd by Metropolitan Police Department officers. At the time, Fitzgerald was quietly capturing video at the police line on the West Plaza.The second shot came more than 40 minutes later, just after he walked into the Capitol with a large group of protesters.Something was very wrong inside, as he discovered during more than a half-hour in the restroom. He was bleeding. His undiscovered colon cancer was fully present, but it wouldn’t be diagnosed for nearly a year. By that time it was at stage IV and had spread.Fitzgerald’s peaceful 39-minute visit inside the Capitol brought federal felony and misdemeanor charges. Despite occasional discussions with Fitzgerald’s attorney about dropping the case, prosecutors have refused to dismiss the charges, even though Fitzgerald’s doctor says his cancer is incurable.“I know it’s all marching orders from the DOJ, which we all know are obviously conflicted and they’re politically biased,” Fitzgerald, 46, said during an interview at his home. “I just take some comfort in knowing that if Trump is re-elected, this will get straightened out.”'I appreciate every day with my family a lot more, and I don’t take anything for granted.'In September, Fitzgerald filed a status report with U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C., indicating that his recto-sigmoid cancer has spread to his liver. His treatment regimen would make it dangerous for him to fly to Washington for a trial.“His cancer has an estimated prognosis from this date (Sept. 25, 2024) in overall survival of 12-24 months based on his current line of therapy and molecular features specific to his cancer type,” wrote Dr. Jeremy Kratz, Fitzgerald’s oncologist at the William S. Middleton Memorial VA Hospital in Madison.Kratz said air travel and prolonged immobility would put Fitzgerald at increased risk of blood clots. His chemotherapy requires a 46-hour infusion of two anti-cancer drugs that put him at risk of local infection and require frequent follow-ups for IV fluid support and electrolyte replacement, the doctor wrote.“It is anticipated that he will remain on chemotherapy and radiation for the remainder of his life based on his goals of pursuing life-prolonging therapy,” Kratz wrote. Michael Fitzgerald has had several surgeries and is on long-term chemotherapy to fight his stage IV colon cancer.Photo for Blaze News by Chris DuzynskiFitzgerald’s next court appearance is set for Nov. 8. He said he just wants the case to be finished so he can focus all of his energy on his wife and four children — and fighting the cancer doctors believe is related to his U.S. Marine Corps service.“Why can’t they just leave me alone?” he asked.Fitzgerald said even if prosecutors were to drop his case, he would still worry about it hanging over his head while he fights for his life.“I don’t like the fact that if I ever were to beat cancer, those charges would be re-implemented and I would face maybe jail, prison time. So that’s a huge stressor. At the same time, with me being God-fearing, I’ve kind of let it go because there’s nothing I can do about it.“I appreciate every day with my family a lot more, and I don’t take anything for granted. Both of them have kind of been a blessing in disguise in that regard.”Gassed and shotFitzgerald was suddenly in a war zone. He had been quietly filming police and the crowd from the front row on the West Plaza beneath the inauguration stage at the Capitol.Police had been firing and lobbing incendiary munitions into the crowd for nearly an hour, but Fitzgerald’s location was suddenly ground zero.At 2:04 p.m., Metropolitan Police Department Sgt. Frank Edwards fired two 40mm shells over Fitzgerald’s head within less than 10 seconds, security and bodycam video showed.Throughout the afternoon, Edwards stocked his orange munition launcher with 60-caliber hard rubber “stinger” balls and Skat Shells, which split into four fire-producing sub-munitions that release tear gas.Another MPD officer was busy tossing incendiary grenades about 30 feet into the crowd. At 2:04:02 p.m., he lobbed one that landed just behind Fitzgerald. A blinding orange flash lit up the profiles of protesters at the police line, followed by a thud and a rapidly expanding cloud of tear gas.Fitzgerald was looking right at the gas cloud as it flowed south at 20 mph to envelop the crowd at the police line. Within seconds, he doubled up and was incapacitated. He turned away and limped into the crowd. He dropped to his knees, fell on his face, and blacked out. Michael Fitzgerald was tear-gassed and struck by 60-caliber projectiles while filming at the police line on the West Plaza of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Photos by U.S. Capitol Police (above) and Metropolitan Police Department (below)He’s not sure exactly when during the fusillade it happened, but one of the projectiles struck his neck. He said it felt like a baseball bat hit him. When he returned home, a deep bruise about the diameter of a tin of chewing tobacco formed on his neck. It took weeks to fade, he said.Fitzgerald was sprawled face down on the concrete. The chemical delivered by many of the munitions on Jan. 6 was 2-chlorobenzylidene malononitrile — or Courson-Stoughton gas — a lachrymal agent that causes a burning sensation in the eyes, mouth, and throat, a tight chest, and difficulty breathing. The chemical munition typically incapacitates a person for up to 20 minutes. In people with compromised respiratory systems, it can be fatal, but most people recover after 10-15 minutes of fresh air.Bystanders helped a dazed Fitzgerald to his feet, then used a jug of water to flush out his eyes. He said it felt like “military-grade tear gas.”The crowd, he insists, had not tried to push through the police line, so the deployment of munitions made no sense to him. In fact, the exploding shells had the opposite effect from what they are designed for. They did not scatter the crowds but rather corralled them in tighter at the barricades.'He got caught up in what many people are characterizing as an insurrection.'“There was no reason for it,” he contends. “The crowd wasn’t getting unruly. The crowd hadn’t moved forward. There was no rioting."“People were shaking hands with Capitol Police officers and saying, ‘Good job,’ and everything like that,” he said. “Then all of a sudden they just turned on us.”Fitzgerald said he saw the munitions affecting people of all ages.“I saw elderly people get hit, people in wheelchairs get hit, little kids get hit because they didn’t expect that,” he said. “They thought we were just there for a peaceful protest, and then all of a sudden they just started opening fire on people.”The Metropolitan Police Department declared all of its uses of force on Jan. 6 “objectively reasonable,” including munition launchers, grenades, tear gas, pepper spray, and strikes with riot batons.39 minutes in the CapitolFitzgerald entered the Capitol at 2:47 p.m., 35 minutes after the building was breached by the first rioters at the Senate Wing Door. He did nothing violent yet would be charged with violent entry and five other crimes.The USA Today-owned Green Bay Press-Gazette seemed to suggest that Fitzgerald was guilty of the acts of those around him in the crowd. That is also the default belief of the U.S. Department of Justice about many J6 defendants.“For about a minute and a half, rioters were seen on video ‘punching law enforcement officers, throwing objects at law enforcement officers and attempting to hit law enforcement officers with a flagpole,’” a Jan. 6, 2022, Press-Gazette story read.Capitol Police security video, however, shows that Fitzgerald did none of those things. He was near the front of the crowd that pushed into the building, but he was filming the action and did not push against or strike anyone, video showed. Michael Fitzgerald asks a police officer for directions to the bathroom inside the Crypt at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.U.S. Capitol Police CCTV; graphic by Blaze NewsThat mattered not one bit to the media, which adopted the DOJ’s narrative that Fitzgerald and thousands of others took part in an attack on democracy. They “stormed” the Capitol and attempted an “insurrection” at then-President Donald Trump’s specific direction, the narrative claimed.“Apparently, he’s admitted to the FBI that he was there,” U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephen Crocker said during Fitzgerald’s first court hearing. “And maybe he got caught up in things. But he got caught up in what many people are characterizing as an insurrection, and people were killed.”Prosecutors insisted that Fitzgerald wear a GPS ankle monitor, which Judge Crocker ordered over the objection of defense attorney Mark Eisenberg. After a few months, however, the monitor was removed.'She told me not to go. She said she had a bad feeling.'The story of Fitzgerald’s time inside the Capitol is told on Capitol Police CCTV and his own iPhone videos. He stayed in the Senate Wing lobby for a few minutes, then walked down to the Crypt. His main concern, he said, was finding a bathroom.“All of a sudden people just started pushing,” he said. “I had one hand I’m trying to brace so I don’t fall down. I have my cell phone and I’m trying to record it, and we get pushed in.“The first thing I did was to go up to the Capitol Police officer to say, ‘Hey, I got pushed in.’ He goes, ‘It doesn’t matter now.’ I said, ‘Can you tell me where the bathroom is?’ This is when the symptoms of my cancer were first starting and I was having a lot of issues.”Fitzgerald’s wife called him while he was in the bathroom and told him someone had been shot at the Capitol. He had no idea that Ashli Babbitt had been fatally wounded three minutes before he entered the building.“She told me not to go,” he said. “She said she had a bad feeling. I said, ‘What’s going on? Am I getting in trouble for being in the building?’ She said, ‘Do you not know what’s going on?’ I said no. She had to tell me.”Fitzgerald retraced his steps to the Senate Wing Door and exited the building through a window. “I just left on my own,” he said. “Nobody told me to leave.”On the way out, “I didn’t see anything,” Fitzgerald said. “I just saw it was still crowded, lots of people, and you could look down the street and it was nothing but heads. It was that packed.”Most wanted man turns himself inBy the time Fitzgerald reached Reagan National Airport for a flight home late on Jan. 6, the newscasts were filled with dramatic, breathless reports of massive rioting and a “storming” of the Capitol. He couldn’t believe it. Aside from being knocked off his feet by tear gas and a munition shell, Fitzgerald said he didn’t see any large-scale violence.“That’s when I started freaking out a little bit, but then I was thinking, ‘I didn’t do anything,’” he said. “I was a little bit comforted in that fact. When I got home, I called attorneys before the FBI even came and said, ‘What’s going to happen to me?’”The first attorney who represented him did not view it as overly serious because he wasn’t violent and did not vandalize or steal anything or go into any Capitol offices, Fitzgerald said.“He goes, ‘Well, this happens all the time. You’re just going to get a trespassing ticket and maybe a parading ticket. They’re not even misdemeanors; they’re just tickets,’” Fitzgerald said.That prediction never came true. Michael Fitzgerald was originally charged with two felony counts for being at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, but the obstruction of an official proceeding charge was dropped after a landmark June 2024 Supreme Court ruling.Photo for Blaze News by Chris DuzynskiTwo FBI agents visited him on Jan. 9 after he called the Bureau to turn himself in. The FBI put out "most wanted" posters with a photo of Fitzgerald as No. 32. “I turned myself in because I figured that was the best way to go,” he said.A month later, the situation took a big turn when 18 FBI agents raided his house, looking for the red Trump cap and custom sweatshirt he wore on Jan. 6. The entourage included an FBI SWAT team.“They came rushing into my house with weapons,” he said. “You couldn’t move in here, that’s how many FBI agents were in my house. I turned around, and my whole yard is full of agents.“I’m like, ‘All this for me?’ It was overkill,” he said. “I don’t know if they had a slow day or something. They were friendly, but they scared the crap out of my kids.”Nothing else happened in the case until April 2021. Fitzgerald and his wife were in Illinois visiting a museum with their children when his cell phone rang. A federal grand jury had indicted him on two felonies and four misdemeanors.“I honestly felt like I had a heart attack. It felt like someone just stabbed me right in the heart,” he said. “I couldn’t believe it. I’m like, ‘What did I do?’ I’m not naive. I know I broke the law by being inside, but I really didn’t think it was going to be anything more than trespassing.”'I got a call saying that I had stage four colon cancer that metastasized to my liver.'A grand jury issued an indictment on April 28 charging him with two felonies — civil disorder and obstruction of an official proceeding — and four misdemeanors related to entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds. At a May 7 arraignment hearing, he pleaded not guilty to all charges.Prosecutors claim that while he was on the Upper West Terrace, Fitzgerald shouted to other protesters, “Go get their sticks,” referring to batons carried by police. On video from his own iPhone, however, his voice is clear: “They have sticks!” Fitzgerald shakes his head at the assertion. “They twist everything,” he said.A superseding indictment was issued in December 2021, just before Fitzgerald got his cancer diagnosis. The indictment repeated the exact charges that were on the April 28 indictment. The only difference appeared to be that the U.S. attorney’s signature was now Matthew Graves instead of Channing Phillips.Fitzgerald had been scheduled for court hearings in December 2021 and January 2022, but his life was about to get further toppled in a way that would push his case well into 2022 and 2023.Fitzgerald said he visited the Veterans Affairs hospital in Madison complaining of blood in his stool — the symptom he first noticed in the bathroom at the Capitol on Jan. 6.“I was freaking out and went up there three times telling them what was going on with my symptoms,” he said. “They kept turning me around and saying that it was just symptoms of hemorrhoids. I said, ‘That’s not true because I’ve never seen ounces of blood.’”Fitzgerald decided to get a second opinion and scheduled an appointment at SSM Health St. Mary’s Hospital in Madison for a colonoscopy. After learning that St. Mary’s doctors had ordered the diagnostic test, the VA relented and performed Fitzgerald’s colonoscopy.“A couple days later I got a call saying that I had stage four colon cancer that metastasized to my liver,” he said. “At that point it wasn’t in my lungs. Now it’s in my lungs.”After the first anniversary of Jan. 6 passed, Fitzgerald faced a brutal regimen of chemotherapy to shrink the colon mass and liver tumors. His Jan. 6 criminal case would have to wait — and wait. The suicide of his Marine Corps buddy right in front of him on the Japanese island of Okinawa left Michael Fitzgerald with lasting mental scars.Photo for Blaze News by Chris Duzynski“I was doing a really harsh chemo, to the point where I was bedridden six out of seven days, throwing up a lot, in the bathroom a lot,” he said. “They got my tumors down enough to where they could do surgery on my liver and in my colon.”Initially Fitzgerald expected the surgery to be a minimally invasive laparoscopic procedure, but he was surprised at what he saw when he awoke from the anesthesia.“I ended up waking up to my whole chest open with 54 staples and an ostomy bag,” he said. “So I was not expecting that. If you know anybody that’s ever had an ostomy bag, it’s not pleasant. I had it for 90 days, and if I would’ve had it any longer, I don’t think I would’ve been able to do it.“So now I have a line from here all the way down under my belly,” he said. “Then it looks like I got a gunshot wound in my side from where the ostomy was. So I had to deal with that while dealing with the [Jan. 6] case.”The DOJ did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.From the crucible to PTSDFitzgerald carries invisible wounds from his time in the U.S. Marine Corps. Based at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif., Fitzgerald did tours in Kuwait, Korea, and Okinawa, Japan.He still recalls the end of boot camp, when the recruits were put through a three-day test called “the crucible.” The final stretch was a climb up a steep hill they nicknamed “Mount Motherf***er.”“So we get up there, and when we’re done, we’re at the end of the hills. That’s when we get our EGAs [Eagle, Globe and Anchor insignias]. They pinned them on our collars, and that’s when we sang ‘[God Bless the USA].’ We actually had Lee Greenwood there, so that was pretty special.”It was his deployment to Okinawa that left him so scarred that he is now classified as 100% service-disabled. There were good things during his months on Okinawa. He got to climb the snow-capped Mount Fuji, Japan’s tallest mountain at 12,388 feet.The nine-month tour got tedious, so Fitzgerald took college-credit courses and exercised a lot in his spare time. “One of the sayings was either become an alcoholic or a PT stud,” he said, noting that he pursued the physical training option over the booze. A bystander flushes Michael Fitzgerald’s eyes after he was struck by a heavy cloud of tear gas on the West Plaza of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Photo by Steve Baker/Blaze NewsIt was a trip to the shooting range on Okinawa that forever changed his life and took the life of his friend Dan.Dan had just gotten a “Dear John” letter from home and discovered that his wife was cheating on him. He was upset, so Fitzgerald gave him the best bit of tough-guy Marine advice he could muster: “I told him, ‘Stop being a bitch,’ basically. ‘I mean, there’s plenty of women out there who care. Move on.’”The pair went to the base shooting range a short time later. Fitzgerald noticed that Dan was unusually quiet. Marines have to have their wits about them during practice and qualification, or they could find themselves in the line of fire. They’re never supposed to put themselves there on purpose.“There’s a red line that you don’t cross, because then you’re in the direct sight or direct fire of everybody else,” Fitzgerald said. “He walked over that line and got lit up by three or four different Marines who were shooting downrange. He was killed instantly.”The shock and horror of watching a buddy die in front of him didn’t hit Fitzgerald until he got home and finished his hitch in the Marine Corps. Suicide was not a stranger. Three men in Fitzgerald’s battalion took their own lives. But now it was intensely personal. The experience would shape Fitzgerald’s life for a decade — and not for the better.'You think I’m having a stroke?'“I wouldn't say I had PTSD right away,” Fitzgerald said. “I was just more in awe, I guess. Probably had a little bit of guilt. I don’t think it really hit me until I started getting in trouble.”“I wrote some bad checks, got into drugs and girls too hard, and was on a mission of self-destruction,” he said.That self-destructive mission over a 10-year period landed Fitzgerald in criminal court repeatedly for writing bad checks, using someone else’s identification, theft of movable property, criminal trespass to a dwelling, obstruction of police, and selling alcohol to a minor, court records show.He said it all started when he used his mother’s car without permission and wrote some checks she gave him to pay bills. Fitzgerald said his stepfather insisted that he be prosecuted, while his mother did not want the police involved.In 2013, the military classified Fitzgerald as fully service-disabled. The ruling and its basic income helped him steady his life. Within a few years, he and his wife started a clothing business, selling custom T-shirts, caps, sweatshirts, and more to first responders, Second Amendment enthusiasts, and other conservative patrons. That led in 2018 to the founding of a charity to help homeless veterans by providing tiny homes.All of that came crashing down after his arrest. It started with hateful messages on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. “People would call me traitor and piece of crap, piece of sh*t,” he said. “Pretty much all of the names you could get. They were like, ‘How could you serve your country and then commit treason?'” The anti-Jan. 6 rage mob destroyed Michael Fitzgerald's patriotic clothing business by leaving fake reviews online. They then attacked his veterans' charity, and soon the donations dried up.Photo for Blaze News by Chris DuzynskiThen the rage mob went after the family business, flooding Yelp and other ratings sites with fake negative reviews. “I went out of business with my apparel line because they would get everybody and their mother, 100 of their best friends, and they would leave all negative reviews saying, ‘I didn’t receive my stuff.’”The hate campaign also caused donations to the charity to dry up, he said. “We lost all of that funding and donations from people because they would go on [social media] and just make stuff up on our Facebook page. They said, ‘Oh, this guy’s a J6er' or 'this guy is treasonous.’”In the midst of it all, Fitzgerald lost his mother, Laurie Lynn Wallace, to a brain bleed and a stroke on Feb. 19, 2023. A 36-year head nurse at the Middleton VA Hospital where her son is being treated for cancer, Wallace, 66, came out of retirement to help out during the pandemic.'He might be a billionaire, but he’s still the underdog.'“We had our annual sleigh ride, and my mom starts slurring her words. My stepdad said, ‘What’s going on with you? You’re not making any sense,’” Fitzgerald said. “My mom was like, ‘What do you mean? You think I’m having a stroke?’” She then collapsed.Despite emergency surgery at the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Wallace could not be saved. “We had to let her go,” Fitzgerald said.Laurie Wallace fled domestic abuse with her son, Michael, when he was little. Fitzgerald said his father was prone to violence.“He threw a vase at my mom and missed my mom. It hit me and broke my collarbone. So my mom took me and never looked back.”Take no days for grantedThrough it all, Fitzgerald stays positive. His surgeries and cancer treatments have left him infertile. He continues to travel to the VA hospital for chemotherapy in the hopes of beating the cancer. He recently had an MRI to make sure the cancer had not spread to his brain.“If I go up to the [Wisconsin] Dells and take the kids up there and I’m watching them at the water park, I’m like, ‘Is this the last time that we’re going to be able to do this as a family?’" he said.“But then I’m thinking on the flip side — I could get in a car accident tomorrow and die. So I’m really putting everything in God, knowing that just because I have stage four cancer doesn't mean I couldn’t be here for another 10, 15 years.“The way I’m looking at this is I need to make it in three-year increments,” Fitzgerald said. “Every three years there’s a chance of a new treatment or a cure. So if I can make it in those three-year increments, I’m doing good." Michael Fitzgerald is a vocal fan of former President Donald J. Trump and has volunteered at several Wisconsin campaign rallies. A sign in his front yard leaves no doubt about the matter.Photo for Blaze News by Chris Duzynski“I’m trying to stay positive because 50% of the battle is staying positive,” he said. “Obviously that helps your immune system too. I don’t take any day for granted. At first they gave me 24 months, and I’m past that now. So, I mean, that’s a good sign.”In the nearly four years since Jan. 6, Fitzgerald has become an even bigger admirer of former President Trump, attending eight of his rallies. He worked as a Republican volunteer at various Trump campaign events. He said he marvels at how Trump gave up a comfortable retirement to take on D.C. corruption and the ruling elites — all because the country was headed in a bad direction. He took a bullet and still stands strong.“Everybody’s asking me why I support Trump,” Fitzgerald said. “He was a billionaire that didn’t need to do this. He was a Democrat and saw the light, became a Republican.”Fitzgerald has seen a transformation in his wife, who was politically neutral before but is now a “full-blown Trump girl.” “She’s been seeing with her own eyes and sees I like underdogs,” Fitzgerald said. “That’s another reason I love Trump, because the more that people hate him, the more that there’s something going on that people [on the left] are trying to cover up.“That’s where I’m at,” Fitzgerald said. “He might be a billionaire, but he’s still the underdog.”If you are a veteran in crisis or know someone at risk of suicide, call the Veterans Crisis Line 24 hours a day, seven days a week, by dialing 998 and pressing option 1.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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To Divine the Future, the Ancients Relied on These Chance-Based Fortune-Telling Tools
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To Divine the Future, the Ancients Relied on These Chance-Based Fortune-Telling Tools

Texts like the "Sortes Astrampsychi" promised insights on clients' love lives, career prospects, financial woes and families
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