We genocide, we launch massive prison concentration camps in Gaza, we kidnap presidents, we pollute the land, and we valorize Gestapo, but, nah, sports, flicks and meaningless mush prevail!
Jan 24, 2026
This is just another single stupid example of how dead AmeriKKKa is:

The phone message from Bowdoin College security on September 14 caught Finley Rhys by surprise. He hadn’t expected the organizers of a Charlie Kirk vigil to be pleased with his flippant three-word email, but he hadn’t expected anyone to feel threatened by it, either.
“RIP to bro,” it read, followed by a sad-cat emoji.
Jackson Holl, a Bowdoin junior and one of three students who’d organized the planned vigil for the murdered conservative activist, was rattled by the response. He reported it to campus security and would later tell an officer that he interpreted the message “as a direct threat to my life, a deliberate and malicious attempt to intimidate and terrorize me for my beliefs.”
Euthanized? Shot by security detail? Hmm.

Killing Sitting Bull over and over and over again: The U.S. Department of the Interior has said it will revoke the grazing permits that have allowed American Prairie to run bison on roughly 63,000 acres of federal public land in Montana. This decision would affect seven parcels managed by the Bureau of Land Management in Phillips County, and it would hinder the organization’s larger goals of conserving large swaths of intact grasslands while restoring the native grazers to those landscapes.
The Interior’s rationale for yanking the permits, according to its Jan. 16 proposed decision, is that under the Taylor Grazing Act, the BLM can only issue grazing permits for livestock managed for “production-oriented” purposes. It claims that American Prairie’s emphasis on conservation runs counter to those purposes.
“A cold wind blew on the prairie on the day the last buffalo fell. A death wind for my people”

Conservatives who once railed against federal agents now applaud them

MAGA, RINO, Conservatives, Libertarians, and a whole lotta liberals — Nazis.
Since Ruby Ridge and Waco in the 1990s, a faction of right-wing populists had excoriated federal law enforcement. Now those agents are being deployed by their allies.

In case you haven’t been to Yosemite before, it’s virtually impossible to keep even the inside of a vehicle “free of dirt” while visiting the park. Harder still is keeping your home free of personal property while you’re living there.
According to the employee who spoke with SFGATE, workers at the park suspect that Aramark’s motives behind the new housing policy are a means of making it easier to replace longtime, permanent employees with temporary workers who are paid less and provided with less adequate, more crowded housing arrangements. In the new policy, third parties are granted permission to lease certain employee housing units from Aramark.
“They want temp employees, the ones that just come and go, that they can put in bunk housing with low pay,” the employee said. “They want people they can just cram in.”
Aramark has been heavily scrutinized since the company took over Yosemite’s concessions in 2015. In early 2020, the company faced a federal investigation after several visitors and employees were infected with norovirus at the park. A 2024 Bloomberg investigation found dangerous, run-down conditions at employee housing within Yosemite, including chemical spills, collapsed ceilings, bedbugs and a rodent infestation that caused one employee to contract hantavirus. Most recently, the company’s handling of the famous Ahwahnee Hotel came under fire after a report filed by the National Park Service cited rodent activity, improperly maintained facilities, food storage issues and a host of other problems at the iconic building.

The white ghouls of the Department of War Crimes. Your wife’s daddy, dudes. A face only a machete could love!

As the U.S. military continues its campaign targeting alleged drug cartel boats, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is convening a rare meeting of all of the top military leaders from the 34 countries in the Western Hemisphere.
This will be the first time that such a meeting has been convened and appears to be focused on improving cooperation against drug trafficking and criminal organizations.
The meeting is set for Feb. 11, according to a statement from the Joint Chiefs of Staff provided to ABC News.

This is the face of separatism? U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent weighs in on Alberta separatism, calls province ‘natural partner’. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday goaded Prime Minister Mark Carney and directly referenced Alberta’s potential independence referendum, calling the Western province “a natural partner for the U.S.”
Mr. Bessent’s comments, made in a Thursday interview with American right-wing media personality Jack Posobiec, make him the highest-profile member of the Trump administration to weigh in on Alberta’s potential independence vote – and adds to the steady drumbeat of allies of U.S. President Donald Trump who appear to be watching the campaign.

The faggotry of AI, Trump, Weiss, Miller-Glosser . . . . White House Posts Photo Altered to Show Arrested Minnesota Protester Crying
The New York Times ran the image through an A.I. detection system and concluded that it showed signs of manipulation.

Going after those blacks.
A Minnesota federal magistrate judge refused to sign a complaint charging independent journalist Don Lemon in connection with a protest inside a church in St. Paul on Sunday, multiple sources familiar with the proceedings told CBS News.
“The attorney general is enraged at the magistrate’s decision,” said a source familiar with the matter. Attorney General Pam Bondi has been in Minnesota for two days, as the Justice Department has sought to surge prosecutorial and law enforcement resources there.
A different source stressed that the process is not over, and the Justice Department could find other avenues to charge Lemon.
We need a motherfucking football stadium worth’s of whistelblowers and leakers.
A federal grand jury in Maryland has indicted a Pentagon contractor whose alleged leaking of classified documents sparked an “outrageous” FBI raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home.
According to the justice department, Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones illegally provided sensitive and secret information “related to national defense” to a reporter who it says then wrote and published at least five articles using it.
The indictment was not immediately available, and a press release announcing five charges against Perez-Lugones of mishandling classified information did not identify the journalist or their employer.
On 14 January, the FBI raided the Virginia home of the Post reporter Hannah Natanson in what the newspaper called a “highly unusual and aggressive” move, and seized items including two laptops, a hard drive and a recording device, her smart watch and a mobile phone.

In a subsequent development this week, a federal judge temporarily blocked prosecutors from reviewing material taken in the raid while the court reviews a request by the Post to return Natanson’s equipment.
Perez-Lugones, 61, of Laurel, Maryland, was arrested on 8 January and has remained in jail since. The navy veteran held a top secret security clearance as a systems engineer and information technology specialist for a defense department contractor.

Look at the smile on this fucking Sperm Receptacle Hand Maid cunt.
Usha Vance, wife of US Vice President JD Vance, is from San Diego, California, where she was born and raised by her Indian immigrant parents who are academics in science and engineering. She attended Mt. Carmel High School in San Diego before pursuing degrees at Yale University and the University of Cambridge.
- Vice President JD Vance called back to his past comments about parenting while addressing his wife’s pregnancy at the 2026 March for Life rally
- At the previous year’s rally, JD made the case that he wants to see “more babies” in the United States
- One year later, on Friday, Jan. 23, he called attention to how second lady Usha Vance is now expecting their fourth child, bragging that he “practices what he preaches”
Krish and Lakshmi both work in higher education at universities in San Diego. Krish is a lecturer in the Department of Aerospace Engineering at San Diego State University. He has also been published in many technical papers and received numerous patents, per his SDSU bio.

Meanwhile, Lakshmi is a professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at UC San Diego as well as the coordinator of the Undergraduate Microbiology Teaching Laboratory, a role in which she designs “the microbiology teaching laboratory curriculum” and coordinates “Instructional Assistant training, and mentoring adjunct faculty.”
In 2018, she was also appointed as the provost of Sixth College. In a letter from Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla, he called Lakshmi a “creative and dynamic educator” and said he was “delighted” to have her in the role.
“Professor Chilukuri has a demonstrated record of commitment to undergraduate education, equity, and diversity. She is one of the founding members of the pilot course in Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in Biology and Medicine, exploring the practice and philosophy of science from a multicultural perspective, the historical use and misuse of science in biomedical research and social policies, and issues of race and medicine in a post-genomic age,” he wrote.
As a professor, Lakshmi has also been involved in activism and was one of over 2,300 California professors who signed an open letter to Donald Trump urging him not to withdraw from the Paris accords on climate change, per The New York Times. As of the newspaper’s July 2024 story, Krish and Lakshmi were registered Democrats.

Vance Announces Expansion of ‘Mexico City Rule’ to Cover D.E.I. and ‘Radical’ Gender Policies The change, which could affect more than $30 billion in foreign assistance, is the Trump administration’s latest move against what the president calls “woke ideology.”

Hillbilly fucking Hindus.
At Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, the Trump administration took down an exhibit on the contradiction between President George Washington’s ownership of enslaved people and the Declaration of Independence’s promise of liberty.
At Muir Woods National Monument in California, the administration dismantled a plaque about how the tallest trees on the planet could help store carbon dioxide and slow the Earth’s dangerous warming.
And at Lowell National Historical Park in Massachusetts, Trump officials ordered the National Park Service to stop showing films about the women and immigrants who once toiled in the city’s textile mills.
Across the country, Park Service workers have started taking down plaques, films and other materials in connection with a directive from President Trump to remove or rewrite content that may “disparage Americans” or promote “corrosive ideology.”




In the not-too-distant future, every movie and TV show will be about the Trump administration. Or maybe it just feels that way: On Saturday, HBO premieres Fahrenheit 451, the latest adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s visionary 1953 novel about a dystopian society where books have been outlawed and artistic expression squashed. But the movie, which stars Michael B. Jordan as “fireman” Guy Montag and Michael Shannon as his commanding officer in a brigade that burns books, is also very much meant to speak to The Way Things Are Now, portraying a frightening America where the country’s history has been rewritten to serve the government’s agenda and the populace is subservient to social media and technology.
Pedophiles REJOICE. For months, the 2025 news cycle was dominated by the disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
Public outrage over the continued secrecy surrounding Epstein investigative files – which Donald Trump failed to release fully early in his second term, despite campaign promises – was growing.
Federal lawmakers took matters into their own hands: they issued a spate of subpoenas related to the late child sex trafficker, releasing batches of files that renewed attention to his connections to high-profile individuals on both sides of the political spectrum. Congress ultimately passed legislation mandating that the Department of Justice release these files by 19 December, with Trump signing this bill into law.
But that deadline came and went, with Trump’s justice department making a mere fraction of the total disclosures required by the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). These scant releases have so far failed to lift the veil on how Epstein operated with impunity for years.

All American Amazon (NOT). Jewish run Amazon is gearing up to lay off as many as 14,000 white-collar workers, with cuts starting as soon as next Tuesday.
Reuters reports that jobs at cloud division Amazon Web Services are among those at risk, along with retail, Prime Video, and human resources units.

And so we get more fucking InBred UnUnited Queen-Dumb shit?

Bezos family backs UK’s WatchHouse coffee shops for US expansion

HighPost Capital, co-founded by Mark Bezos, invested over $6 million in the luxury drinks provider, which offers options including a $58 eugenioides coffee

His (Mark Bezos’) aim for the business was to “elevate” the local café experience, serving rare and single-origin coffee and high-quality food in spaces featuring Scandinavian-inspired interior designs. The idea stemmed from working in the luxury homes of celebrities.
Coffee, or real news?
Fiorella Isabel and I are back to assess the events, or some of them, that have accelerated in 2026. The Trump Technate is being ushered in at breakneck speed.
Venezuelan President Maduro kidnapped, US military build-up for war against Iran, CENTCOM in Israel today 24th January which usually heralds Zionist aggression.
ISIS transferred, with the help of Jolani’s Takfiri militia, to Iraq to combat the Iraqi anti-Imperialist/Zionist forces.
Aggression and economic pressure on the Lebanese Resistance has also escalated in the last week, again signalling a regional uptick in the Zionist attempt to eradicate resistance against their demonic project to secure resources, territory and supremacy.
Russia and China seem to be interested observers only – their western acolytes are pushing fake news like the landing of multiple Chinese planes in Tehran but Iranian analysts have dismissed these reports as disinformation.

Last spiel, I promise: I went down a rabbit hole, and lo and behold! Jews, man, everywhere in the Jew Yorker! Got this shit in my email, again, always a Jew telling the world what’s up. Tucker? Ahh, a Jew has to write the biography?
Jason Zengerle
A staff writer covering politics.
In April, 2023, I was deep in the weeds of writing a book about Tucker Carlson when he was abruptly fired by Fox News. I’m not sure which one of us was more shocked—and, if I’m being honest with myself, dismayed—by this development.
At the time, Carlson was the network’s most popular prime-time host and had achieved a level of cultural ubiquity that made him the most powerful person in conservative media. After his firing, many savvy press critics predicted that Carlson would suffer the same fate as previous Fox stars who had lost the news channel’s powerful megaphone: irrelevance. (To wit, when was the last time you thought about Bill O’Reilly, much less wanted to read a book about him?) But Carlson has staved off oblivion. Indeed, in the nearly three years since he left Fox, he has not only reëstablished himself as the most significant media voice on the American right; Carlson has become, in some ways, more influential than he was at the height of his Fox tenure.

Photo illustration by Joan Wong; Source photograph by Giorgio Viera / AFP / Getty
In this week’s issue, I examine how Carlson has managed to stay in the picture. Now deprived of Fox’s built-in audience, he’s grown his own for his video podcast by mastering the attention economy. He regularly generates outrage (and eyeballs) by hosting the likes of Vladimir Putin, Alex Jones, Andrew Tate, and, most recently, Nick Fuentes on his show. And he routinely crosses lines that his boundary-pushing Fox show was careful to avoid—particularly lines related to the United States’ relationship with Israel, which he criticizes in the most inflammatory and sometimes antisemitic terms. Just as crucially, he’s embraced Donald Trump in a way that he refused to do during Trump’s first Presidency. Back then, Carlson was perhaps the only Fox host who maintained a wary personal and professional distance from the President. Today, he luxuriates in his proximity to power. This month Carlson has had lunch with Trump on consecutive Fridays. Carlson’s business partner posted pictures of Carlson in the Oval Office on social media.

The rabbit hole . . . . Twenty fucking YEARS ago, these fucking Jewish neuroperverse fucks, man.
Of Death Threats and ‘Death Threats’. When I told Zengerle that while I found the letter to be “both insane and obscene,” I couldn’t find anything threatening in its contents, he found my conclusions disturbing.
I don’t know about you, but when I see the words “death threat” in my daily newspaper, I expect to read about an actual threat of death to someone somewhere. [Wikipedia agrees: “death threat is a threat (often made anonymously) against a person to kill him or her.” Here.] I got a threat once from an angry reader on the phone and I called the police and that was not even regarding my impending “death”; just a broken leg or two.
For reasons I cannot fully explain, I became briefly obsessed on Friday afternoon with the Boston Globe’s report of “death threats” against The New Republic’s Jason Zengerle by members of the Kos community who did not like his reporting on Jerome Armstrong and Moulitsas Zúniga. The article, which was written by Globe intern, Michael M. Grynbaum, here, struck me as playing to all the clichés the mainstream media offers about the liberal blogosphere, but nowhere more than in the reporting of alleged “death threats” against Zengerle, which when I read it, I knew simply could not be true. (Why the article made no mention of what struck me as a central fact of the drama–Zengerle’s employment of an accusatory e-mail that turned out to be a forgery–also piqued my curiosity/annoyance, but remains another story.)
Anyway, on Friday afternoon, I made a few calls and reached both Globe Washington bureau chief Peter Canellos and Jason Zengerle. (I could not reach the article’s author, Grynbaum, who was not in the office, and does not have voicemail on the system.) I spoke to Zengerle first and asked him to describe the threat. He read to me the contents of an e-mail that, in rather graphic, sick and disgusting terms–relating to concentration camps–explained to him that the writer wished he would one day die a similar death. It was clearly the product of a sick mind and no doubt disturbing to receive, but nothing in it could conceivably be labeled a “threat” of any kind. When I told Zengerle that while I found the letter to be “both insane and obscene,” I couldn’t find anything threatening in its contents, he found my conclusions disturbing. First he sent me an e-mail in which he said, “If you write about this, I expect you will print the attached e-mail in its entirety (with edits for the two instances of profanity in the last paragraph, if necessary) so that you can then explain to your readers how this note –which I received because Moulitsas put my personal e-mail address on his website at the end of a long screed attacking me and the magazine I work for– is not, in your definition of the term, a death threat.”
When I told him that I would characterize the note as best as I could but that for reasons of taste and space I could not imagine that my editors at MSNBC.com would want to print it, he sent me a second e-mail in which he insisted, “The fact that we’re even discussing whether it constitutes a “death threat” is insane and obscene.” He then went on to explain the fact that he had received hundreds of e-mails as a result of the fact that “Moulitsas printed my personal e-mail address on his website, and “a handful wishing me death and/or some sort of bodily harm. I deleted virtually all of them, but I did hang on to the one I forwarded to you, because I found it particularly unsettling. I assumed you would feel the same way. Look, if a note from an anonymous e-mailer wishing for me, a Jew, to be put in a concentration camp and then tortured by Nazi guards until I choke on human feces is not, in your mind, a death threat, well, that’s your opinion. But that’s not an opinion I share. It’s not as if this e-mailer was hoping that people defecate in my mouth as part of a fraternity prank. He was hoping for this to happen to me in Auschwitz! Do you think the Nazi guards, in the e-mailer’s scenario, ultimately perform the Heimlich on the choking Kapo and save his life? I don’t. If you want to have a debate about all this–in which you basically soft-pedal or in some sense defend this e-mail–then we can have it. But I’d really rather not. Therefore, I’d really rather you not write about this on your blog. To try to turn this difference of opinion into a “gotcha” item strikes me as unfair and unworthy of you.”
Now I’ve never spoken to Zengerle before and know nothing about him. And I’ve not waded too deeply into the waters of TNR’s fight with Kos and company. So I’m staying clear of those issues. But this is not a matter of “gotcha” journalism, nor for God’s sake an attempt by me to “soft-pedal or in some sense defend this e-mail” which after all, I characterized to Zengerle as “both insane and obscene.” It’s a matter of the meaning of words. I once heard Susan Sontag and Nadine Gordimer describe the purpose of intellectuals is to defend the language. I agree. There was no “death threat” here; just the kind of e-mails that are the price of putting strong opinions on the Internet--something that happens with unhappy frequency here at Altercation, and the main reason I pay somebody to screen them for me.
