JORDAN TRISHTON WALKER LIED SUDDENLY!!

Friday, 27 January 2023

LIAR!! THROUGH HIM OUT!!

Monday, 9 January 2023

USAFA Superintendent Lt General Clark Is A Liar, Must Be Removed. Is Behavior Treasonous?

By L Todd Wood

September 27, 2022

Views: 10650

Clark has blown past quibbling, now flat out breaking the honor code. His behavior aids CCP agenda.

Full Disclosure – Lt General Richard Clark is my classmate at the United States Air Force Academy. Although I didn’t know him at the ‘Zoo’, some friends of mine did, and have told me he is a ‘good person’.

Good people don’t push cultural Marxism for our enemy communist China on young cadets. Good people don’t force young cadets with no risk of dying from Covid to take experimental, illegal shots which damage their health (containing the same biological weapon that was used by communist China on the United States).

I have written extensively that we are under attack by a foreign power. General Clark is aiding that attack, whether he will admit it or not.

There are two explanations for this.

When I asked an older, wiser fellow graduate what he thought of Clark’s behavior, he declared, “A useful idiot… a person of limited abilities who has done irreparable harm.”

The second is — General Clark is willfully participating in the attempted destruction of the United States Air Force. 

Over the last year, many have given Clark the benefit of the doubt. 

That is no longer possible.

The General recently issued a statement on the negative publicity our beloved Academy has received on its ‘DEI’ program where cadets were instructed not to use the words ‘mom and dad’. 

Clark’s response to all of this negative attention is posted in the PDF below.

Clark states “certain parts of the training were taken out of context.”

How can you take don’t use the words ‘mom and dad’ out of context?

Elaine Donnelly, President of the Center for Military Readiness, puts it this way:

The AFA’s dissembling on what the DIE slides actually say, while failing to recognize how inconsistent they are with sound principles of military culture – non-discrimination and recognition of merit, is very disappointing but not surprising.

If the leaders at the AFA don’t get this, and if they keep dissembling with statements designed to deceive, perhaps it’s time to listen to critics who believe we are spending too much taxpayer money on what amount to liberal arts colleges.

I’ll be more blunt.

Clark is lying. 

Clark has blown past ‘quibbling’ and is now in full violation of the Cadet Honor Code. 

Whether Clark knows it or not, he is aiding and abetting the enemy, violating the honor code, has lost the respect of the Air Force, the American people, and even our adversaries. 

He needs to resign and save whatever honor he has left. 

He won’t resign however. Therefore, he needs to be removed.

It is unfortunate for me to say a classmate of mine, who benefitted immensely from all America could give him, will go down in history in this manner.

Email1Download

L. Todd Wood is the CEO of Creative Destruction Media. He’s also been a longtime national security columnist for the Washington Times, and other large publications. Visit LToddWood.com

IN THE U.K.

Monday, 2 January 2023

Approved plan to introduce climate lockdowns in 2024. Katie Hopkins explains the dictatorship plan – you will not believe this BS

This is why we will keep and bear arms, They try this here we do not hold back. Freedom is almost gone in the UK,  they will try this there first, let’s see if they submit like good globalist fools.  They are about to try it in Paris as well.  See below….  Multiple clips including news clips….   Exercise your Constitutional right to bear arms,  do it often, Buy for friends.  Buy now, use cash….  do not use cards at any gun store ever until the issues are cleared up as they are now logging all purchases for future confiscation attempts.

America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve Falls to Lowest Level Since 1983 as Gas Prices Rise Again

Nick R. HamiltonDecember 31, 2022 – 10:06 am2 Comments

The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) fell to its lowest level since 1983, as oil and gas prices rose again last week.

The Biden administration has tapped over 240 million barrels from the SPR this year to lower domestic gas prices, which have been rising since the president took office.

President Joe Biden first announced his plan to release oil from the national reserve on an emergency basis on Nov. 23, 2021, as part of a “major effort to moderate the price of oil” and lower prices at the average “corner gas station.”

The SPR was established when Congress passed the Energy Policy and Conservation Act after the 1973 oil embargo, for emergency shortages, acts of terrorism, and natural disasters.

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Biden ordered the release in March of the first 30 million barrels out of the 180 million initially intended to be tapped from the SPR in 2022.

Republicans and energy analysts have been highly critical of the plan, arguing that it does little to lower gas prices and makes the United States more vulnerable to major supply disruptions in the future.

U.S. gas prices soared over $5 per gallon in June, reaching an all-time high, but later fell below $4 by the end of summer.

Right before the midterms, Biden controversially ordered the DOE to sell an additional 15 million barrels from the SPR on October 19, in addition to the oil already released, and called for additional sales throughout the winter.

The emergency oil stockpile, which is managed by the Department of Energy (DOE), tumbled to 375.1 million barrels as of Dec. 23, according to the Energy Information Administration.

This is the first time that the reserve has fallen below 378 million barrels since Dec. 30, 1983, when it reached 378.3 million barrels.

In the meantime, average national gas prices rose to $3.159 per gallon on Dec. 29, for the third consecutive day, according to the American Automobile Association’s gas price index.

However, the brief rally earlier this week and other associated factors may deter producers from selling oil contracts to the U.S. government at its desired price of between $67 and $72 per barrel, to refill the reserve.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the U.S. oil benchmark, jumped to nearly $80 per barrel last week, but later fell to around $78.30 by Dec. 29, while the Brent crude index, the global oil benchmark, hit $84.33 per barrel.

The DOE’s Office of Petroleum Reserves announced on Dec. 16, that it would start repurchasing crude oil for the SPR.

Higher oil prices potentially pose a challenge to the DOE’s plan to begin soliciting bids from oil producers to refill the SPR using fixed-price contracts.

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed future WTI prices holding above $79 per barrel from February through July 2023.

The DOE’s program to refill the national oil stockpile by 3 million barrels a day, is set to begin in February 2023.

Two factors driving up oil markets include rising demand from China, as it emerges from its pandemic restrictions in recent weeks, and a potential reduction in oil output from Russia after it promised to retaliate against countries supporting the G-7-led price cap.

The latest price estimates may encourage producers to take their chances with the market rather than make bids for the government’s contracts.

Congressional Republicans have since denounced the move and announced that they would impose further oversight and new legislation next year, that would halt further releases from the stockpile, which is dangerously low, reported Fox Business.

The Republicans are pushing a bill that would prohibit the DOE from tapping the SPR unless there is a “severe energy supply interruption” and until the administration issues a plan to boost domestic oil and gas production.

They also warned the rapid depletion of the stockpile would allow opponents like Russia, China, and Iran to “gain geopolitical leverage” over the United States.

Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY.), the ranking member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, and Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), the ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, warned last month that the Biden administration was endangering its future of the SPR.

The two Republican lawmakers accused Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm of overseeing the sale of more than 245 million barrels from the national stockpile, while “gas prices remain high and supply chain shortages continue to plague our economy.”

They noted that instead of encouraging American energy producers to drill for more oil, Biden administration officials failed to “establish long-term plans for the optimal size, configuration, maintenance, and operational capabilities of the reserve,” while depleting it to its lowest level in decades.

GOP legislators noted that while the United States remains a net exporter of oil products, the SPR needs to remain stable enough to mitigate any potential supply disruptions that could affect the nation’s energy infrastructure.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration has been criticizing American oil producers throughout the year for spending too little on additional production, despite the White House’s best efforts to discourage drilling.

Major producers like Chevron and ExxonMobil have said that they were trying to increase production in the Permian Basin in response to the criticism, but others in the industry have said that any new drilling projects might expose them and their investors to risks if prices plummet.

Share this:

join telegram

Who is the best president?

Here’s How The Military Dropped Its Standards In 2022 To Address A Major Recruiting Crisis

By Daily Caller News Foundation 

Here’s How The Military Dropped Its Standards In 2022 To Address A Major Recruiting Crisis

By Micaela Burrow

  • In 2022 amid a historic recruiting crisis, U.S. military leaders lowered the bar of physical and mental standards required to join the service. 
  • The changes, such as expanding access for individuals with a history of behavioral health conditions, could reduce military readiness, Thomas Spoehr, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
  • “These changes have been part of a trend of lowered standards” — mental, physical and medical — “which has taken place over the last two years,” Spoehr explained.

The military’s standards for committed members and new recruits have dropped in 2022 as the services struggle to overcome challenges in filling the ranks.

Army recruiting plummeted in 2022, while the remaining services just made their recruiting goals for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, according to Department of Defense (DOD) data shared with the Daily Caller News Foundation. The military is scrambling to adjust policies in a way that attracts more recruits, prompting some lowering of physical fitness and academic standards that could negatively impact military readiness, a military expert told the DCNF.

“The military and the administration are trying to overcome the greatest recruiting challenge they have ever faced by reducing certain standards,” Thomas Spoehr, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, told the DCNF. (RELATED: The Military Vaccine Mandate Has Been Overturned, But Unvaccinated Troops Still Risk Reprisal)

The Navy opened up the service to more prospective sailors who score at minimum levels on entrance examinations that test physical and mental aptitude on Dec. 5, Cmdr. David Benham, a Navy Recruiting Command spokesperson, told Military.com. New guidelines will allow 7,500 recruits, or roughly 20% of the new active duty enlisted cohort, from the lowest acceptable aptitude level to join.

While the Navy met its fiscal year 2022 recruiting goal with a surplus of just 42 sailors, the target for 2023 raises the ceiling by an additional 4,000 new applicants, according to Military.com. Officials insisted the change did not reflect a lowering of standards.

“As we continue to navigate a challenging recruiting environment, changing the AFQT requirement removes a potential barrier to enlistment, allowing us to widen the pool of potential recruits and creating opportunities for personnel who wish to serve,” Benham told the outlet.

The Air Force also relaxed entrance requirements. A new policy revealed in September allowed applicants who test positive for tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient in marijuana, during their entrance physical a second chance to come clean, whereas under prior rules they would be automatically disqualified from service.

In June, the DOD shortened the minimum amount of time individuals with a history of conditions including asthma or behavioral health problems like attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder would need to be symptom-free to enlist without a waiver, a DOD issuance shows. The military has allowed 700 recruits previously diagnosed with ADHD to join without a waiver in 2022, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

The change could “reasonably lead to lower quality recruits and diminished readiness,” Spoehr told the DCNF.

Mike Lindell comments…

Friday, 30 December 2022

Arizona votes still coming in…

Thursday, 29 December 2022

Fishy Business – Arizona Mandatory Recounts Revealing Significant GOP Gains, Hobbs Sealed Results Until After Her Lawsuit Completed 

December 29, 2022 | Sundance | 189 Comments

Oh, now this is just the proverbial cherry on the fishy cake in Arizona.   The results of a mandatory recount in Pinal County, Arizona, are set to be released today, December 29th, showing “significant discrepancies” from the original vote.  Results favoring the republican candidates [Details Here].

Then there’s this very interesting development….

“The results of the statutorily required recount in 3 races were expected to be released on December 22nd however, inexplicably, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs petitioned the courts to have the results go directly to her office and asked to postpone the release until December 29th.”

Apparently, in her role as Secretary of State Katie Hobbs filed a motion with the court to seal the final recount result until after the lawsuit filed in Maricopa County against her was concluded.  That means the Lake team did not have the results of three recounts to use in court as evidence that something sketchy in Arizona had taken place.