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In just five days, a surge of manipulated war imagery from the Middle East has flooded platforms like X, Facebook, and Telegram. What makes these images alarming is not just that they exist -- it's how quickly they travel and how authoritative they appear.
In what is being described as a "watershed moment for parental rights," the Supreme Court has blown up, for now, a state's scheme to secretly push trangenderism on children in school, and hide the activism from parents who are responsible for the upbringing of those same children.
Islamists are trying to introduce curriculum into the Texas school district that would teach that one-third of all slaves in America were Muslim, enslaved, and killed for their Muslim faith, and teach that the Alamo was influenced by Islam and honors Islamic architecture and more.
The US has issued evacuation orders for 14 countries throughout the Middle East region at the same time President Trump is warning that 'the big one is coming'. Is the US getting ready for something unseen in modern warfare?
If this conflict has revealed anything in its first three days, it is that modern war is not just about who fires first -- it is about who has enough inventory to finish quickly.
Shortly after airstrikes on Iran began on February 28, several Palestinian groups, including Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, issued strong condemnations of Israel and the US and voiced support for the Iranian regime. They also called on Arabs and Muslims to stand united against Israel and the US.
War used to be something nations feared. Now, for a growing corner of the internet, it's something to wager on.
Sleeper networks are designed precisely for moments like this. They wait silently for years, blending into communities, building ordinary lives, and then, when triggered, they act.
Our entire way of life depends upon cheap energy, and nearly a third of all oil that travels by sea must go through the Strait of Hormuz...which is now shut.
In modern warfare, timing is often measured in weeks or months of planning. But in this case, history may record that a war's decisive turning point was measured in minutes when a unique window of opportunity opened to take out an entire echelon of leadership in a single attack.
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