Anonymous ID: 046840 April 2, 2026, 6:01 p.m. No.24458144   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>24458087

dis man is a disappointment!

jus sayin is all..

all the hype and zilch results, jus like bondi.

oh well, here we are.

 

we-have-it-all.mp4

Anonymous ID: 046840 April 2, 2026, 6:23 p.m. No.24458231   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8242 >>8246

https://conservativeplaylist.com/did-kristi-noem-leak-her-husbands-cross-dressing-to-garner-sympathy-and-save-her-career/

 

Did Kristi Noem Leak Her Husband’s Cross-Dressing to Garner Sympathy and Save Her Career?

 

Washington has seen its share of carefully timed scandals — revelations that arrive precisely when a political figure needs to change the subject, redirect public sympathy, or rehabilitate a damaged image. The question now swirling through conservative circles in the aftermath of the Bryon Noem story is a pointed one: Is this latest bombshell a genuine family tragedy, or a strategic detonation?

 

Consider the timing. Kristi Noem was fired as Secretary of Homeland Security on March 5, 2026 — the first Cabinet secretary to leave her post — amid what an administration official described as “a culmination of her many unfortunate leadership failures,” including the fallout from a fatal immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota, a controversial $220 million non-bid advertising contract, allegations of infidelity, and what was characterized as constant feuding with the heads of other agencies. She was not gracefully transitioned. She was pushed. And then, barely three weeks later, a story lands in the Daily Mail alleging that her husband Bryon has been living a secret double life involving cross-dressing and contact with online fetish performers — and Kristi Noem’s spokesman rushes out a statement casting her as a devastated, blindsided wife.

 

The sympathetic framing arrived almost too quickly and too cleanly.

 

The Setup

Kristi and Bryon Noem have been married since 1992. While Kristi built a career in Republican politics — serving in the South Dakota legislature, as the state’s governor, and ultimately as head of the DHS — Bryon made a “fortune in the insurance industry.” By all public appearances, they were the embodiment of the conservative family ideal: faith, fidelity, and the heartland. Kristi leaned into it. She leaned into it hard.

 

GLAAD has profiled Noem as part of its Accountability Project cataloging anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and discriminatory actions. She opposed marriage equality for same-sex couples and supported anti-transgender legislation. She signed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in South Dakota. She fought to keep biological males out of women’s sports. The wholesome, God-fearing, flag-waving family was not a peripheral part of her brand — it was the brand.

 

Which makes the revelation about her husband all the more extraordinary, and all the more politically useful, depending on how one reads what followed.

 

The Convenient Victim

Photos allegedly obtained by the Daily Mail appeared to show Bryon Noem in feminine clothing, wearing what appeared to be a makeshift breast plate, engaging in what the New York Post described as a “bimbofication” fetish involving online contact with multiple women. According to reports, the images were part of hundreds of messages exchanged between Bryon and three women.

 

A spokesperson for Kristi Noem told the New York Post that “Ms. Noem is devastated. The family was blindsided by this, and they ask for privacy and prayers at the time.” President Trump, for his part, expressed bewilderment. “They confirmed it? Wow, well, I feel badly for the family if that’s the case, that’s too bad,” Trump told the Daily Mail. “I haven’t seen anything. I don’t know anything about it.”

 

moar at link..

Anonymous ID: 046840 April 2, 2026, 6:27 p.m. No.24458253   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://libertyonenews.com/hegseth-asks-army-chief-randy-george-to-retire-immediately/

 

HEGSETH ASKS ARMY CHIEF RANDY GEORGE TO RETIRE IMMEDIATELY

 

Pete Hegseth moved fast this week, asking Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George to retire immediately as the U.S. military faces combat with Iran. The abrupt change came with an official statement and no public explanation for the decision, and Gen. Christopher LaNeve is now serving as acting chief. This shakeup fits a broader push by the War Department leadership to reshape senior ranks and assert different priorities for readiness and promotions.

 

War Secretary Pete Hegseth placed a direct call asking Gen. Randy George to step down and retire Thursday, signaling a dramatic leadership shift at the top of the Army. Hegseth framed the move as part of a larger need for new direction at a time when the force faces active threats overseas. Supporters argue such decisiveness is essential for accountability and operational focus.

 

Hegseth told the Army it was time for a different set of leaders to guide the service forward, saying, “It was time for a leadership change in the Army.” That exact language has become the touchpoint for critics and backers alike, with opponents asking for more detail and allies praising the clarity of purpose. The quote captures the administration’s appetite for action rather than slow bureaucratic processes.

 

Sean Parnell released a formal announcement on X that made the retirement immediate and definitive. The statement reads, “General Randy A. George will be retiring from his position as the 41st Chief of Staff of the Army effective immediately. The Department of War is grateful for General George’s decades of service to our nation. We wish him well in his retirement.” Those lines close the personnel chapter without offering a public rationale beyond gratitude.

 

The department did not supply any written reason for the request, and an Army official confirmed Hegseth gave no explanation to George when he asked him to step aside. That lack of public detail has fueled speculation, but the action itself is clear and binding. In highly charged times, some argue clarity of command matters more than protracted explanation.

 

moar at link..