Colorado students report same-sex peers were made to kiss during class assignment, teacher fired
https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/making-students-kiss-colorado-teacher-fired/
Colorado students report same-sex peers were made to kiss during class assignment, teacher fired
https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/making-students-kiss-colorado-teacher-fired/
Translation:
I don’t like talking about the dead, because they are Colombians who shouldn’t have died if there were peace.
But the top commander of the Cauca fronts, who had confronted the government and killed Indigenous people and people of Cauca in general — known as Marlon, second‑in‑command to Iván Mordisco — has been killed in combat.
It is the hardest blow we have dealt to the armed mafia structures in western Colombia.
Given the number of rifles seized, the people captured, and the children freed, the organization’s structure in Cauca has now been defeated.
Peace is the path, but without naivety. A victory for the nation’s army and more security for Colombia.
Colombia can disconnect itself from illicit economies and build its peace.
National Fraud Enforcement Division
U.S. Department of Justice
@DOJFraudDiv
Assistant Attorney General Colin McDonald on @FoxNews this morning:
"The cases yesterday ranged from just $4,000 in fraud up to over $500,000 in fraud, and the common theme in these cases was illegal aliens stealing the identities of Americans to then steal from America."
https://x.com/DOJFraudDiv/status/2068013654629335263
Alzheimer’s Patient Regains Speech & Mobility After High-Dose Magic Mushrooms
An octogenarian Japanese-American woman with advanced Alzheimer’s disease, who had spoken mostly in single syllables and required full-time care for years, exhibited improvements in multiple functions after receiving a high dose of psilocybin-containing mushrooms, according to a recent case report.
The patient, with a 10-year history of Alzheimer’s including five years of marked hypofunction, received 5 grams of Enigma strain mushrooms.
Approximately 19 hours later, she began to speak spontaneously in an autobiographical manner. Over subsequent days and weeks, she regained urinary continence, improved ambulation, dressed herself independently, showed increased emotional responsiveness, and engaged socially, per a case report published in late May, 2026.
A follow-up 3-gram dose one month later was associated with greater verbal expressivity, humor, and agility.
The report, titled “Transient multidomain functional improvement in advanced Alzheimer’s disease following high-dose psilocybin-containing mushroom administration: a case report,” appeared in Frontiers in Neuroscience. Authors Marcos Lago, Mariana Cerveira, and Joe Xavier Simonet from Brazil’s Associação Cruz de Ankh described the changes as temporary and not indicative of disease reversal.
The woman lived with continuous family supervision. Baseline symptoms included chronic urinary incontinence, executive dysfunction, dysphagia, dependent mobility, flat affect, and severe reduction in spontaneous communication. No formal biomarker confirmation or advanced neuroimaging was available.
The acute phase after the 5-gram dose involved autonomic activation, suspected hyperthermia, profuse sweating, and a prolonged, deep-sleep-like state. Spontaneous speech emerged later.
Improvements included restoration of continence—even at night—independent dressing, better walking, sustained eye contact, reciprocal smiling, and contextual memory retrieval, such as asking about a family member and recognizing a vehicle.
During the second session, she described positive visions, including surfing with her son, and spontaneously stated, “It is pleasant to come here.” Gains persisted for weeks but were transient.
The authors noted limitations: single-case design, no controls, no scans, and inability to prove causality. They wrote that the findings “do not imply disease reversal but suggest that residual functional capacity may persist in late-stage neurodegeneration and may become transiently accessible under specific neuromodulatory conditions.”
Psilocybin acts on serotonin 5-HT2A receptors, altering brain networks and promoting plasticity in preclinical models. This case builds on broader interest in psilocybin. A 2024 review in the same journal discussed its potential for Alzheimer’s via neuroplasticity, anti-inflammation, and network connectivity.
https://dallasexpress.com/health/alzheimers-patient-regains-speech-mobility-after-high-dose-magic-mushrooms/
AAGHarmeetDhillon
U.S. Department of Justice
@AAGDhillon
Swing and a miss! Major League Baseball encouraged players to wear “Black Lives Matter” on their uniforms but reportedly threatened Christians who write Bible verses on their hats. @USEEOC will investigate whether this amounts to religious discrimination.
https://x.com/AAGDhillon/status/2067709644185759938
Declassified 1992 CSIS memo warned refugee system could be exploited by Islamic extremists
A newly released Canadian Security Intelligence Service memo from 1992 warned that Islamic extremists could exploit Canada's refugee system to enter the country while avoiding the security screening routinely applied to other foreign nationals.
Blacklock's Reporter says the declassified document, obtained through Access to Information laws, argued that refugee claimants were particularly difficult for authorities to screen and monitor because many arrived using improper documentation and with little verifiable background information.
"It is by definition extremely difficult to control the entry to Canada of refugee claimants using improper documents," the CSIS memo stated.
"Many individuals whose background is unknown arrive in Canada from the Middle East and some of these are certainly Islamic fundamentalists."
The document, titled Working Group On Islamic Fundamentalism, cautioned that Canada could inadvertently become home to a network of extremists.
"The possibility exists of creating a nucleus of Islamic fundamentalists in Canada, some of whom may espouse anti-democratic or violent causes," the memo said.
At the time, CSIS noted that security screening was mandatory for foreigners applying abroad for many visitor and student visas, including applicants described as Islamic clerics and fundamentalists from countries such as Iran, Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Algeria and Tunisia.
The agency said similar reviews were commonly conducted on applicants from Iraq, Egypt, Jordan, Sudan, Saudi Arabia and Gulf states.
However, refugee claimants arriving in Canada could bypass much of that process.
The memo warned that Islamic fundamentalist movements were expanding across parts of the Middle East and Africa, including in countries where visitor visas could be issued without lengthy waiting periods.
CSIS questioned whether Canada should place greater emphasis on identifying Islamic extremism when processing immigration and visitor applications.
"Although Islamic fundamentalism is not generally seen as intrinsically hostile and in fact often contains elements of social and economic reform, a combination of repression, social and economic divisions and anti-Western sentiment has led to cases of extremism," the memo stated.
The release of the document comes as several high-profile terrorism-related prosecutions are before Canadian courts.
Among them is the case of , a Pakistani foreign student living in Montreal who pleaded guilty to plotting "antisemitic" killings in Brooklyn.
Also before the courts are Ahmed and Mostafa Eldidi, an Egyptian father and son from Scarborough, Ont., who were arrested in 2024 and accused of planning what investigators described as a serious and violent attack at an undisclosed Toronto-area location.
The 1992 memo follows the earlier declassification of a 1988 CSIS assessment released on Jan. 26. That report warned that immigration could become a significant source of national security threats.
In the document, titled National Security Concerns Related To Immigration, CSIS concluded that concerns about the immigration stream posing risks to Canada's security should be answered "in the affirmative."
https://www.westernstandard.news/news/declassified-1992-csis-memo-warned-refugee-system-could-be-exploited-by-islamic-extremists/74269
https://thefederalist.com/2025/10/13/californias-gerrymandering-scam-raises-election-integrity-concerns/
A devastating fire has engulfed a 174-year-old historic church in South Bushwick, Brooklyn
https://www.nydailynews.com/2026/06/19/fire-engulfs-historic-wooden-brooklyn-church-collapses-steeple/
Video Captures Undercover Deputies Arrest Gold Coin Scammer: 79-Year-Old Widow's $700,000 Nest Egg Saved
Police Incidents
@PoliceIncident
Man Charged After Michigan Sting Operation Foils Alleged $700,000 Fraud Against Senior
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — An undercover operation conducted by the Kent County Sheriff’s Office led to the arrest of a man accused of participating in a scheme that allegedly sought to defraud an elderly Michigan woman of approximately $700,000.
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According to the Kent County Sheriff’s Office, investigators were alerted on May 1, 2026, after a 79-year-old woman from western Michigan was reportedly instructed by individuals posing as federal agents to convert her savings into gold and turn it over for “safekeeping.” Authorities said the scammers falsely claimed her finances were connected to criminal activity and that her money was at risk.
Investigators determined the woman was the target of a fraud scheme and coordinated a sting operation. An undercover detective posed as the victim and arranged a meeting with a man who arrived to collect what he believed was a package containing hundreds of thousands of dollars in gold. Detectives substituted the gold with decoy items before the exchange and arrested the suspect at the scene.
The suspect was identified as Yug B. Chauhan, 20. He was booked into the Kent County Jail and charged with obtaining money by false pretenses involving a value of $100,000 or more and using a computer to commit a crime. Court records indicate Chauhan was held on a $100,000 bond. Authorities have also reported an immigration detainer associated with the case.
Investigators said the alleged scheme appeared to involve individuals communicating with the victim by phone and computer, with some communications reportedly linked to people outside the United States. The investigation remains ongoing.
Sources: Kent County Sheriff’s Office, Kent County court records, FOX 17 West Michigan
#police #cops #crime #policia #polizei #CrimeNews
https://x.com/PoliceIncident/status/2067481146989088832
Elephants are absurd if you think about it for 2 seconds.