Anonymous ID: 1cff2b July 14, 2026, 7:24 a.m. No.24825151   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5178 >>5238 >>5282 >>5322

>>24825089

>>24825104 ^^^^^^

>NOTABLE

agreed:

Hussein/HRC (& many more) must be terrified!

Ahmadinejed talking.YES, Proof out 7-13-26

Where did ALL that money go?

How many planes?

Where did the planes land?

Why were Clowns/private contractors escorting?

Why cash?

Why offshore cash?

Why wasn’t Congress notified for approval?

Where did the bank wires originate from?

Coincidence all donations to the CF terminated post defeat?NO

What did AUS/UK obtain in exchange for all that money?

Where do majority of Rothschilds reside?UK

Why is Hussein traveling the globe and visiting major financial institutions?

[$115,000,000]

Who are the Muslim Brotherhood?UK/MI6

Who is AWAN?MB

Who is Huma?MB

Who is VJ?MB

Who created ISIS?[BHO]

Who controlled ISIS?UK/MI6

What was the purpose of ISIS?FEAR/expand an Islamic Caliphate

Who is MS13?FEAR

Why were known MS13 members released after capture?FEAR

Who controls MS13?Great [D]eceivers

Who FUNDS MS13?[D]s

Hard to swallow.

Watch the news.

Stages.

Anonymous ID: 1cff2b July 14, 2026, 7:34 a.m. No.24825190   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5282 >>5322

Lindsey Graham final phone call revealed as Senator dialed staffer in desperate need of help

Lindsey Graham made a desperate phone call to one of his staffers in his final moments before his sudden death over the weekend, it was revealed Monday.

The longtime senator and close Donald Trump ally unexpectedly passed away on Saturday night due to a 'sudden' heart complication, according to his office.

Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville told reporters Monday that one of his staffers was with Graham's scheduler Saturday night when the phone call came.

While it has been revealed the 71-year-old initially shrugged off his health concerns, he admitted to the scheduler that he needed help.

'Lindsey called, called basically, said, Listen, I'm having chest pains. You know, I need to do something,' said Tuberville, a fellow Republican.

The scheduler then asked Graham if he'd called 911.

Graham replied: 'No, that's the reason I called you.'

'By the time she got there, 911 had knocked the door down, and they were working on him,' Tuberville added.

The longtime Republican from South Carolina spoke with the President by telephone on Saturday night, discussing his recent trip to Ukraine, and the President confided in him about his planned strikes on Iran, Axios reports.

Trump told Newsmax Monday night he called and asked how Graham was doing following the trip.

'I'm doing good but I'm tired,' the President said Graham told him.

In a Sunday morning interview on NBC's Meet the Press, Trump revealed that Graham was 'like a member of the family to him,' and that the two had spoken over the phone on Saturday night.

The President also revealed that Graham called him to discuss the passage of the SAVE America Act, which Graham co-sponsored in the US Senate.

'He actually said he was tired, but he wanted to pass the SAVE America Act, and I said, ‘Well, we’re going to get it done, Lindsey. We’re going to get it done. I’ll see you, like, soon,' Trump noted on Meet the Press.

During the July 4 recess break in Washington, DC, this past week, Graham traveled to Ukraine, met with President Volodymyr Zelensky, and even visited a drone facility which was later destroyed by the Russians.

An unidentified person who spoke with Graham hours earlier told the outlet he complained that he was feeling unwell.

When the individual urged Graham to seek medical attention immediately, the senator said he would do so on Sunday morning after his scheduled appearance on NBC's Meet the Press.

He then joked, 'I can't die now. I still need to do the Russian sanctions, get Iran sorted out and do Israeli-Saudi normalization,' according to the outlet.

But just a few hours after making the quip on Saturday night, the senator was seen lying on a gurney as first responders attempted life-saving measures in pictures obtained by TMZ.

He appeared to be intubated as EMTs pushed the gurney into a nearby ambulance that was headed for George Washington University Hospital.

Authorities first received a 911 call about a 'cardiac arrest' at Graham's home at around 8.30pm that night, according to multiple reports. Hordes of first responders were then seen descending on the street outside Graham's house.

Just about 25 minutes after the call, first responders had started CPR as the Senator suffered from cardiac arrest, according to police scanner audio obtained by The Washington Post.

Then, early Sunday, Graham's office announced he had 'passed away from a brief and sudden illness.'

His cause of death has since been revealed to be 'aortic dissection due to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease.'

'The death certificate will be PENDING until all the toxicological and microscopic testing are finalized, and at that point the death certificate will be updated to reflect the cause of death and appropriately classify the manner of death,' Graham's spokesman added.

Director Kash Patel had said his agency was providing all necessary resources for the probe.

Following existing Senate protocol, Graham's desk on the Senate floor was covered in black cloth and topped with a vase of white roses as lawmakers returned to Washington after a two-week recess.

Graham was one of Trump's closest allies in the US Senate, consistently voting to enact the President's agenda.

The White House has lowered the flags to half-mast in his honor.

The senator was also a staunch supporter of Ukraine and Israel, and he advised the President on foreign policy matters pertaining to Russia and Iran.

In late March last year, just a little more than a month after Trump took office, the President posted a lengthy endorsement of Graham, referring to the senator as 'a wonderful friend.' …

 

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15975477/Lindsey-Graham-final-phone-call-revealed.html

Anonymous ID: 1cff2b July 14, 2026, 7:52 a.m. No.24825242   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5282 >>5322

Fed’s Warsh Tells Congress Inflation Will Be ‘Thing of the Past’

The new Federal Reserve chairman also touted the artificial intelligence boom in the U.S. economy.

Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh said on July 14 that inflation over the past five years “will be a thing of the past.”

Warsh appeared on Capitol Hill for the first time since his confirmation hearing in April. The new central bank leader appeared before the House Financial Services Committee for his semi-annual monetary policy report to Congress.

In his opening statement to lawmakers, Warsh reaffirmed his commitment to vanquishing inflation that has plagued the Fed since 2021, taking a hardline stance on the price stability side of the institution’s dual mandate.

“Today, we are at a hinge point in history. It’s up to all of us to meet this moment,” Warsh said.

“The Fed’s number one objective is to get monetary policy right—or as near to it as we possibly can. That is our clear and constant aim, the star we steer by.

“And if we get policy right—and we will—the inflation surge of the last five years will be a thing of the past.”

Like other advanced central banks worldwide, the Federal Reserve maintains a 2 percent inflation target. Since early 2021, the Fed has been unable to meet this goal, with the annual rate remaining consistently above that threshold.

Warsh, at last month’s policy meeting, unveiled five monetary task forces as part of efforts to introduce reforms to the century-old institution.

One of these panels is tasked with revisiting how the Fed understands and responds to drivers of inflation. It will be headed by Greg Mankiw, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers; Thomas Sargent, professor of economics at New York University; and William White, former economic adviser at the Bank for International Settlements.

Echoing his colleagues, Warsh recognized the “undue burden” elevated inflation has on U.S. households and businesses.

“While monthly price fluctuations are inevitable—especially in an unsettled world—underlying inflation over longer time horizons is determined largely by monetary policy,” he said.

June’s Consumer Price Index report showed the monthly inflation rate falling 0.4 percent, fueled by a sharp drop in energy costs. The 12-month annual inflation rate slowed to 3.5 percent, from 4.2 percent in May.

Both readings came in better than economists’ expectations.

He did not provide a signal as to the Fed’s next policy decision.

Investors widely anticipate the central bank will raise interest rates at least once this year. Futures market data suggest September could be the earliest date for a quarter-point hike.

 

‘Solid Pace’

The U.S. economy continues to expand at a “solid pace” and is defying recent headwinds, Warsh told lawmakers. Consumer spending growth is moderate, and manufacturing output has “moved up steadily” in 2026.

Warsh also gave top marks to the U.S. labor market, pointing to robust job creation, low unemployment, and few layoffs.

A key part of his opening statement reflected his optimism about the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, noting that business investment is “the most striking feature” of current economic conditions.

“The rapid pace—which appears to be accelerating—reflects, in large part, the construction of data centers and the immense demand for the AI-related equipment and software that fill them,” Warsh said.

Recent gross domestic product (GDP) data highlight the extent to which the capital expenditure boom is contributing to growth prospects.

The AI hyperscalers—Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, SpaceX, and others—plan to spend up to $1 trillion on the AI infrastructure buildout. Market watchers expect these companies to spend another trillion dollars in 2027 and 2028.

“We don’t know the extent to which the economy will benefit from the AI buildout,” Warsh said. “Yet it seems inevitable that what is now called ‘AI investment’ will soon be called just ‘investment.’”

But new technologies do present new challenges for policymakers, Warsh added.

One of the chairman’s task forces will concentrate on the economic impact of AI and other general-purpose technologies. It will be led by Marc Andreessen, venture capitalist and co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz; Charles Jones, professor of economics at Stanford University; and Asha Sharma, Xbox CEO.

 

https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/feds-warsh-tells-congress-inflation-will-be-thing-of-the-past-6061449

Anonymous ID: 1cff2b July 14, 2026, 8:25 a.m. No.24825338   🗄️.is 🔗kun

America First Policy Institute

The Truth Behind America's Oldest Gun Control Law

Knox Williams examines the origins of the NFA, arguing that it was designed to restrict firearm ownership through taxation and registration rather than directly banning firearms. He traces the law's history, explains why key firearm categories were ultimately removed from the original legislation, and discusses how recent changes to federal law have reignited constitutional challenges to the nearly century-old statute.

 

Jul 13, 2026 5:22

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3xN6vz18ZE