The Purge

 How Deep State Intel Community, USAID & Stolen Elections are all Connected

Image featuring a bold headline "Deep State Slayer" with visuals of government agencies, emphasizing themes of election manipulation and intelligence community issues.

By Grant Stinchfield

He tapped Bill Pulte to serve as Acting Director of National Intelligence, and the reaction from the media, Democrats, and the intelligence establishment tells you everything you need to know. They are furious.

Why? Because Pulte is doing exactly what many Americans have demanded for years. He’s cleaning house.

Within days of taking over, reports indicate dozens of employees inside the Office of the Director of National Intelligence were either fired or sent packing as the administration moves to shrink what President Trump has called a bloated intelligence bureaucracy.

And here’s the kicker. Almost immediately, anti-Pulte leaks started pouring out of the intelligence community. The same people who claim to be defending democracy are running to the media to undermine the man tasked with reforming their agency. If there was ever proof that the swamp still exists, this is it.

To me, those leaks are not an argument against Bill Pulte. They’re the strongest argument for him.

The intelligence community was never supposed to operate as an independent power center. It exists to serve the American people, not protect itself. Yet every time someone comes along promising accountability, downsizing, and reform, the knives come out.

The media says Pulte is dangerous. Democrats say he’s unqualified. Washington insiders are panicking. Frankly, that makes me like the appointment even more.

Today, we break down why Bill Pulte may be exactly the deep state slayer President Trump was looking for, why the leaks prove the purge is necessary, and why the intelligence establishment is terrified of what could come next.

[…]

Via https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/06/how-deep-state-intel-community-usaid-stolen-elections/

Cobain Murdered?

 I was in Seattle when this happened... sad

US Intelligence Fingerprints Seen in Death of Nirvana Singer Kurt Cobain

Kurt Cobain [Source: dailymail.co.uk]

 

John Potash

April 5 marked the 32nd anniversary of former Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain’s death, supposedly from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

This past year, an unofficial private sector team of forensic scientists that put fresh eyes on Cobain’s autopsy and the crime scene material concluded that Cobain’s death actually resulted from a homicide. A Utah investigator who also recently reviewed the case says he has new evidence that shows that Kurt Cobain was murdered. [1]

Much suspicion surrounds Cobain’s former wife, Courtney Love, who has known ties to U.S. intelligence and is also known to have connections to the Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking network that operated as part of an intelligence-blackmail operation.👇

Rogues around us

 OMG

Pakistan Controlled by the CIA Amidst a Rogue US Justice System

Imran Khan, a cricketeer, a socialite, a ladies man, quite attractive, a philanthropist, a politician, loyal Pakistani, was couped by the US via Antony Blinken for his rebuilding of Pakistan and his distaste for war.

August 2023, The Intercept published a leaked directive which said that “all will be forgiven in Washington” if he (Khan) was removed in the no-confidence motion and indicated the possibility of economic and political isolation if he stayed. The reason? Pakistan’s relationship with Russia and China.

Despite the major charges against Imran Khan being found illegal he remains in solitary confinement. The charges have to do with gifts he retained ‘and disclosed.’ Khan was replaced by Shehbaz Sharif who is the lead negotiator between Iran and the US. Sharif has a history of racketeering, money laundering, theft, and a period of exile. He ran for office against Khan and received 96 votes. When the US military decided Khan was unfriendly to the West, they created false charges against him and bribed Sharif – all his misdeeds would be forgiven if he helped oust Khan and assume the role under the thumb of the CIA while distancing from Russia and China.

Sharif is to Pakistan what Milei is to Argentina. Khan was to Pakistan what Saddam was to Iraq. Khan was and is very much beloved by his people. The US wants Khan to die in prison.

The US war against Pakistan began in 2004 under Bush using drone warfare in conjunction with the Air Force and CIA. Thousands of civilians were killed. It ended in 2018 when Khan took office.

What does Pakistan have that attracts US CIA operatives? Resources. Worth $6 trillion on the open market. These untapped resources include copper, gold, coal, gemstones, rare earths, lithium, cobalt, limestone, rock salt, and vast agriculture lands with deposits of black soil. While Trump has heavily pushed Pakistan to allow the US military to establish a base there in return for cutting-edge military technology, Sharif has refused. And Trump doesn’t have the inventory to sell.

It appears the only countries that want to pursue weapons and war are of the Western bloc.

Justice System of America

ISIS Leader in Syria, Ali Husayn al-Ulaywi, has been killed via a US airstrike… There is no identifiable ISIS commander by that name anywhere across Google. If he was the leader of ISIS he would have a profile. But then, ISIS was already defeated and there has been no presence since January 2026 after being defeated by the US/Israel installed al Qaeda leader, Jolani, as Syrian President.

FBI claims to have captured most wanted fraudster Herbert Leon Kimble. Actually, the Philippines captured Kimble and extradited him to the US. Patel is taking credit and the Philippines will thus not receive the reward as offered.

Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa and the famous “last soldier” to depart Afghanistan in 2021, has abruptly submitted his retirement papers. His work was coordinated with the CIA in Syria and then Ukraine. No reason has been cited and he will retire within the week.

Wounded soldiers from the Iran War are declaring Hegseth lied. While Hegseth declared that of the ‘400’ injured service members, their injuries were minor and all have returned to service. Some of those soldiers are now crying foul! Chief Warrant Officer, Rodney Bearman, was riddled with shrapnel by a drone, suffering vision and hearing loss, damage to his lungs, and a concussion. The army classified his injuries as ‘non-serious.’ Bearman and 20 others hit the same time claim the military has not classified them as war casualties. Playing down what Americans already know – every major agency in the federal government LIES pathologically.

The drone strike incident that hit Bearman and his compatriots is being investigated as they were left completely unprotected. Six service members died in that attack. Bearman is still in the hospital four months after the attack. He had to ‘requisition’ to be placed in a soldier recovery unit.

Trump has claimed he is a superstar in the military ranks, ‘they love me’ is his fanfare. However, allowing Hegseth to treat soldiers in such a disgraceful manner while Trump wants PTSD soldiers housed in mental institutions is not going to give him the clout he needs to succeed in a third term crisis event. Allies have disappeared. When Generals and soldiers leave, America runs the risk of becoming fodder for a foreign or even internal civil coup.

The ONLY soldiers who tolerate Hegseth are among the younger troops. By contrast, he is WIDELY criticized by generals and seasoned officers. Why? Because he is a dolt with no intelligence training and an IQ on par with AOC.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/pakistan-cia-rogue-us-justice-system/5931361

OMG - Lithium Battery Fires (google alerts)

 Surprise setting setback rules for battery storage units - YourValley.net

FDR's Battle with the British Empire and Lessons for Today

 

Sonic Booms Shook the U.S. For Over 300 Years


Here's what you'll learn when you read this story:

  • The "Seneca Guns" or "Seneca Drums" phenomenon of deep, echoing booms coming from New York's Seneca Lake went unsolved for centuries.

  • Local lore whispered of everything from ghosts to aliens, but scientists who were mapping the lakebed found something suspicious and decided to investigate.

  • As it turns out, the intense rumbling comes from enormous bubbles of methane that break through the bottom of the lake and explode once they reach the surface.

Seneca Lake appears tranquil, a summer escape in upstate New York where vacationers meander down the sand and sailboats bob lazily on rippling waves. Its shores are surrounded by wineries, resorts with postcard views, parks, farms, and stretches of verdant forest. Nearby villages are dotted with quaint cottages. Gazing across its deep blue expanse makes it almost impossible to think that something about this lake has caused nightmares.

But the deepest of the Finger Lakes hides secrets down below. Many have heard what can only be described as cannon shots coming out of nowhere. Known as "Seneca guns" or "Seneca drums," the phenomenon was thought by the local Seneca Tribe to be the bellowing shouts of Manitou, the Great Spirit, when he was angry. Later, European settlers thought they were hearing ghosts of Seneca warriors still fighting for their land as the ground turned red with blood. It also inspired James Fenimore Cooper to write his short story The Lake Gun, in which he observes:

"A sound resembling the explosion of a heavy piece of artillery, that can be accounted for by none of the known laws of nature. The report is deep, hollow, distant, and imposing. The lake seems to be speaking to the surrounding hills, which send back the echoes of its voice in accurate reply."

Modern legends that attempt to account for the phenomenon include alien spacecraft plunging into the lake or sonic booms from developing technology being beta-tested undercover by the government. Neither rumor can possibly be believed, since residents have been bombarded by the explosive sounds since at least the 1700s. They have been heard as far as New Jersey, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and even Florida. Reports sometimes made the papers when the lake boomed every few years before going silent. The rise of social media had everyone who heard the booms logging onto their Facebook groups and typing "Did you hear it?" as fast as they could. Those who claimed to have heard the sound reported it occurring at the exact same moment.

Researcher Tim Morin, of SUNY ESF (Environmental Science and Forestry) in Syracuse, New York, had another idea: that there could be a physical explanation for it. As early as the 19th century, scientists were theorizing that the mysterious booms could be explosions of gas trapped in the lakebed. Geologist Herman Fairchild proposed the same thing in 1934 when he stated that "the explanation is bubbles of natural gas escaping from a layer of sandstone deep in the earth and coming up through the waters of the lake, where they burst with a booming sound." In 1971, geoscientist William F. Ahrnsbrak said it was "conceivable" that methane bubbles were bursting through the mud.

Morin and his research team from SUNY ESF and Cornell University had initially set out on another mission. While using sonar to survey the lake's fabled shipwrecks, they found the lakebed was pockmarked with 144 huge craters, each around 30 feet deep and 400 feet wide. They sampled lake water and material from deep pockets of sediment in the darkest reaches of the lake. These samples finally gave away Seneca Lake's secret. In the lab, Morin found traces of methane and other gases that occur beneath the lake, proving what Fairchild and Ahrnsbrak had predicted earlier without advanced enough equipment to investigate.

The booms were not aliens or cryptids or phantom battles, but monstrous bubbles of methane that would erupt from under the lakebed after years of pressure buildup, leaving craters behind. When a bubble reaches the surface, it ruptures with enough force to send a shockwave that sounds like cannon fire across the lake. That was the ghostly firing that had echoed through many restless nights. The lake's immense volume also has something to do with literally turning up the volume. Because it holds about 4.2 trillion gallons of water and is up to 618 feet deep in some places, with a lakebed that reaches 200 feet below sea level, it acts as an amplifier for the infamous booms.

Seneca Lake formed from an ancient glacier that melted after the last Ice Age. For scientists, it's an example that shows just how much gas might be lurking under similar lakes, and it can be usefully compared to other similar "lake gun" phenomena across the planet. Some even belch out amounts of methane that could be potentially lethal. But Seneca Lake's cannons aren't a deadly threat of that kind, and the recent slowdown in booms is a piece of welcome relief for light sleepers and the easily startled.

weather control

 

"Sanctioned Sky": The LEGO Animation They Never Wanted Explained   by Nouri™️

How a generation of drought, blocked clouds, and sudden rainfall becomes one story told in bricks and beats.

Read on Substack

housing crisis

 

Lego Animations: 86 Hours The Housing Crisis That Doesn’t Let Anyone Breathe by Nouri™️

A straight look at how the numbers stack up, and why the whole system is breaking people.

Read on Substack

the change is here for housing

 


https://youtu.be/GgIMm2wi8nY?si=l9hDl6HwaThs8spB

one giant insane asylum

 

Remember when the entire planet became one giant insane asylum, practically overnight? Some of these people will never recover.

- Stop The Shots

Read on Substack

change the way we think about religion?

 


Societies grow and change all the time, but it can be tough to think about big-picture shifts when you’re living through the practical details of the day to day. Take the recent popularity of large language models (LLMs). In the short term, we face important sociological questions about how they fit into the norms of everyday life. Is it cheating to use an LLM to help you write, or to generate new ideas? How will new kinds of automation change work, or will they take jobs away?

These are important questions, but it is also useful to take a step back and think about what rapid developments in technology might do to our foundational social relationships and core beliefs. I was fascinated by a recent set of studies published in PNAS that suggest automated work and LLMs could even change the way we think about religion.

“draw an illustration of a church slowly dissolving into a series of zeros and ones, like computer code in The Matrix”

In the article “Exposure to Automation Explains Religious Declines,” authors Joshua Conrad Jackson, Kai Chi Yam, Pok Man Tang, Chris G. Sibley, and Adam Waytz review the findings from five studies. In one, their analysis of longitudinal data across 68 countries from 2006 to 2019 finds nations with higher stocks of industrial robots also tend to have lower proportions of people who say religion is an important part of their daily lives in surveys.

Figure 1 from Jackson et al. (2023) demonstrating nations with a higher stock of industrial robots also express lower rates of religiosity, on average. You can read the full notes at the open-access article here.

I was most surprised by the results of their fifth study—an experiment teaching people about recent advances in science and AI. Respondents who read about the capabilities of LLMs like ChatGPT showed “greater reductions in religious conviction than learning about scientific advances” (8).

The authors suggest one reason for this pattern is that “people may perceive AI as having capacities that they do not ascribe to traditional sciences and technologies and that are uniquely likely to displace the instrumental roles of religion” (2). This is important for us, whether or not you’re personally religious, because religion is a socially powerful force – people use shared beliefs to accomplish things in the world and solve problems, even to cope with hardships like losing a job.

But these results show that new changes in technology, like the advent of LLMs, might be expanding people’s imaginations about what we can do and achieve, possibly even changing the core beliefs that are central to their lives over the long term.

Evan Stewart is an assistant professor of sociology at University of Massachusetts Boston. You can follow his work at his website, or on BlueSky.


just a reminder

  good reminders!  


oh yeah...

oh yeah...

Trace's book