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Welcome to the age of perpetual war. Look at the headlines: Syria, Ukraine, Iran. Different places, different players — but all the same story. Behind every bomb dropped, every missile fired, lies a network of power that thrives on chaos. Wars aren’t mistakes or accidents; they are manufactured crises, carefully choreographed to serve political and economic agendas that few dare to question.
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The war has already started — and most people don’t even know they’re in...
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The shadow conflict between Israel and Iran is no longer shadowy. It’s bleeding into the world economy, disrupting global oil flow, and turning the most vital shipping routes into ticking time bombs. Forget everything you thought you knew about oil prices—this is the new normal, and it’s dark.
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Leaders from the world’s richest nations gathered, posed for the cameras, held closed-door meetings, and made the usual high-level noises. But when it came time to deliver a unified message on the Ukraine conflict, the silence was deafening. No joint statement. No fiery condemnation of Russia. Just… a polite shrug.
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Who really runs the world? It’s not the politicians — it’s the unelected...
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At the heart of this conflict stands a strange, stubborn figure: the free speech absolutist. You might not know their name, but you know what they believe. They’re the last ones holding the line when everyone else is folding. They say speech should never be silenced—not because they agree with everything that’s said, but because once we allow some speech to be censored, it’s only a matter of time before all of it can be.
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Israeli defense firms showed up at the Paris Air Show expecting to showcase their latest firepower. Instead, they got black curtains. French officials blocked Israeli manufacturers from displaying offensive weapons, particularly those currently being used in Gaza, citing an agreement that had explicitly banned such displays. Israel didn’t take it lightly — calling the move “bluntly anti-Semitic” and accusing France of hiding behind politics to shield their own defense industry from competition.
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On Monday, Donald Trump lashed out at his longtime ally, Tucker Carlson, calling him “kooky” for daring to question U.S. support for Israel’s recent strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Carlson, never one to shy away from controversy, had been openly criticizing what he called “warmongers” in Washington, warning that the drive to support Israeli aggression could tear the MAGA movement apart at the seams.
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They Want Control – Here’s How Canadians Are Fighting Back
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The move comes just days after violent riots erupted in L.A., sparked by controversial ICE raids. Trump responded by doubling down, calling for ICE to expand its crackdown across cities he claims are “overflowing” with illegal immigrants. “In order to achieve this,” Trump wrote, “we must expand efforts to detain and deport Illegal Aliens in America’s largest Cities… where Millions upon Millions reside.”
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The real danger? That you might actually listen. That you might stop nodding along with their staged narratives, switch off the flickering screen, and start asking the questions they’ve worked so hard to bury under a mountain of distractions, pharmaceuticals, and fear.
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And then came the unthinkable: Israel’s vaunted Iron Dome defense system failed. Israeli intelligence missed the mark. Now, a cornered Netanyahu is begging Washington to send in American military might to save Israel from a defeat it helped create — with a little nudge from Washington itself.
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By now, anyone paying even a shred of attention to global affairs knows the myth of a “rogue” Israel acting on its own is laughable. The reality is simpler, starker, and more dangerous: Israel doesn’t go rogue—it goes with the Pentagon’s green light in its back pocket. Let’s drop the pretense. Washington, the heavyweight champ of global bullying, has handed Tel Aviv a blank check—militarily, diplomatically, and politically—to do as it pleases. And right now, what pleases Israel most is war.
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Two hundred Israeli jets screamed across the horizon, raining death down on over a hundred sites — nuclear labs, military hubs, and entire city blocks. Tehran burned. Qom shook. Kermanshah cracked. This was no routine skirmish. This was not a warning shot. This was war—unleashed with biblical symbolism and surgical precision. Israel’s campaign, codenamed Am Ke-Lavi — “A Nation Like a Lion” — was framed as a moment of divine justice. Prime Minister Netanyahu, cloaked in righteousness, called it “a battle of light against darkness.” But behind that sermon was something darker: a deliberate attempt to destroy Iran’s nuclear future and shatter any hopes for diplomacy. And he succeeded.
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On Friday morning, the sky over Iran lit up with fire and metal as Israeli warplanes pummeled nuclear and military targets. Tehran answered with a storm of missiles and drones aimed at Israeli cities. As smoke rises, diplomacy crumbles — and the Middle East edges closer to full-scale war.
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In what’s shaping up to be one of the most dangerous weeks for Middle East stability in recent memory, Russia has come out swinging with a strong condemnation of Israel’s recent airstrikes on Iran. Calling the attack a “violation of the UN Charter and international law,” Moscow didn’t mince words, warning that Israel’s actions could ignite a full-scale regional war. The strike, carried out in the early hours of Friday morning by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), reportedly targeted high-level Iranian military and nuclear sites. Iranian officials say the attack killed top commanders—including IRGC chief Hossein Salami and Deputy Army Chief Gholam Ali Rashid—along with at least six nuclear scientists.
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