Fake Hate Crimes: 7 Brutal Lessons From Renee Good and George Floyd
Fake hate crimes don’t work because they’re clever. They work because most people won’t wait for evidence. Renee Good and George Floyd prove how the script gets sold.
Fake hate crimes don’t work because they’re clever. They work because most people won’t wait for evidence. Renee Good and George Floyd prove how the script gets sold.
A 2,000+ word investigation into political suppression through federal power—covering January 6, FBI testimony, DOJ lawfare, surveillance abuse, and Big Tech censorship
I called out woke climate panic and tribal leftism back in 2017 and paid the social price for it. Now figures like Bill Gates and even Taylor Swift’s new song “Cancelled!” are drifting toward the same ground, and the cancel machine is starting to eat its own.
A neo-Nazi group marched on the New Hampshire State House with swastika flags and a “Trump Loves Epstein” sign. Here is what happened, why language precision matters, and how the tools of big government create a soft landing strip for authoritarians, whether they wear brown shirts or designer suits.
The narrative war over violence in America is louder than the violence itself. Media outlets and viral charts blame white men or trans shooters as the culprits. But the data shows otherwise: men commit nearly all mass shootings, race largely tracks population, and trans shooters remain vanishingly rare. After listening to Tim Pool and Steven Crowder discuss assassination threats and mob intimidation, I reflect on why grassroots defenders like the Proud Boys rose in the first place, why they still matter, and why the defense of free speech requires both restraint and muscle.
Sinclair Broadcasting baited viewers with a promised Charlie Kirk tribute to replace Jimmy Kimmel, then backed out. Ryan “Dickie” Thompson explains why this bait-and-switch proves legacy media is already dead.