Former President Trump on Monday said among his first actions if he is reelected in November would be to free rioters imprisoned for their actions during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
“My first acts as your next President will be to Close the Border, DRILL, BABY, DRILL, and Free the January 6 Hostages being wrongfully imprisoned!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Trump has repeatedly expressed sympathy for rioters charged in connection to Jan. 6, when his supporters violently clashed with law enforcement and stormed the complex to try and halt the certification of President Biden’s 2020 victory.
The former president has said he would consider pardoning some of those charged in connection to the Capitol attack, and he spoke last year at a fundraiser organized for Jan. 6 defendants.
Trump himself is facing federal charges in Washington, D.C., over his attempts to remain in power after losing the 2020 election, and he is facing charges in Georgia over his efforts to overturn the state’s 2020 election results.
As of Jan. 6, 2024, more than 1,200 defendants had been charged in connection to the attack on the Capitol. More than 450 have been charged with assaulting, resisting or impeding officers or employees, according to the Justice Department.
More than 700 individuals have pleaded guilty to various federal charges, the Justice Department said.
Trump is expected to clinch the Republican presidential nomination in the coming days, setting up a rematch in November with President Biden.
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
3 of the 4 foster homes illegal alien children were observed being sent to face serious sexual assault allegations, Muckraker journalists report.
Government contractors were caught on video escorting illegal alien children from LaGuardia airport to shady foster homes in the middle of the night, footage by Muckraker journalists reveals.
“Muckraker has obtained never-before-seen footage of government contractors escorting illegal alien children through LaGuardia Airport and into foster homes in the middle of the night,” the group posted on X Monday.
The video shows the journalists asking the workers putting the kids into black vans where they were headed, but the workers ignored them.
Illegal Alien Foster Homes Exposed | EXCLUSIVE FOOTAGE OF GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS DELIVERING CHILDREN
Muckraker has obtained never-before-seen footage of government contractors escorting illegal alien children through LaGuardia Airport and into foster homes in the middle of the… pic.twitter.com/cLVwqpoUg1
After following the van, and getting stonewalled by more contractors when asked questions, they arrived at several foster care facilities.
URGENT! Keep Alex Jones in the fight against the NWO! Please pray & contribute at DefendJones.com today!
The journalists described how the unaccompanied children trafficked into the U.S. means big business for the foster care system.
“The illegal alien foster home system is an industry worth billions of dollars,” the group wrote. “Unaccompanied children who are trafficked into the United States via the southern border are a major revenue stream for foster homes across the country.”
Muckraker went on to claim that 75% of the foster homes they recorded the illegal alien children being sent to faced “serious sexual assault allegations.”
“We witnessed deliveries of children from LaGuardia Airport to four New York foster homes in the middle of the night. Three of the four homes are facing serious sexual assault allegations, and all of them receive millions of dollars in federal funding,” the group noted, citing lawsuits.
Lawsuits against the New York-based The Children’s Village foster home claims 28 alleged victims were brutally abused by staffers and older children.
Another lawsuit against St. Christopher’s Inc. alleges the plaintiff who was placed there was sexually abused by a staffer over 100 times.
Despite the disturbing allegations, these foster homes still receive hundreds of millions of dollars in government subsidies.
This comes just weeks after 28 attorneys general sent a letter to the Biden administration demanding answers about 85,000 migrant minors who’ve gone missing in the U.S. since 2022, according to figures from the Department of Health and Human Services.
“The Department of Health and Human Services must ensure that it is not handing over children to criminals and sex traffickers,” the letter states.
“It cannot do so if it does not know to whom it is handing these children. Even worse, is that it appears to have no idea where those children are being sent. Missing children must be identified, and potential sponsors must be vetted,” the letter concluded.
Follow Jamie White on X | Truth | Gab | Gettr | Minds
A seventh Prosecution Witness (PW7), Agboro Michael, an investigator with the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), has revealed in court how the embattled former Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, awarded multi-billion Naira contracts to his family members and associates.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arraigned Emefiele on 20-count charges bordering on alleged corrupt practices and forgery.
Last month, the Commission had declared his wife Margaret Emefiele, alongside Anita J. Omoile and her husband, Jonathan Omoile wanted over money laundering.
However, led in evidence by the EFCC prosecution counsel, Rotimi Oyedepo on Monday, the Seventh Prosecution Witness who testified before Justice Hamza Muazu of the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court, Abuja, narrated the processes Emefiele allegedly signed and approved award and payments of contracts to April 1616 Investment Limited and Architekon Nigeria Limited, companies.
The witness, Michael, was part of the investigation team that comprised the EFCC, ICPC, Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), Department of State Services (DSS) and the Nigerian Police.
He testified on the count-charge of abuse of office and conferring an unfair advantage to a public officer and relatives, preferred against Emefiele.
According to Michael, April 1616 Investment Limited and Architekon Nigeria Limited, were companies that allegedly belonged to Emefiele’s wife and Sa’adatu Ramalan Yero, including his in-law respectively.
Michael said: “My Lord, these companies were awarded about 45 contracts to supply Toyota Vehicles. We were worried as investigators as to how a particular company would get bids concurrently to supply vehicles. We did our investigation, and discovered that the company was not even accredited by Toyota.
“In the companies my Lord, one has Sa’adatu’s husband and siblings as directors, and the other one has Sa’adatu as the director of the company while she is still a civil servant.
“Document ‘F1’ shows the signature and approval of the defendant to pay the sum of N854, 700,000 (Eight Hundred Fifty-Four Million, Seven Hundred Thousand Naira) His signature was number three on the document.”
He also said in ‘F3’, the defendant “approved 1, 85,700,000 (One Billion, Eighty-five million, Seven hundred thousand) for the supply of 47 units of Toyota Hilux.
“While ‘F4’ was the defendants approval to purchase for the bank an armoured Toyota Avalon car at the cost of N99,900,000 (Ninety-Nine Million, Nine Hundred Thousand Naira), and ‘F5’ was the approval to procure two units of Toyota Hilux for the bank, and all were bought from April 1616 Investment limited.”
Speaking on the findings of the investigative team on exhibit P26, page 86 of 107 on 6th November 2021. Michael said; “It is a credit into the account from the CBN to the tune of N41, 943, 400, 34 (Forty-one million, nine hundred and forty-three thousand, four hundred and thirty four kobo).
“Page 87 was also a credit in April 2016 from the CBN, N304, 853, 50 (Three hundred and four million, eight hundred and fifty three thousand naira, Fifty kobo).
“26 January, 2021, April 1616 Investment Nigeria limited also received N304, 853, 720, 55 (Three Hundred and Four Million, Eight Hundred and Fifty Three Thousand Seven Hundred and Twenty Naira Fifty-Five kobo) from the CBN.
“On the 10th of February, 2021, the CBN paid N201, 23, 323, 31 (Two hundred and one million, twenty-three thousand, three hundred and twenty-three naira, thirty-One kobo).”
The witness noted further that the approval of payment of 24th March 2021 was “N304,843,720,85, April 27, 2021 was 60,976,744,17 (Sixty million, nine hundred and seventy six thousand, seven hundred and forty-four naira, Seventeen kobo) May 31, 2021 was a payment of 60,976,744,17 (Sixty million, nine hundred and seventy six thousand, seven hundred and forty-four naira, seventeen kobo), and February 21, 2021 was a payment of N50,547,508,30 (Fifty million, five hundred and forty-seven thousand, five hundred and eight naira thirty kobo) were equally approved by the defendant.”
He added that the team recorded the defendant’s statement under caution and video recorded in a conducive environment.
According to him, in 2019, they discovered that the defendant also used his office and position to confer a corrupt advantage to one of the staff of CBN, Sa’adatu Ramalan Yero to supply one unit of Toyota Land Cruiser V8 at the cost of N73. 8m to her company April 1616 Investment Nigeria limited where she is a director, and equally a director in the CBN.
He said: “Again my Lord, the defendant also approved the payment of renovation of the CBN Governors’ residence at No 2. Global road, Ikoyi Lagos to a company named; Architekon Nigeria Limited where his wife and brother-in-law are both directors.
“Sometime in 2020, the defendant used his position as CBN Governor to confer on his wife and brother in-law corrupt advantage by awarding their company landscaping of the CBN governor’s residence in the sum of N39,46,000 (Thirty-nine million, forty six thousand naira.”
The PW7 narrated that a contract to procure furniture items was also awarded to Emefiele’s brother-in-law in the sum of N97m.
He explained further that a contract to procure a power line at the same CBN Governor’s residence in the sum of N68. 5m was also given to the in-law.
However, counsel to the defendant, Matthew Burkaa during the cross examination queried the witness that though there are many signatories in the memo, only his client was on trial.
In response, the witness told him that the defendant was on trial because he was the approving authority, while others only minuted on the documents to justify the process, and didn’t have the power to make such payments and approvals.
Burkaa also wanted to tender the defendant’s statement at the Nigerian Police force before the court, but Oyedepo objected, stating it was a public document and needed to be certified before it can be tendered as an exhibit.
Burkaa then withdrew the document and promised to provide the true certified copy at the next adjourned date and the judge adjourned the matter till 25 and 26 April 2024 for continuation of trial.
Witness Reveals How Emefiele Allegedly Awarded Multi-Billion Naira Contracts To Family, Associates is first published on The Whistler Newspaper
Delivering the Republican response to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, U.S. Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., told the harrowing story of a woman who was sex trafficked by drug cartels when she was 12. In the same breath, Britt blamed Biden for not only creating but inviting a crisis at the U.S. southern border.
Britt listed actions Biden took in his first 100 days in office and said she took a different approach, traveling to the U.S.-Mexico border when she took office in 2023.
“That’s where I spoke to a woman who shared her story with me. She had been sex trafficked by the cartels starting at the age of 12,” Britt said. “She told me not just that she was raped every day. But how many times a day she was raped. The cartels put her on a mattress in a shoebox of a room and they certainly run through that door over and over again for hours and hours on end.”
“We wouldn’t be okay with this happening in a third world country. This is the United States of America,” Britt continued. “And it is past time, in my opinion, that we start acting like it. President Biden’s border policies are a disgrace. This crisis is despicable. And the truth is it is almost entirely preventable.”
But the woman Britt was speaking about was trafficked in the 2000s in central Mexico, not in the U.S. or during Biden’s presidency. The survivor has said it was not a drug cartel that trafficked her, and PolitiFact found no evidence that she was attempting to migrate to the U.S. when it happened.
Jonathan Katz, a freelance journalist and former The Associated Press reporter, posted a video March 8 on TikTok fact-checking Britt’s retelling of the events — notably that this did not happen during Biden’s presidency, or in the United States.
@katzonearth This isn’t going to make her like TikTok more. #katiebritt #sotu #stateoftheunion #lies #politicians #biden2024 #trump2024 #immigration #traffickingawarenes #mexico #bordersecurity #fyp ♬ original sound – Jonathan M. Katz
On “Fox News Sunday,” Britt told host Shannon Bream that she was contrasting Biden’s first 100 days with hers, during which she visited the southern border.
“I very clearly said I spoke to a woman who told me about when she was trafficked when she was 12… She was a victims’ rights advocate who was telling this is what drug cartels are doing, this is how they’re profiting off of women and it is disgusting,” Britt said.
A Britt spokesperson did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for comment, but confirmed to The Washington Post that Britt was talking about Karla Jacinto Romero, a Mexican woman in her thirties and an activist against sex trafficking. She has told her story about surviving sex trafficking in Mexico at various forums, including before the U.S. Congress in 2015.
Britt met Jacinto in Del Rio, Texas, during a discussion about human trafficking.
Here’s a look into Britt’s misleading framing of Jacinto’s story, and the facts she got wrong.
The facts behind Jacinto’s sex trafficking story
Jacinto’s trafficking happened in the 2000s: Jacinto was sex trafficked at 12 years old, as Britt said. But this didn’t happen during Biden’s administration. Jacinto was trafficked decades before, from 2004 to 2008, during President George W. Bush’s administration, according to Jacinto’s bio in U.S. House records.
Britt used Jacinto’s story to illustrate the dangers of migration through the U.S.-Mexico border under Biden.
“We wouldn’t be okay with this happening in a third world country. This is the United States of America,” Britt said. (The term “third world country” is an outdated label often used to describe developing, low-income countries.)
Jacinto’s trafficking happened in Mexico: Jacinto’s trafficking occurred in central Mexico, not in the United States.
While retelling her story on a Mexican government agency’s YouTube page, Jacinto said she grew up in an abusive home and at 12 fell in love with a man. She eventually left her home and went to live with him in central Mexico near a city called Puebla.
“For years and years I was coerced, intimidated, threatened, beaten, robbed of my children and emotionally and sexually violated time and time again,” Jacinto testified to Congress in 2015. “During those years, I was forced to serve every type of fetish imaginable to more than 40,000 clients. Of those, many were foreigners visiting my city looking to have sexual interactions with minors like me.”
Jacinto said a pimp trafficked her: Britt also claimed it was cartels that trafficked Jacinto. However, PolitiFact listened to multiple videos from different sources of Jacinto telling her story and did not find any where she said it was cartels who trafficked her.
Jacinto wasn’t trafficked by Mexican drug cartels, “but by a pimp that operated as part of a family that entrapped vulnerable girls in order to force them into prostitution,” said CNN Reporter Rafael Romo, who spoke to Jacinto, on March 11.
Jacinto told CNN that Britt did not ask for permission to use her story.
“I hardly ever cooperate with politicians because it seems to me that they only want an image, they only want a photo and that to me is not fair,” Jacinto said, according to CNN’s translation of her interview. “I think Sen. Britt should first take into account what really happens before telling a story of that magnitude.”
No evidence that Jacinto’s trafficking was related to immigration: Britt’s recounting of Jacinto’s story also gave the impression that Jacinto’s trafficking happened as she tried to migrate to the United States. But Jacinto did not say that in her testimony to Congress or various news and podcast interviews.
Our ruling
While speaking about Biden’s immigration policies, Britt said a woman had been “sex trafficked by the cartels starting at the age of 12 … We wouldn’t be okay with this happening in a third world country. This is the United States of America.”
Britt was talking about Jacinto, who was sex trafficked when she was 12 years old. But Britt omitted significant facts and context about when and where this happened. It was in the early 2000s in Mexico, not during the Biden administration or in the United States.
Jacinto has said a pimp trafficked her after she left an abusive home and went to live with a man she fell in love with. Jacinto has not said this was related to immigration to the United States.
We rate Britt’s claim False.
RELATED: Fact-checking Katie Britt’s immigration claims in Republican 2024 State of the Union response
RELATED: Fact-checking Joe Biden’s 2024 State of the Union address
Para leer en español, vea esta traducción de Google Translate.
Former President Donald Trump promised to provide a live “play by play” via Truth Social to “correct, in rapid response, any and all inaccurate Statements” made by President Joe Biden during his State of the Union address. But we found many of Trump’s alleged corrections were … factually incorrect.
Under Biden, Trump claimed, “Migrant Violence is leading to the Worst Crime Wave in History!” But homicides and violent crime in general have been trending down the last two years and is nowhere near historic levels.
Trump alleged that Biden “wants to take away everyone’s gun.” Biden has called for a ban on so-called assault-style weapons and large-capacity magazines, but he proposed a voluntary buyback for those already legally owned, and he has never proposed banning or confiscating all guns.
Trump said the bipartisan border security bill that failed in the Senate would have “let at least 5,000 Migrants in a day.” That’s not accurate.
Trump claimed that he “got the NATO Nations to pay up,” and that before he got involved, “NATO was BROKE.” NATO was not “broke” and countries don’t owe money to anyone else if they spend less on defense than other member countries.
Trump claimed that he “took away Nord Stream 2” — the Russian pipeline that would double the export of Russian natural gas to Germany — from Russia and Biden “gave it to them.” Neither of those statements is true.
The former president said that “Biden’s All Electric Car Mandate is a disaster for our Country.” But there is no such mandate.
He claimed that the Jan. 6 Capitol rioters “had no guns” on them. At least five people were charged with or sentenced for carrying a gun on Capital grounds.
Trump claimed that “Republicans have no plan to cut Social Security,” but some Republicans have proposed raising the retirement age for some future beneficiaries. That would reduce scheduled benefits for those affected.
Trump claimed, “We are stronger on IVF than the Democrats!” Most Republicans have said they support in vitro fertilization, or IVF, but some want to leave the issue to the states and have rejected consideration of a federal law to protect access to IVF.
For our article on Biden’s speech, see “FactChecking Biden’s State of the Union.”
‘Migrant Violence’
When Biden referred to the country’s falling violent crime rates, Trump responded on Truth Social, “He’s talking about Violence, but Migrant Violence is leading to the Worst Crime Wave in History!”
Actually, though, there’s been a decrease in violent crime recently.
As we’ve written before, the number of homicides was 10% lower in 2023 than in 2022 in 32 cities, according to a January report from the Council on Criminal Justice, which gathered data from the participating cities. And violent crime nationwide went down in 2022, according to the most recent data released by the FBI.
In our coverage of Biden’s State of the Union remarks, we noted that despite the recent downturn, murder and violent crime rates still have not returned to their pre-pandemic levels. Nonetheless, the spike in violent crime during and after the pandemic never approached anywhere near the record-high violent crime rates during the 1990s.
Although there have been several high-profile violent crimes committed recently by immigrants living in the country illegally, studies have found that migrants are generally less prone to crime than citizens who were born in the U.S.
“Immigration’s crime suppressing impact is most notable for violent crime, especially homicide, and in places where there are well-established immigrant populations and where the social and political environments, and municipal policies, are pro-immigrant,” according to a 2023 book called “Immigration and Crime: Taking Stock” by Charis Kubrin, a criminologist at the University of California at Irvine and Graham Ousey, a criminologist at William & Mary.
“At the micro-level, studies consistently document that foreign-born individuals — first-generation immigrants — are less involved in crime as both offenders and victims compared to the native-born, including the children of immigrants,” the book said. “This pattern of findings — negative or null relationships between measures of immigration and crime — is also evident in studies of undocumented immigrants specifically.”
NBC News reviewed “2024 crime data from the cities targeted by Texas’ ‘Operation Lone Star,’ which buses or flies migrants from the border to major cities in the interior,” and found that crime levels dropped in those cities.
“Overall crime is down year over year in Philadelphia, Chicago, Denver, New York and Los Angeles. Crime has risen in Washington, D.C., but local officials do not attribute the spike to migrants,” the NBC report said.
So, violent crime rates have been falling nationally and cities that have received an influx of migrants, specifically, have seen a decline in crime, which means there’s no evidence to support Trump’s claim about a “crime wave.”
Guns
When Biden criticized his “predecessor” for boasting that he “told the NRA he’s proud he did nothing on guns when he was president,” Trump fired back with the claim, “He [Biden] wants to take away everyone’s gun. Remember that when you go to the Voting Booth, because if I’m not elected, your guns are GONE, along with your Freedom!”
That’s not an accurate reflection of Biden’s position. Biden has been a longtime advocate for banning so-called assault weapons and large-capacity magazines.
But even for those proposed gun bans, Biden has talked about voluntary buybacks — not confiscation of any legally purchased weapons — prior to a ban taking effect.
As he has on numerous occasions, Biden recounted an encounter he had at a fundraising event in October with a hunter in Delaware who accused him of wanting “to take my damn guns away from me.”
“I said, ‘I’m not going to take your guns away. I’m just going to take some.’ I said — no, I’m serious. I said, ‘The Second Amendment doesn’t say you can own a cannon. It doesn’t say you can own a machine gun. It doesn’t say’ — I went down the list.”
“They’re trying to make it seem like we’re trying to take everybody’s gun away. Not true,” Biden said while recounting the same anecdote during a fundraiser in June. “But we have to have some rational basis for gun ownership.”
Biden has supported various gun control measures, such as safely storing guns in homes, cracking down on “ghost guns” that are difficult for law enforcement to trace, and requiring enhanced and universal background checks.
But his plans don’t propose banning the purchase or ownership of all guns or confiscating lawfully purchased, so-called assault-style weapons that he does seek to ban.
Biden-Backed Border Bill
When Biden urged Republicans to support a bipartisan border security bill that he said included “the toughest set of border security reforms we’ve ever seen,” Trump wrote, “His Border Bill is a Disaster, it would let at least 5,000 Migrants in a day, and that is one of the better aspects of it!” That misrepresents what was in the failed Senate bill.
The $118 billion bill, called the Emergency National Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, would have provided emergency authority to the administration to “summarily remove” people who cross into the U.S. illegally between ports of entry, even those seeking asylum, when certain metrics were reached. The bill stated that temporary border emergency authority would be automatically activated by the Department of Homeland Security secretary if there is an average of 5,000 or more migrant encounters a day over seven consecutive days — or if there are 8,500 or more such encounters on any single day.
But as we have written it wouldn’t have “let in” 5,000 unauthorized migrants a day until the emergency authority kicked in.
“It’s not that the first 5,000 [migrants encountered at the border] are released, that’s ridiculous,” one of the architects of the bill, Republican Sen. James Lankford, said on the Senate floor. “The first 5,000 we detain, we screen and then we deport. If we get above 5,000, we just detain and deport.”
“The reason we’re doing that [providing emergency authority] is because we want to be able to shut down the system when it gets overloaded, so we have enough time to process those asylum claims,” Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, an independent who helped craft the bill, said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Feb. 4.
NATO
When Biden praised NATO as “the strongest military alliance the world has ever seen,” and welcomed its newest member, Sweden, Trump wrote on Truth Social, “NATO only became strong, because of ME, I got the NATO Nations to pay up. They were almost all delinquent. The United States was paying for them all!” At another point, Trump claimed that before he got involved, “NATO was BROKE.”
As we wrote recently when Trump made similar comments, he is mischaracterizing what he calls “delinquent” payments from alliance members to NATO. Although NATO countries pay direct costs for NATO’s common fund based on a formula, Trump is referring to the indirect costs countries pay toward their own defense. Countries don’t owe money to anyone else if they spend less on defense than other member countries.
“That’s not how NATO works,” James Goldgeier, a former dean of the School of International Service at American University who teaches at the university and sits on the State Department’s International Security Advisory Board, told us in an email. “There is a common budget that countries pay into, but most of what we think of as NATO defense spending refers to individual country defense spending and preparedness to be able to operate as a military alliance.”
In 2006, NATO countries made a commitment to aim to spend 2% of their gross domestic product on their own defense. A NATO spokesman at the time said: “Let me be clear, this is not a hard commitment that they will do it. But it is a commitment to work towards it. And that will be a first within the Alliance.”
A 2014 NATO declaration after a summit in Wales again said that countries that weren’t meeting the 2% goal would “aim to move towards the 2% guideline within a decade.”
According to NATO, 11 countries, including the U.S., are spending at least 2% of their GDP on their defense. Nineteen other countries do not meet that threshold, but with the exception of Croatia and Turkey, all are estimated to be spending more on defense as a percentage of their GDP in 2023 than they did in 2014.
Alliance members also pay money for NATO’s commonly funded budget. That’s a direct cost. The U.S. currently pays about 16.2% — the same as Germany — of NATO’s “principal budgets” that are funded by all alliance members based on a cost-sharing formula that factors in the gross national income of each country. The principal budget categories include the civil budget, the military budget and the NATO Security Investment Programme. But, again, when Trump is referring to NATO spending, he is referring to the indirect costs each country spends on its defense.
It’s also not true that NATO was “broke” until Trump stepped in. As we have written, after years of decreases, combined defense spending by non-U.S. NATO members has increased every year since 2015 — two years before Trump assumed office. Combined NATO defense spending increased about 11.5% between 2016, the year before Trump took office, and 2020, Trump’s last year in office, according to NATO. The amount paid by NATO members other than the U.S. increased by about 19.8% over the same period.
Nord Stream 2
In his speech, Biden accused Trump of “bowing down” to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Specifically, Biden criticized Trump for saying at a Feb. 10 rally that he would allow Russia “to do whatever the hell they want” to a NATO member country that is “delinquent” in its payments to NATO.
Former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally on March 9 in Rome, Georgia. Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images.
On Truth Social, Trump responded by once again falsely claiming that he “took away Nord Stream 2” from Russia and Biden “gave it to them.” Nord Stream 2 is a Russian natural gas pipeline to Germany that was completed in September 2021, but has never received the approval it needs from Germany to operate.
“[Biden] said I bowed down to the Russian Leader,” Trump wrote. “He gave them everything, including Ukraine. I took away Nord Stream 2, he gave it to them!”
Nord Stream 2 runs under the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany, and would have doubled the export of Russian natural gas to Germany. It runs parallel with Nord Stream 1, which has been operational since 2011, according to a report by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.
As we have written, Trump signed legislation in December 2019 that imposed sanctions against companies that were building Nord Stream 2. Pipeline construction was temporarily suspended in response to the sanctions, but resumed a year later while Trump was still in office, CRS said in its report.
When construction was suspended, the pipeline was already about 90% completed.
After assuming power, the Biden administration, like past administrations, opposed the Nord Stream 2, but suggested that its “ability to prevent the pipeline from becoming operational was limited, even with additional sanctions,” the CRS report said.
Biden waived sanctions against those involved in the Nord Stream 2 project in May 2021 — which is what Trump is referring to when he says that Biden “gave it to” Russia.
But, as we said, construction of the pipeline had resumed under the Trump administration, so Trump didn’t take it away from Russia. And, contrary to Trump’s claim, Biden didn’t give the pipeline to Russia. In fact, only Germany can approve the project, and that country’s chancellor has blocked its approval.
Nord Stream 2 “must receive certification from German regulators before it becomes operational,” another CRS report said. But German Chancellor Olaf Scholz stopped the certification process on Feb. 22, 2022 — the day that Putin recognized two separatist territories in eastern Ukraine as independent states and sent Russian troops into the Donbas region of Ukraine.
No Federal Electric Car Mandate
Trump continued to falsely suggest that Biden is requiring manufacturers to sell only electric vehicles.
“Biden’s All Electric Car Mandate is a disaster for our Country, but great for China,” Trump wrote in a social post.
There is no such federal mandate. As we’ve written, the Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Transportation under Biden have proposed new vehicle emissions and fuel standards that are expected to greatly increase the number of electric vehicles sold in the U.S. To comply, the EPA estimates, EVs “could account for 67% of new light-duty vehicle sales and 46% of new medium-duty vehicle sales” in 2032.
But the proposals do not ban cars and trucks that run on gasoline and other fuels. Experts told FactCheck.org that carmakers could still produce and sell some vehicles with internal combustion engines to meet the proposed requirements for tailpipe emissions and fuel efficiency.
“Requiring vehicles to be more efficient and emit less is something that regulators in the US have done for decades, and automakers are free to comply with those standards in whatever strategy works best for them,” John Helveston, a George Washington University assistant professor of engineering management and systems engineering, told us in an email.
Some Capitol Rioters Had Guns
In another post, Trump responded to Biden’s description of Trump supporters who attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as “insurrectionists.”
“The so-called ‘Insurrectionists’ that he talks about had no guns, they only had a Rigged Election. The only gun was that used on Ashli Babbitt, who sadly, is no longer with us!” Trump wrote.
Babbitt, a military veteran, died after she was shot by a Capitol Police officer as she was forcing her way into an area of the Capitol that leads to the House chamber. But Trump is wrong that no one protesting his 2020 election loss at the Capitol had a gun. Some did, even if they didn’t use them.
In March 2021, we wrote about Christopher Alberts, who was convicted of carrying a loaded 9mm semi-automatic handgun on Capitol grounds. In addition, the Jan. 6 committee report released in December 2022 mentioned three other men – Jerod Bargar, Guy Reffitt and Mark Mazza – who were convicted of carrying a firearm during the Capitol breach.
The Washington Post reported that in a video played at his trial, Reffitt said he saw four other people at the Capitol with guns, including two people, a couple he met, with five of them.
Then, last week, on March 8, John Banuelos was arrested on felony and misdemeanor charges for his actions during the Capitol riot, including discharging a firearm. The Justice Department said video footage allegedly shows Banuelos pulling a gun from his waistband and firing two shots in the air.
Also, the committee’s report said other people had guns stored elsewhere. For example, members of the Oath Keepers extremist group that participated “left their guns stowed away in their cars or across State lines for easy access should they be needed.”
Jason Dolan, a member of the group who testified at a seditious conspiracy trial, said there was a “quick reaction force ready to go get our firearms in order to stop the election from being certified within Congress,” the report said.
Trump’s focus on guns also ignores the fact that rioters attacked and injured police with other weapons, including flag poles, bats and pepper spray.
Social Security Proposal
Trump took exception to Biden saying in his address that “many of my friends on the other side of the aisle want to put Social Security on the chopping block.”
“Republicans have no plan to cut Social Security, a made up story by Crooked Joe!” the former president wrote in response.
We’re not aware of a Republican proposal that directly calls for cutting Social Security benefits for current recipients. But there is a proposal that would effectively reduce benefits for future beneficiaries.
For years, task force members on the Republican Study Committee, a caucus of more than 100 conservative House members, have proposed budgets that would make adjustments to the Social Security program, including raising the retirement age by several years for some workers. The committee argues that without changes to Social Security, benefits will automatically be cut in a few years.
In its proposed budget for fiscal year 2023, the committee proposed increasing the full retirement age to 70 — up from the current age of 67 for people born in 1960 or later. Its most recent proposal for fiscal 2024 doesn’t mention a specific age. But Rep. Ben Cline, the task force chair, reportedly said the plan would spare current retirees and those closest to retirement.
“He said those now aged 59 would see an increase in the retirement age of three months per year beginning in 2026. The retirement age would reach 69 for those who turn 62 in 2033,” Roll Call reported in June.
The Congressional Budget Office previously said raising the full retirement age to 70 “would reduce scheduled lifetime benefits for every affected Social Security recipient, regardless of the age at which a person claimed benefits.”
Workers could still retire early, at age 62, but they would get a reduced monthly payout. Meanwhile, those who wait until the full retirement age would receive those benefits for a shorter period of time than current beneficiaries.
In Vitro Fertilization
When Biden implored Republicans, “don’t keep this waiting any longer, guarantee the right to IVF Guarantee it nationwide,” Trump responded, “IVF was just approved in Alabama, and the Republicans are totally in support of helping women. We are stronger on IVF than the Democrats!”
The controversy over protecting in vitro fertilization came to the forefront when, in February, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos used in IVF are children, and that a couple had the right to sue for the wrongful death of a minor when a test tube of frozen embryos was dropped on the floor and destroyed.
Dr. Paula Amato, the president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, told the New York Times that doctors would close fertility clinics in Alabama rather than risk criminal or civil charges.
In a podcast, Joanne Rosen, a practice professor in Health Policy and Management and an expert in reproductive law at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, wrote that bioethicists, legal scholars, and reproductive technology specialists had warned that if the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade “and allows states to regulate life from the moment of conception” — as it ultimately did with the help of justices appointed by Trump — “this could indeed have implications for IVF, because IVF creates embryos.”
Ever since the Alabama ruling, most Republicans in Congress have come out in support of IVF, even many who co-sponsored the Life at Conception Act, which sought protections for “every member of the species homo sapiens at all stages of life, including the moment of fertilization, cloning, or other moment at which an individual member of the human species comes into being.”
At a House leadership press conference on Feb. 29, House Speaker Mike Johnson, one of those who co-sponsored the Life at Conception Act, said he and his wife “have many close friends who have had trouble with fertility issues and they’ve had beautiful families as a result of IVF. And so it needs to be readily available. It needs to be something that every American supports and it needs to be handled in an ethical manner.”
“I don’t think there’s a single person in the Republican conference who disagrees with that statement,” Johnson said.
In an interview with CBS on March 7, Johnson repeated that position, but said it needs to be handled at the state level.
“There’s this question of embryos,” CBS Mornings co-anchor Tony Dokoupil said to Johnson. “In the process, they are destroyed, disposed of. If you believe life begins at conception, fertilization, and I know you do, do you see that as murder?”
“It’s something that we’ve got to grapple with,” Johnson said. “It’s a brave new world. IVF’s only been invented, I think, in the early ’70s, but there are an estimated eight million Americans who have been born because of that great technology. So we support the sanctity of life, of course, and we support IVF and the full access to it.”
Johnson said the issues of ethics surrounding the handling and disposal of embryos “are unprecedented, and so it takes a lot of thoughtful debate and careful consideration. But we do believe in the sanctity of life and if you do believe that life begins at conception it’s a really important question to wrestle with. It’s not one Congress has dealt with, and it won’t be. I think it’s a states’ issue, and states will have to be handling that.”
Indeed, the Alabama state legislature has, since the state Supreme Court decision, passed a law to protect IVF in the state.
However, in his State of the Union address Biden called on Republicans to guarantee IVF “nationwide.” On Feb. 28, Senate Republicans for the second time blocked a bill from coming to a vote that would have protected access to IVF nationwide.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, 202 S. 36th St., Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Rookie right-hander Joe Boyle still has a grip on the fifth and final spot in the Oakland A’s rotation despite losing his command during Monday’s 6-5 spring training win over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
The 6-foot-7 Boyle only allowed one run in three innings by relying on an upper 90s fastball — on that occasionally reached triple digits — to offset a wild streak that produced five walks at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick.
Boyle, who seemingly is still ahead of fellow fifth-starter hopefuls Mitch Spence and Kyle Muller, struck out two and gave up just one hit as hitters continued to struggle against him. Boyle’s only hit permitted was an infield single to speedy star Corbin Carroll. The 24-year-old has now given up just four hits in 11 1/3 innings. Batters are hitting a cumulative .108 against Boyle, which is the lowest average against any major league pitcher this spring.
To illustrate Boyle’s performance may not just be a spring fling: He took a no-hitter into the seventh inning against the Los Angeles Angels in the last of his three big league starts last season.
Top A’s prospect Mason Miller, another hard-throwing right-hander, also seems unhittable in the Cactus League while looking like a fit as the team’s closer. He pitched a 1-2-3 seventh inning and has now thrown four shutout innings while giving up one hit, no walks and striking out seven while his fastball has reached speeds of 102 mph.
Oakland’s offense was paced again by emerging star Zack Gelof, who went 3-for-3 with three RBIs, including his third home run, a 417-foot blast to left off Arizona starter Ryne Nelson.
Miguel Andujar further strengthened his hold on a starting spot in Oakland’s lineup by doubling in a pair of runs. Andujar’s 12 RBIs this spring is second only to Dodgers star Freddie Freeman’s 14.
Two other things became more clear after Oakland’s 17th spring training game: 22-year-old Darell Hernaiz, the A’s No. 9 prospect, is on track to open as their starting shortstop and 27-year-old former Pirates utilityman Hoy Park is going to be hard to keep off the 26-man roster.
Hernaiz had a pair of hits to improve his average to .286 and also started a pair of double plays. (His odds of starting at short are aided by Nick Allen’s back issues). Park helped himself in his bid for a bench spot by lifting his slash line to .348/.360/.565 with a pair of hits.
Gobert gestures towards the official after fouling out. (Ken Blaze/USA TODAY Sports/Reuters via CNN Newsource)
By Sam Joseph, CNN
(CNN) — Three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert has been fined $100,000 after he appeared to make a money gesture towards an official during the Minnesota Timberwolves’ 113-104 overtime loss against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Friday.
In an official release on Sunday, the NBA stated that the Timberwolves center had been fined for “directing an inappropriate and unprofessional gesture toward a game official, and publicly criticizing the officiating.”
“The fine takes into account Gobert’s past instances of conduct detrimental to the NBA with regard to publicly criticizing the officiating,” the statement added.
CNN has reached to Gobert’s representatives for comment.
Gobert appeared to make the gesture after being called for his sixth foul in the game against the Cavaliers, being ejected from the game as a result with less than 30 seconds left in regulation and the T-Wolves leading by only a point.
The action appeared to be directed at referee Scott Foster who had handed out the foul. And although Foster missed it, fellow official Natalie Sago saw Gobert’s gesture and assessed a technical foul to the center, which proved to be costly for Minnesota.
Cleveland point guard Darius Garland converted the resulting technical free throw to knot the score up at 97 and send the game into OT. The Cavs then closed the game out in the extra period, outscoring the ‘Wolves by nine points to steal the 113-104 victory.
After the game, Gobert acknowledged that he made a mistake in reacting the way he did to fouling out, saying that his “immature reaction” cost his team the game. He appeared to accept that a fine was inevitable and was prepared to take the hit, before going on to suggest – without evidence – that sports betting is influencing the way NBA games are being officiated.
“I’ll bite the bullet again,” he said, per ESPN. “I’ll be the bad guy. I’ll take the fine, but I think it’s hurting our game. I know the betting and all that is becoming bigger and bigger, but it shouldn’t feel that way.
“It’s not just one call. Everyone makes mistakes, but when it’s over and over and over again, of course, it’s frustrating.”
CNN has reached out to the NBA and the National Basketball Referees Association for comment on Gobert’s betting comments.
Gobert finished with seven points, 17 rebounds and two blocks in 37 minutes played.
According to Spotrac, which keeps track of suspensions, technical fouls and fines in the NBA, this is the fourth time in Gobert’s career that he’s been fined by the league for criticizing the officials. The $100k fine is a significant step up from the $25,000 fine that he was handed for his third offense in 2023.
Minnesota assistant coach Micah Nori, who was filling in for head coach Chris Finch due to illness, described the gesture as unacceptable and lamented the timing of the technical foul call.
“That’s not who Rudy is, but you’ve got to be smart … He made a visual that was [an] automatic [technical],” he said.
Former quality control manager John Barnett raised concerns about company cutting corners, using faulty parts, and issues with oxygen supply systems.
A former Boeing worker who blew the whistle on commercial airliner quality control issues was found dead in a hotel parking lot over the weekend, as the aviation company has recently been making headlines with numerous terrifying incidents.
On Saturday, police in Charleston, South Carolina, discovered the body of former Boeing quality control manager John Barnett, 62, in his vehicle dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.
According to the BBC, Barnett was in Charleston last week testifying in depositions surrounding his ongoing litigation with Boeing, accusing the company of “denigrating his character and hampering his career.”
“He had been due to undergo further questioning on Saturday. When he did not appear, enquiries were made at his hotel,” reports the BBC.
BREAKING: Boeing whistleblower John Barnett found dead in hotel parking lot in Charleston, SC from 'alleged self-inflicted' gunshot wound – Lawyer pic.twitter.com/jOTytMt6EP
Introducing Next Level Foundational Energy from Dr. Jones Naturals starting at 30% off! This cutting-edge dietary supplement is designed to elevate your energy levels and support your overall well-being.
“He was subsequently found dead in his truck in the hotel car park.”
For years, Barnett had been raising concerns about problems he observed while working at Boeing’s North Charleston plant, warning the BBC in 2019 that, as a result of hasty mass production, the company’s 787 Dreamliner fleet had numerous safety issues, including that some planes had been improperly retrofitted with “sub-standard” salvaged parts.
Barnett had additionally called attention to issues with the company’s emergency oxygen systems.
The faulty systems meant if there was a sudden cabin decompression issue mid-flight, up to one in four oxygen supply masks delivered to passengers may not work.
Barnett said he raised the concerns to supervisors to no avail.
“A 2017 review by the FAA upheld some of his concerns, requiring Boeing to take action,” notes the Daily Mail.
Barnett had also been speaking up in regards to other problems at Boeing, including the reported removal of inspection operations which he claimed led to cascading issues.
Totally NOT suspicious.
Boeing whistleblower John Barnett was found DEAD in a hotel parking lot from an 'alleged self-inflicted' gunshot wound.
He claimed that Boeing was cutting corners on their planes.
“We are saddened by Mr. Barnett’s passing, and our thoughts are with his family and friends,” Boeing said in a statement.
Skeptical social media users questioned whether Mr. Barnett could be a victim of corporate murder.
“Totally normal,” remarked Colin Rugg on X, with commentator Elijah Schaeffer also writing, “Totally NOT suspicious.”
The whistleblower’s death comes as Boeing’s planes have been at the center of numerous negative headlines over the past few months, including at least 5 incidents last week which included a tire falling off mid-takeoff, a plane that suffered landing gear failure, and a horrific mid-air engine fire.
JUST IN: A United Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 has just suffered a landing gear failure while landing at Houston Intercontinental Airport, causing it to veer off the runway.
It is not known if there are any injuries at this time.
The FAA has also been investigating the company after a door plug blew off an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max plane upon take-off in January.
The BBC reports:
Last week, the FAA said a six-week audit of the company had found “multiple instances where the company allegedly failed to comply with manufacturing quality control requirements”.
The globalists are increasing their attacks on Infowars and the stakes have never been higher!
Please consider donating and visit InfowarsStore.com for merch, nutraceuticals and survival gear.
Follow the author on X, Facebook, Gab, Minds, Truth Social and Gettr.
Nigerian Breweries Plc has fallen back on price increment to avert a repeat of the losses it made in 2023.
Last year was terrible for the brewer that recorded a disappointing N145.2bn loss before tax and N106.3bn loss after tax.
The company was significantly affected by the redesign of the naira notes, resulting in cash shortages that severely hampered social and economic activities.
The cash shortage coupled with naira devaluation and foreign exchange shortages set the tone for a turbulent year for Nigerian Breweries.
But the company is using price increment to hedge against high production cost that may lead to another loss.
Nigerian Breweries had in a letter dated Monday, February 12, 2024, communicated a price review that became effective from Monday, February 19, 2024.
It became necessary to offset the impact of increased production expenses driven by a general rising cost of manufacturing in Nigeria.
In a fresh development on Monday, the company notified customers around the West zone of another round of price hike.
This time, the company said the new prices will be effective March 15, 2024.
“As earlier informed, we will review the prices of some of our SKUs effective Friday 15th March 2024. This review has become necessary because of the continued rising input cost and the need to mitigate the impact.
“All open orders in our system at 00.00hrs on Friday 15th of March, 2024 will be invoiced at the new prices,” the notice signed by the company’s zonal business manager, Lekan Awosanya said.
Many factors influenced the company’s loss in 2023. For instance, its unaudited financial record for 2023 said it recorded net loss on foreign exchange transactions of N153.33bn up from N26.3bn while net finance cost rose to N36.4bn from N8.4bn in 2022.
To Avoid Repeat Of Losses Recorded In 2023, Nigerian Breweries Effects Another Price Increment is first published on The Whistler Newspaper
The stock market has been on a roll, and politicians are vying to take credit for it.
In December and January, the S&P 500, a broad market gauge, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average both closed at all-time highs for the first time in about two years.
Even though former President Donald Trump has been out of office for more than three years, he claimed credit in a Jan. 29, all-caps post on his social media platform, Truth Social, saying that his polling advantage over Biden is driving the stock market to new heights because investors are projecting he will win.
On ABC’s “This Week,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg countered that President Joe Biden, not Trump, deserves credit for the stock market rise.
“You know, most of us don’t think that the stock market is an indicator of the economy, but if you do, because I know the former president does, it hit an all-time high under President Biden and not under President Trump,” Buttigieg said March 10.
However, Buttigieg was wrong about Trump’s tenure. Trump saw stock market records set during his term, too.
The stock market can be driven by investor perceptions and crowd psychology rather than by economic data alone, which means that caution is necessary when using it to gauge the broader economy. Still, it usually has some connection to economic reality, and at the very least, many Americans have investments in the stock market, so the market’s health can influence economic perceptions.
The S&P 500 tracks 500 of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States. The value rises or falls based on the latest prices for those 500 stocks during weekday trading sessions. Over time, this and other stock metrics tend to rise, although not without periods in which the metric falls.
The S&P 500 regularly reached record highs during Trump’s presidency, even after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. The market gauge hit seven peaks during Trump’s presidency. Leading up to these peaks, the S&P 500 often set records; after the peaks, the level fell, until stocks rebounded and hit the next peak.In Trump’s case, the final peak of his tenure saw the value of the S&P 500 at about 3,800, after starting his term at a little more than 2,200.
The pattern for the Dow Jones Industrial Average was similar, with several new peaks under Trump.
Under Biden, the S&P 500 has also hit new highs.
The metric experienced several new peaks in Biden’s first year in office, 2021, before declining for most of 2022. The market recovered in 2023 — enough to blow past its previous record and set new ones into early 2024.
Currently, the S&P 500 is hovering around 5,100, which, despite the year-long slide in 2022, is well above what it was at the end of Trump’s term. That’s not surprising for the S&P 500: Barring an economic calamity, most presidents see higher stock prices than their predecessor did.
“The stock market hit its highest point ever under President Biden, higher than at any point during the previous administration,” Sean Manning, a Transportation Department spokesman, told PolitiFact.
Our ruling
Buttigieg said the stock market “hit an all-time high under President Biden and not under President Trump.”
The S&P 500 recently hit record highs under Biden, as it did several times in 2021.
But the S&P 500 also set multiple records during Trump’s presidency, even after the coronavirus pandemic hit.