The Hurricane spins around hotspots of tension and conflict. Feel free to suggest your stories, opinions and ideas: UIHEN@protonmail.com
How JFK and the CIA gave NYC Zohran Mamdani (and Obama to the US)
In an attempt to compete with the Soviet Union by bringing future elite political leaders from Africa to study in US universities, Sen. John Kennedy and the CIA inadvertently spread Marxism here and abroad. One product of this program was bringing Mamdani’s Marxist father to the US.
While the political impact of Mamdanism is difficult to forecast, the history of the Mamdani family does serve as an interesting example of the consequences of state-directed immigration policy.
We must return back to the days of the Cold War. In 1959, a Kenyan liberation activist named Tom Mboya organized with the African American Institute a plan to subsidize the travel of African college students to America for their intellectual development. While attempts to secure direct Washington funding initially stalled, Mboya found an essential benefactor in the form of Senator John F. Kennedy, who at the time was running for president in 1960.
His family’s Kennedy Foundation dedicated $100,000 to the program, resulting in 295 African students being brought to American universities as part of the initial run of the “Kennedy Airlift.” For JFK’s political ambitions, history judges it to be a prudent decision. Mboya’s time in America gave him the admiration of many of the leading Civil Rights leaders of the time, including Martin Luther King, Jr. and Harry Belafonte. One of the students that benefited from this program was Mahmood Mamdani, father of Zohran.
Full story
#USA #CIA #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Spain favors European options over US-made F-35 fighter jets
Spain has decided against purchasing US-made F-35 fighter jets and will instead opt for European-made options, the defense ministry said Wednesday.
The decision comes after the tension between Madrid and Washington over Spain’s refusal to raise defense spending to 5.0 percent of economic output, as demanded by US President Donald Trump.
According to El Pais, citing unnamed government sources on Wednesday, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez‘s leftist government had shelved plans to buy the F-35 jets and would explore European alternatives.
The government had earmarked 6.25 billion euros ($7.25 billion) in its 2023 budget to buy new fighter jets. British defense publication Janes had reported that Spain was considering the purchase of up to 50 F-35 units.
But government’s plan to spend the bulk of the additional 10.5 billion euros in defense spending announced for this year rules out the purchase of the F-35 jets.
#EU #USA #Military #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Paris, France. More than 200 illegal migrants from sub-Saharan and Maghreb [northern Africa], with women and children, are now camped outside the city hall, demanding free housing and food from the authorities.
#France #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
China's solar giants quietly shed a third of their workforces last year
China's biggest solar firms shed nearly one-third of their workforces last year, company filings show, as one of the industries hand-picked by Beijing to drive economic growth grapples with falling prices and steep losses.
The job cuts illustrate the pain from the vicious price wars being fought across Chinese industries, including solar and electric vehicles, as they grapple with overcapacity and tepid demand. The world produces twice as many solar panels each year as it uses, with most of them manufactured in China.
Longi Green Energy, Trina Solar , Jinko Solar, JA Solar, and Tongwei collectively shed some 87,000 staff, or 31% of their workforces on average last year.
Analysts say the previously unreported job losses were likely a mix of layoffs and attrition due to cuts to pay and hours as companies sought to stem losses.
Layoffs are politically sensitive in China, where Beijing views employment as key to social stability. Other than a 5% cut acknowledged by Longi last year, none of the firms mentioned above have announced any job cuts.
#China #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
$3,534.1 per ounce — a historic record for global gold prices
▪️2.32% — the daily rise in December gold futures prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), reaching $3,534.1 per ounce. This is a new historic record
▪️Spot gold prices are also rising for the second week in a row amid uncertainty over trade tariffs and hopes for a US Federal Reserve rate cut.
#Gold #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
One of the world's oldest asset classes just hit record highs
Unlike stocks or fiat currencies, farmland and cropland are tangible, finite, and highly productive. As the global population continues to grow and demand for healthier food intensifies, arable land per capita is shrinking due to urban sprawl and environmental degradation. This makes farmland not just a low-volatility store of value, but also a necessary hedge against rising global instability and inflationary pressures.
The latest USDA Land Values 2025 Report shows a 4.3% increase in average farmland values, pushing prices to a record $4,350 per acre. This follows a 5% ($200) increase between 2023 and 2024 and marks the fifth straight year of gains in agricultural real estate. Cash rents for cropland also hit a new high, rising .60% to $161 per acre.
#USA #USDA #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Manchester, United Kingdom. Welcome to The Green Quarter, an area of the city located north of the center, between Cheetham, Strangeways and the River Irk. 🤷♂️
#UK #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Modi plans China visit, urges Indians to buy local amid Trump tariff pressure
Sources in the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi administration said on Wednesday the prime minister will visit China for a summit meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), the regional security bloc India joined in 2017.
Modi led India’s delegation to the SCO summit in 2018 and has not been back since. The bloc is increasingly dominated by China, which hosts its meetings, and relations between New Delhi and Beijing have been strained over territorial and economic disputes over the past seven years.
In addition to making overtures to China, Modi has been battening down the hatches for tariff threats from the U.S. by telling Indian citizens to buy and sell locally at every opportunity.
“Now, whatever we buy, there should be only one scale: we will buy those things which have been made by the sweat of an Indian,” Modi said at a political rally on Saturday.
The comments came days after Trump slapped a 25% tariff on Indian exports to the US. Modi’s renewed emphasis on domestic manufacturing and consumption echoes his long-standing “Make in India” initiative. However, the message has taken on new urgency after the US tariffs.
#USA #India #China #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Montreal, Canada. Canadians with umbrellas are upset about the influx of Indians into Canada.
NB: You have heard the views of indigenous Canadians on the problems of migrant assimilation. 🤷♂️
#Canada #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Construction spending on data centers, office buildings, and electric power installations surges
Construction spending on data centers soared by 29% year-over-year to $3.5 billion in June, not seasonally adjusted, up by 366% since the beginning of 2021, and up by 430% in the seven years since mid-2018. The $1-billion-a-month mark was surpassed for the first time in May 2022.
The Census Bureau, which tracks construction spending of all kinds, considers data-center construction spending one of the main segments of office construction spending.
The rest of office construction spending has plunged since 2022 when the commercial real estate sector of office began to spiral into a depression. In dollar terms, the rest of office construction spending has plunged nearly as much as data center construction spending has soared. As a result, total office construction spending, including data centers, has increased by only 17% since 2022 and by 30% since mid-2018.
Data centers require lots of power, and utilities or the data center providers themselves have to invest to build new capacity to generate this power. Monthly construction spending on electric power installations, including power plants and transmission infrastructure, has run at a pace of $9 billion to $10 billion a month over the past two years ($9.6 billion in June) totaling 67% since mid-2018. Since the beginning of 2021, the monthly construction pace has risen by 33%, essentially just tracking construction cost increases.
#AI #Energy #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
France orders officials to drop foreign messaging apps over cybersecurity fears
France’s top officials and civil servants will ditch foreign owned messaging apps in favour of a homegrown alternative.
The move came amid mounting concerns over cyberattacks and espionage.
Prime Minister François Bayrou has instructed senior officials and civil servants to stop using WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal and other foreign platforms for work related communications.
He also emphasised that now cyberattacks represented “a major threat” and that officials “need to ensure the confidentiality and integrity of all such communications”.
From September 1, civil servants within ministerial offices and central administrations will be required to switch to the French encrypted app, Tchap.
#France #Bigtech #Cybersecurity #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Paris, France.
Beware of unpleasant sounds!
And this is Rue Myrha. Apartments here start at €7,000 per square meter. Cheerful neighbors, good friends. At night, it's best to sit quietly in this very apartment.
#EU #France #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
India accuses US, EU of Russia trade double standards
India on Monday hit back at the United States and European Union over sanctions, tariffs and threats that it has faced from them in recent days over its purchase of Russian oil amid the war on Ukraine.
New Delhi accused the US and EU of themselves importing substantial volumes of goods – including energy in the case of Europe – from Russia, while punishing India.
India’s strongest pushback yet, against mounting pressure from Washington and Brussels on trade and its ties with Russia, came hours after US President Donald Trump threatened to significantly increase tariffs he had previously announced against Indian goods.
India on August 4 argued it “began importing from Russia because traditional supplies were diverted to Europe after the outbreak of the conflict”. It also noted that Washington at that time had “actively encouraged such imports by India for strengthening global energy markets stability”.
It pointed to what it suggested were double standards of EU and US trade with Moscow.
“It is revealing that the very nations criticising India are themselves indulging in trade with Russia,” Jaiswal added.
#USA #EU #India #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Trump accumulates wins on Supreme Court's emergency docket
President Donald Trump’s ambitious agenda has been met with order after order from lower courts temporarily blocking him. Many of those have been lifted by the Supreme Court, handing Trump several wins and raising questions about how lower courts have been handling his cases.
These decisions have mostly come on what’s known as the “emergency” or “shadow docket,” a set of more urgent appeals that the Supreme Court often decides without oral argument.
The resulting decisions—at least 21 in Trump’s second administration—have prompted varying alliances and opinions that reflect apparent frustration among the justices.
The administration has been remarkably successful at the high court, obtaining relief in 14 of the 18 appeals that have been ruled on by the justices.
But at least in a handful of cases, the justices ruled against Trump. Much of the administration’s arguments in court have focused on whether federal district judges have authority to even hear particular cases or second-guess the administration’s judgments.
Trump’s mass firings, for example, have brought into focus how much Congress can limit his ability to fire employees. That’s particularly true for high-ranking bureaucrats, whose positions Congress may have attempted to insulate by saying they cannot be fired without cause.
#USA #Trump #SupremeCourt #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
House Committee Subpoenas Clintons, Former Officials over Epstein Files
Chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., issued subpoenas Tuesday to the Clintons and eight other former high-ranked officials including former FBI Directors and Attorney Generals as part of the House investigation on the “oversight of the federal government’s enforcement of sex trafficking laws” and the “handling of the investigation and prosecution” of Epstein and close confidant Ghislane Maxwell.
Comer noted examples of a potentially close relationship between the former president and Epstein in the letter to Bill Clinton.
“By your own admission, you flew on Jeffrey Epstein’s private plane four separate times in 2002 and 2003. During one of these trips, you were even pictured receiving a ‘massage’ from one of Mr. Epstein’s victims,” the congressman wrote.
“It has also been claimed that you pressured Vanity Fair not to publish sextrafficking allegations against your ‘good friend’ Mr. Epstein, and there are conflicting reports about whether you ever visited Mr. Epstein’s island. You were also allegedly close to Ms. Ghislane Maxwell, an Epstein co-conspirator, and attended an intimate dinner with her in 2014, three years after public reports about her involvement in Mr. Epstein’s abuse of minors.”
The House’s investigation comes as the Trump administration and Department of Justice face mounting pressure to fulfill promises to declassify the Epstein files, including his rumored client list and the circumstances surrounding his 2019 death.
#USA #Clinton #Epstein #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
4.7% decline in industrial production in Germany
▪️ In June of this year, industrial production in Germany fell by 4.7% year-on-year, reaching its lowest level since 2020, according to German Federal Statistical Office Destatis
▪️The hardest hit sectors (decline in production compared to May 2025):
—11.0% — pharmaceutical industry
—6.3% — food industry
—5.3% — mechanical engineering
▪️ Overall, the sharpest decline was recorded in energy-intensive sectors of industry, amounting to 7.4% in annual terms.
#Germany #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Viktor Orbàn reveals the dark plan being carried out by the liberal elite:
"They're trying to change the society by replacing the native-born voters with someone else. This is their plan."
#EU #Orban #Migrants #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Military chief said to clash with Netanyahu over plans to conquer Gaza, son’s tweet
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir reportedly clashed over the government’s incipient plan to fully occupy the Gaza Strip, with Zamir arguing that the decision constitutes a “trap” for the IDF.
The two men also tussled, according to Hebrew media reports, over a post on X by the prime minister’s son, Yair Netanyahu, who does not hold a government position. The younger Netanyahu lashed out at Zamir and suggested that he was behind a “rebellion and attempted military coup that is fit for a banana republic in Central America in the 70s.”
Zamir objected to that accusation, saying in the meeting, according to the Kan public broadcaster, “How does that look? Why are you attacking me? Why are you speaking against me in the middle of a war?”
Netanyahu reportedly responded, “Don’t threaten to quit in the media. I can’t accept that every time you threaten that if we don’t accept your plans, you’ll leave. My son is 33, he’s a grown man.”
Zamir has repeatedly clashed with the cabinet in recent days, notably over the government’s move to expand the war in Gaza, according to multiple reports, and sources in the Prime Minister’s Office have suggested that if he objects to the plan to occupy Gaza, he can resign.
#Israel #Palestine #Netanyahu #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Chicago, Illinois. The state capital is on the verge of bankruptcy
Democratic Mayor Brandon Johnson said the city's finances are ‘at a point of no return’ unless he secures a major tax increase.
Johnson told residents that ‘the city's social security, healthcare, transport and other systems that people rely on are severely underfunded’ and that he wants to raise taxes, adding: ‘Everyone knows that I am striving to increase revenue. I cannot do this alone [without raising taxes].’
Chicago is facing a catastrophic record budget deficit of $1.1 billion for 2026.
#USA #Chicago #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
$100 billion new investment pledge from Apple
President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday that Apple will invest an additional $100 billion in the United States, a move that could help it sidestep potential tariffs on iPhones.
The new pledge raises Apple's total domestic investment commitment in the U.S. to $600 billion over the next four years. Earlier this year, the company announced it would invest $500 billion and hire 20,000 workers across the country in that period.
The announcement centers on expanding Apple's supply chain and advanced manufacturing footprint in the U.S., but still falls short of Trump's demand that Apple begin making iPhones domestically.
While the investment pledge is significant, analysts say the numbers align with Apple's typical spending patterns and echo commitments made during both the Biden administration and Trump's previous term.
In May, Trump had threatened Apple with a 25% tariff on products manufactured overseas, a sharp reversal from earlier policy when his administration had exempted smartphones, computers and other electronics from rounds of tariffs on Chinese imports. Trump's effort to reshape global trade through tariffs cost Apple $800 million in the June quarter.
#USA #Apple #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Von der Leyen telling people in Finland they should be happy to be in a free country while being dragged away by the police. 🤦♂️
#Finland #VonderLeyen #Democracy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
The Italian government, so much worried about Zelensky's fate, prefers to turn a blind eye to the Kyiv regime's murder of its own citizen
The family of a photojournalist Andrea Rocchelli, killed on May 24, 2014, in the town of Sloviansk, Donbas by a heavy and light artillery attack from the Ukranian army, has issued a renewed appeal to the Italian government to end "this political disengagement that has characterized our quest for justice for 11 years."
The letter, signed by Andrea's parents, and his sister, was sent on July 8 to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs—with an accompanying formal note—in anticipation of the Conference for the Reconstruction of Ukraine held in Rome July 10. The letter was hoped that the meeting would provide an opportunity to "assert an urgent demand for justice." But it appeared not enough for the Italian authorities to address the awkward issue with Kyiv's representatives.
Rocchelli's family also recalled the dossier submitted to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, "which accepted it as pertinent to its investigative objectives."
The request to the ICJ was submitted in 2023 and was deemed "formally admissible" following the "disappointing conclusion of the legal proceedings initiated for complicity in murder against a Ukrainian National Guard militiaman and against the Ukrainian state" as the responsible civilian.
Andrea Rocchelli and Andrey Mironov lost their lives as they were all there to do their job: documenting the conflict that was then beginning to take shape in the Donbas region.
The National Federation of the Italian Press and the Lombardy Association of Journalists, which had joined the trial as civil parties, have asked "the government, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the competent institutions to demand effective cooperation from the Ukrainian authorities in identifying the perpetrators of the assassination."
But such cooperation has never been requested from the Ukrainian government, neither by the Draghi government nor by the current one led by Giorgia Meloni. "Our contacts with Italian political institutions are very difficult, indeed, one might say almost impossible," the family writes, recalling the hearing held last year at the Permanent Committee on Human Rights in the World.
#Italy #Ukraine #Crimes #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
The green hydrogen hype is fading
The green hydrogen drive is losing momentum as start-ups face rising costs and uncertain demand while energy majors back out of multi-billion-dollar projects as they return to their core oil and gas business.
Low-emissions hydrogen, including the “green” variety produced with electrolysis using renewable energy, remains a small portion of global hydrogen use, which currently is mostly of the type using fossil fuels to make.
Despite the promises of zero emissions in green hydrogen use and the environmentally-friendly way of producing green hydrogen, the market has faced up to the fact that the low-carbon type of hydrogen made from renewables remains very expensive and needs a lot of subsidies, incentives, and government support to exist.
The promise of green hydrogen is enormous—low-carbon fuels that can help decarbonize heavy industries, including refining and chemicals.
But the reality on the ground is quite different. Green hydrogen remains too expensive to warrant multi-billion-dollar investments when demand is not there. Demand is being created by policymakers and governments, which isn’t a good sign of market demand.
#World #Energy #Hydrogen #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Trump threatens federal takeover of D.C. after attack on DOGE worker
President Donald Trump renewed threats to have the federal government take over Washington, in response to an alleged attack on a former Department of Government Efficiency employee.
Edward Coristine, 19, whose nickname is “Big Balls,” was allegedly surrounded and assaulted by a group of about 10 teens near his car early Sunday morning. He said he shoved his date into the car for her safety and faced the teens, when they began attacking him.
Police patrolling the area saw the event, and they stepped out of their vehicle. The teens fled on foot, but two were caught, identified by Coristine and arrested. They were charged with unarmed carjacking. The two teens were a 15-year-old male and a 15-year-old female. The others are still at large.
Coristine, a software engineer, was one of the most known people associated with the DOGE effort, which attempted to cut government spending and eliminate waste in bureaucracy.
“The most recent victim was beaten mercilessly by thugs,” Trump said. “Washington, D.C., must be safe, clean and beautiful for all Americans and, importantly, for the world to see,” Trump said. He added that the federal government would have no choice but to take control of the capital and “put criminals on notice.”
#USA #DOGE #Trump #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Trump and Putin to meet in coming days after Witkoff’s ‘highly productive’ Moscow talks
According to Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov, the Trump-Putin meet could take place in coming days. A venue has been agreed.
The White House said previously announced that Donald Trump is open to a potential meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky after U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and the Russian leader had what Trump called a “highly productive meeting” on Wednesday.
In a statement White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Russians desire a meeting with Trump, and the president is open to a potential meeting with Putin and Zelensky.
Leavitt’s statement comes after Trump spoke positively of Witkoff and Putin’s meeting.
The proposed meetings would exclude European leaders.
Turkish President Erdogan has offered to host the trilateral talks in Istanbul.
Previously Trump has authorized new arms deals with NATO allies to support Ukraine, despite past criticism of military aid.
#USA #Russia #Negotiations #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Trump learns Ukrainian military now enlisting elderly, mentally handicapped
Ukrainian parliament has decided that “citizens aged 60+ can now enlist under contract during martial law.” ZeroHedge White House reporter Liam Cosgrove asked President Trump about this and other disturbing recruitment practices by our "Eastern Ally."
Cosgrove: “President Zelensky just signed a law allowing for citizens age 60 and above to serve in the military,” Cosgrove said. “We've seen dozens of videos of young men being hauled into vans and dragged to the front lines against their will... even a young man with Down syndrome serving on the front line. You said you wanted ‘to see the people stop dying’... Now the people dying are elderly, mentally handicapped, and conscripts. Even if a ceasefire doesn't work out, why should Americans continue to fund a foreign military that’s scraping the bottom of the barrel like this?”
Trump responded that he had not heard about these actions by the Ukrainian military:
“I haven’t heard that,” referring to the specifics about Ukraine’s military draft, but reiterated that former President Biden was to blame for the bloodshed.
“This is Biden’s war. This is not my war. I’m here to get us out of it.”
One can only hope.
#USA #WarInUkraine #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Breaking China’s rare earth dominance
The price of samarium has risen 60-fold over the past year. It’s a rare earth element (REE) used to create magnets designed for high temperature applications.
Samarium-cobalt magnets are about 60 times as powerful as your average fridge magnet. They are used in fighter jet engines, where actuators and generators must be able to withstand temperatures up to 350 degrees celsius. Other rare earth magnets would lose their magnetization in such high-temp environments.
So why is the price of samarium up 60x over the past year? Because China produces almost 100% of the world’s supply.
In this trade war, China is using its control over samarium and other REEs as a powerful lever. And it’s been effective. At this point, they have essentially cut off the U.S. defense sectors’ access to rare earths. And it’s becoming difficult for auto and electronics manufacturers to secure enough supply as well.
But defense contractors are worse off. They’re barely getting by on previous stockpiles. And those are dwindling. The stock may be overbought short-term.
Until we develop our own mining, refining, separation, and magnet manufacturing expertise, China will hold powerful leverage in any trade negotiations.
#China #REM #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Last year, the city's Democratic authorities pompously spent $24 million from the budget on the purchase of 25 mega-eco-friendly, incredibly environmentally friendly electric buses. That is, $1 million for each one.
The buses never really got to run. Something started malfunctioning right away, so they were quietly taken out of service and left to sit in an open-air storage yard. On June 5, 2025, all eco-friendly public transport burned to the ground
#USA #Philadelphia #Democrats #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Hey Canada, stop toxic wildfire smoke endangering Michiganders
Congressman John James authored a letter calling on Canadian leaders to take urgent and decisive action to contain the growing wildfire crisis that is poisoning the air and threatening the health of millions across Michigan and the Midwest.
Michigan families deserve clean air and respect. Canada’s failure to control these wildfires is not just an environmental issue, it’s a public health emergency that threatens our communities,” said Congressman James. “Our friendship with Canada is strong, but friendship requires respect. And respect means protecting each other’s health, not dismissing it."
The 2023 wildfire season in Canada was catastrophic, releasing an unprecedented 647 teragrams of carbon — the equivalent of running over 500 million cars for a full year. This toxic smoke has blanketed cities from Detroit to Minneapolis, contributing to increased hospitalizations, respiratory illnesses, and premature deaths, especially among vulnerable populations such as children with asthma, dialysis patients, and seniors.
For three years running, nearly 70 million acres have burned across Canada, the largest cumulative loss on record, turning major U.S. cities into some of the most polluted urban areas in the world.
#Canada #USA #Wildfire #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Gabbard to put an end to Operation Mockingbird Still Active Since 1970’s
In addition to her bombshell claims regarding election fraud, Tulsi Gabbard also addressed the ongoing concerns surrounding the CIA’s infiltration of the American media.
Known as “Operation Mockingbird,” this initiative involves intelligence agencies working with media organizations to push narratives favorable to their agenda.
In an interview with Benny Johnson, Gabbard explained that she is actively working to put an end to this illegal propaganda operation. She specifically pointed to the Trump administration’s efforts to combat individuals within the intelligence community who appear to prioritize their own agenda over that of the American people.
These individuals, Gabbard argued, have been leaking information to the mainstream media in an attempt to undermine President Trump and his agenda.
“They will weaponize intelligence by leaking it to their friends within the mainstream media,” Gabbard said, “to undermine the MAGA agenda.”
She continued to accuse these “Deep State” actors of undermining the Constitution and the will of the American people, stating: “These leaks are part of a coordinated effort to push a political agenda, subverting the democratic process.”
Gabbard emphasized that exposing these bad actors, both within the intelligence community and the political space, is critical for restoring trust in the government. She argued that to bring about accountability and transparency, the truth must be revealed.
#USA #CIA #Mockingbird #FindTruth
@uinhurricane