Friday, February 27, 2026

BREAKING - Mass public outrage is brewing after burger chain Whataburger fired a young man who prayed over his meals while making food reviews off the clock and raking in millions of free ad views for the company.

Whataburger fires kid for his reviews of Whataburger food items?  No.  

Did they fire him for making the reviews off the clock?  No.

For poor reviews?  No.  He generated free ad revenue for the company.

Then what for?  For saying "See you guys in the next video.  Jesus love you.  Peace out." 

Whataburger:  That's not who we are.

Americans:  Then who are you, Whataburger?  Are you owned by Muslim Brotherhood?

Ooooh, here is his egregious sin,

@byronjuniorsworld123 Roman's 8:26 helpless #jesuspaiditall #spreadthegospel✝️😇 #jesusislord #jesussaves #fyp ♬ original sound - Byron juniors world

from Grok

It's a big cultural icon in Texas (where it started and remains headquartered in San Antonio), known for.

Founded on August 8, 1950, in Corpus Christi, Texas.

Started by entrepreneur Harmon Dobson (the main visionary) and partner Paul Burton.

Harmon wanted a burger so impressive that people would bite into it and say "What a burger!" — that's literally where the name came from.

It began as a small roadside stand and grew into a regional powerhouse.

The Dobson family ran it for decades (even after Harmon's death in 1967, his wife Grace and children continued it). In 2019, the family sold the majority stake to a private equity firm called BDT & MSD Partners (sometimes just called BDT Capital), but the Dobson family still holds a minority stake. As of 2026, it's privately owned (not publicly traded), with over 1,100 locations mostly across the southern and southeastern U.S., and it's still expanding (new spots opening in places like North Carolina, Florida, etc.).
So to answer "who and who is Whataburger":

Who founded it → Harmon Dobson (primary) and Paul Burton.

What is it → A beloved Texas-based burger chain that's way more than just fast food—it's practically a way of life for many people in the region. 😄

    BREAKING 911: The USA now produces more oil then Saudi Arabia And Russia combined?

    DANIEL TURNER: Kamala Harris is on a book tour in Michigan today. "The auto industry is clearly moving toward electric." It didn't. Ford pulled the plug on the all-electric F-150. Stellantis posted a $26.3 billion loss due to EVs. GM is shifting production back to gas-powered vehicles.

    Thursday, February 26, 2026

    DAVID FRIEDBERG: The majority of Americans do not own assets. They are net asset negative. As a result, they live off of income and they do not benefit from the de-dollarization like asset holders do and this is what is ultimately fueling populism in the United States.

     like I just don't know if there's a way of solving this fiscal problem without a functional redistribution of wealth.  And the question is can you do it violently or non-violently, and if there's a non-violent path I think that's probably the preferable path.  --David Friedberg

    GUESTS

    David Friedberg (the main speaker in the clip, a billionaire entrepreneur and CEO of The Production Board, known for his work in agtech and climate solutions).  David Friedberg $1.4 billion dollar net worth.  

    Chamath Palihapitiya (former Facebook executive, founder of Social Capital, and investor in companies like Slack and Box).

    David Sacks (co-founder of PayPal, founder of Craft Ventures, and a prominent venture capitalist involved in tech policy).

    Jason Calacanis (angel investor, podcaster, and author, known for early investments in Uber and Robinhood).

    TRANSCRIPT

    If you own assets, like we do, the four of us, we own stocks, we own real estate, we own other assets, as the dollar devalues and everything inflates in value, our asset prices go up and we get wealthier and wealthier.   

    The majority of Americans do not own assets.  They are net asset negative.  As a result, they live off of income and they do not benefit from the de-dollarization like asset holders do and this is what is ultimately fueling populism in the United States.  And the populism in the United States is what is driving socialism and the response to those behaviors is what got Donald Trump elected to some degree.  And the response to the Donald Trump actions is what's driving the civil unrest in Minnesota and other places. And I fundamentally believe that much of the unrest, the civil unrest, and ultimately the divide in this country is driven by the fact that de-dollarization, because of excess government spending, ultimately a majority of people in this country to feeling oppressed and left behind because they're seeing a few people in the country accelerate their net worth, like all of us here, and there's no way for them to catch up because if they don't actually own assets.  So I'll be honest with you guys, I'll make a confession, I was at the gym this morning on the treadmill and while I was there I was actually thinking about the wealth tax stuff that's going on in California.  And I wondered if it may be an inevitability in order to keep the United States from going into Civil War, I mean that very wholeheartedly, like I just don't know if there's a way of solving this fiscal problem without a functional redistribution of wealth.  And the question is can you do it violently or non-violently, and if there's a non-violent path I think that's probably the preferable path.