Friday, May 1, 2026

CHRISTOPHER HALE: [Evelio Menijar-Ayala] finally arrived in California in 1990, having been smuggled in the trunk of a car with his brother over the border crossing between Tijuana and San Diego.

USCCB, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. 

from Christopher Hale:

NEW: Pope Leo XIV has named Salvadoran immigrant Evelio Menijar-Ayala to be West Virginia’s lone Catholic bishop. 
As a teenager, he made three attempts to enter the United States illegally. 
He finally arrived in California in 1990, having been smuggled in the trunk of a car with his brother over the border crossing between Tijuana and San Diego. 
Over the next several years, Menjivar-Ayala worked janitorial and construction jobs in California before deciding to become a priest. 
It’s a remarkable choice in a state that [was] over 90% white and voted for President Trump by 42 points.

DR. ANTHONY CHAFFEE: Normal age-related atrophy is not evolutionary. It confers no survival advantage. If it does occur, it's caused by malnutrition over time.


We accept as normal that our brains are supposed to shrink as we age, and we say, "Well, that's normal age related atrophy."  But at the same time, we know that if you have certain nutrient deficiencies, like B12 in the normal ranges you can still get brain atrophy.  Your brain is shrinking by half a percent or 1% per year. Oxford showed that in 2008 in a published study they did, so and that's in the normal range of B12.  And they said, "Well, . . . my doctor said my B12 is fine."  Well, I can tell you it's probably not.  If your doctor didn't say it was too high, then it's it's not fine.  Because we were just going by reference ranges and doctors just go by reference range.  Well, those are the reference ranges that we use, okay.  But did you look them up and see if they're actually useful?  Because the next Lab down the road, they have completely different reference ranges. So who's right?  And you have a patient that goes to one lab or the other lab and you get one says fine and one says too high.  Well, what is it?  You're making objective decisions based on arbitrary figures.  If you were an architect or an engineer that did that and used arbitrary measures,  buildings and buildings are falling down.  People are dying.  Your accountant that used artificial figures, they'd be in prison.  When you use, you know, imaginary arbitrary figures and measures for humans,  health collapses.  Instead of buildings, it's your health. No other animal in the wild eating their natural diet has normal age related atrophy. There's actually a study where they looked at 99 chimpanzees and did MRIs looking at them, comparing them to people aging over time.  And they had no degeneration in their brain.  Their brain didn't shrink at all.  They had no atrophy as they age at any point.  They even concluded that this is an abnormality in humans that our brains shrink over time.  And they said this is evolutionary anomaly.  But it's not, it can't be evolutionary.  That's not a survival advantage, that's a big disadvantage.  So it doesn't make any damn sense.  And so I think that's malnutrition over time. 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

DIANA WEST: Jaw-dropping video to view 45 years later from our own era of increasing communist violence, pushed by Democrat leaders and normalized by top media in late nite & prime time.

Carson, 1981.

Kimmel, 2026.

BREAKING 911: American Airlines is operating the the first USA-Venezuela direct flight in 7 years. The flight is traveling from Miami to Caracas.

J. MICHAEL WALLER: Those advocating for a multipolar world would surrender American primacy to Russia, China, the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the globalists.

Lee Smith

5:10  But the way a lot of people are looking at multipolarity is they presume that Russia should be dominating Europe, not Europe dominating Europe.

5:24  What problem would that cause for us, I mean Europe is an enormous trade partner for the United States, and so what would it mean for Russia to dominate Europe?  What would it mean for the Europeans, then what would it mean for the United States?

5:38  Well, it's the whole reason we had NATO was to prevent Moscow from dominating Europe.  Russia never de-Sovietized the way that Germany de-Nazified.  There was never any national retrospection, never any screening of people who would be unfit to serve in the new post-totalitarian government.  So they still have a big Soviet mentality and they have a pretense of a great power to dominate what they say from Dublin to Vladivostok.  

So that's all the way from the Atlantic across the Eurasian landmass to the Pacific, and that's their concept of multipolarity, which is part of a doctrine that Alexander Duggin, a Russian political theorist, geopolitician who is credited with refining the term but that means you had different poles of power around the world.  But within that Russian construct is what they call Eurasianism.  Russia is a Eurasia power.  That's a fact from Europe all the way to Vladivostok.  So you can't argue that.  Its the logical power for a lot of that part of the world.  But Eurasianism is an ideology that goes with multipolarity where it will sort of where it will dominate Asia in concert with China, with India, with what until recently was the Islamic Republic of Iran, and Europe.  Well that means it would dominate a whole lot of our own strategic interests and that's just not in our national interests to allow Russia to do that.  They have no constructive role to play.  

7:25.  A lot of people, including inside the government, look at NATO . . .  for instance, they say NATO is outdated and also . . . so, what is the purpose?  The United States has very important interests in Europe, and I always contend with people who say, well, we're just there to protect Europe.  Well, no we're there to protect our own interests and we expect the Europeans help us to protect their interests as well as our own.  So what's your argument against people who say, "Well, NATO is outdated.  We don't need NATO anymore."  Either we can't do it on our own anymore, or you know well actually this is Russia sphere of influence.  Let's step off of Europe a little bit.

8:18.  First of all, NATO is outdated.  It was developed to contain Soviet communism.  It accomplished that mission.  But it's a mutual defense pact among all member nations, and it was designed to defend Europe but the only time that that Article 5 Mutual defense pact was put in motion was after 9/11 in defense of the United States.  Our NATO allies played big roles in Iraq, Afghanistan, with terrorism around the world, even countries that we like to bash.  I mean France provided us with important help.  The Brits did of course. A lot of the Continental Europeans did.  The Danes did.  The Lithuanians did.  The Polish.  I was in Afghanistan when the Polish and the Lithuanian forces back in 2007 they were really gung-ho.  You had the military from Finland, which wasn't even part of NATO at the time doing guard duty so that our forces wouldn't have to do that, and all the way across the board.