reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @TheShawnHendrix

Saved - June 15, 2025 at 1:10 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I often share news with proof, and today I'm highlighting Chinese-owned farmland and its implications for our food production. Despite the evidence, I wonder why there's not more concern. It's troubling to think we could become a conquered nation without any conflict.

@TheShawnHendrix - Shawn Hendrix

🚨I am on Chinese Owned Farmland🚨 I post a lot of news but I try to bring you the proof. You hear about Chinese owned land. Well I am going to show you what they are buying…. Our ability to produce food. This has been shown by many including @DataRepublican Why are we not on red alert over this. The Chinese love us fighting each other. We will wake up one day a conquered nation without a shot ever fired.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Smithfield is owned by the Chinese, therefore land owned by Smithfield is Chinese owned land. Pastures and cows on this land are Chinese owned. The speaker indicates that the Chinese are buying up land.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Smithfield is owned by the Chinese. This is owned by Smithfield. This is Chinese owned land. This beautiful pasture, these cows, this is all Chinese land. So that's what they're buying up, guys. Just a heads up.
Saved - March 9, 2025 at 7:13 AM

@TheShawnHendrix - Shawn Hendrix

🚨I just made a HOW TO video with @datarepublican she shows us how to use the tools she made and research effectively! PLEASE SHARE this we need as many people DIGGING as possible. Also give a follow and subscribe to help keep the progress coming. https://t.co/OV0VprEFIy

Video Transcript AI Summary
If you want to use the DataRepublican website, remember to use it responsibly and verify your findings. I had Brock generate a list of judges' names and pasted them into the search generator. The tool pulls data from multiple sources and shows connections, like a judge on the American Law Institute board. EIN numbers for charitable organizations are provided, and results can be downloaded as a spreadsheet with names, titles, and EINs. You can search by last name to find related individuals. The charity graph helps visualize money flow, highlighting taxpayer-funded entities in red. The charity funding tool lets you search by name, like "Republican," to see funding details, including the percentage paid by taxpayers. The nonprofit financials tool allows sorting by minimum taxpayer funding percentage and travel expenses. The people relations tool shows connections between individuals, like Bill Crystal, and their historical context, using color-coded categories. Explore these tools at DataRepublican, share your findings in the comments, and subscribe for more deep dives.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: If you want to learn to use a DataRepublican website, this video is for you. Before we start though, a quick warning. This tool is powerful, but you must use it responsibly. Read carefully, understand the context, and always verify your findings. This is not a verdict. It's a tool for research. Also, please click the share button. Let's get the word out so we have as many people researching the data as possible. Now let's dive in. Alright. So here's what I did. I asked Brock to generate a list of judges' names. Once I had that, I simply copied them over. There we go. Copy, copy, copy, and then pasted them into a search generator. Now we wait for the tool to run its search. It takes about five minutes because it's pulling data from multiple sources. You can see here how many searches have been completed and soon even more results will appear. Okay. The results are coming in. Let's take a closer look. Here's an example. One of the judges appears on the board of the American Law Institute. That's one connection. Also note that you can see the EIN numbers of all the charitable organizations. This is gonna be very important for your search. An EIN is a federal number that identifies a charity. It's like a fingerprint for the charity. There's no two numbers that are the same. Another really powerful tool is to be able to download the results and look at them in more of a traditional spreadsheet format. And the spreadsheet is gonna show you the EIN, the charity name, the judge's name, or not the judge, but whoever you're searching's name, and then their title. So this really lets you start to see an overall picture of what's going on. You also don't need to use their full name. You can just search a last name. For example, Nixon Bush Eisenhower, run search, and you can see the results for just that part of the name. Now, obviously, you'll need to verify that it is the person you're looking out for. This also helps you see relationships of people who share a last name. This will also help you find in laws, sisters, brothers, because it doesn't matter if they have different names. It'll still search the terms. So once it's done, you'll be able to see, like, right here, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, for example. Now let's go to the next tool, the charity graph. So we're gonna go ahead and copy the EIN number and then bring it over into the charity graph. It's important to know that there's not a full picture. There's so many awards. We can't actually funnel them all in. So again, this is just to help you understand where a lot of the money is going. You never understand this without the AI. The AI is what puts it all together, makes the connections. Without that, it's just a lot of data that we can't make any sense out of. An important note is the red ones have high taxpayer dollars. If you see red, that's where the taxpayer money is flowing to. So the next tool is a charity funding. You You can actually go in and just search by a name, type in like Republican, and then hit search, and it's gonna bring up exactly what you're looking for. The important note here is percent paid by taxpayers right there. Now we can go to the nonprofit financials. This is a much more detailed tool. I like this one a lot because I can search and sort by the minimum percentage of taxpayer funds. So you can see like youth and family services of Central Oklahoma is 88% taxpayer funded. You also can search with travel expenses. People spending the least on travel and those spending the most on travel. I think something that'd be interesting is looking at something that has a high taxpayer fund, but is also spending most of that money on travel expenses. That's the type of work you can do with this tool. One thing I like to do is just look at charities and nonprofits that have a high percentage of taxpayer funds. Now this little slider up here lets you set that number. So it's taken up to 76, 70 five percent, and then hit search. And now you're really just looking at specifically high taxpayer funded search or not searches companies. This helps you kind of narrow down what you're looking for and then dig in, go find out what these companies are, what they do and do the research. This is where the power comes from. We're all looking for things that don't make sense. Again, it's not, it's not a guilty verdict. It just says, hey, maybe we should look a little deeper into what this company does. And now let's go to our newest tool, the people relations. This lets you take people and kind of see what and who they're related to. Let's start with Bill Crystal. We hit search. Let's say he co founded a project for the New American Century in 1997. Click on him. And that's going to take us into a bigger, I don't know, a bigger view of who he's connected to. This is really like anybody important that Bill Crystal's connected to. So let's let you start to see how the different charities and the different people all relate to each other in like a historical context. Now, again, with all the rest of the tools, you have to verify this stuff is correct. This just gives you a place to go look. So please don't take this and just assume that it's all true. Go do the work. It's so important that we put out real good research and not just, you know, something you think is important. And like the last tool, this is a small percentage. This just gives you a place to look. So go dig deeper, find the stuff that no one else has found. And hopefully soon, we'll be able to get the full map. We'll do more work and get more data so we can see the full view. Actually, this is really interesting. I did not realize that Bill Crystal was the manager for Allen Keyes. Again, something I didn't know and I just discovered by looking at this tool. Also, interesting thing is the colors tell you what type of category it is. Education, family, historical, legal, media, political, social, unknown, or work. So this kinda helps you even tell a deeper story by the color of the arrows. Now let's move over to the principal officer search. Now we put William Crystal back in, and now we'll see the institutes that he's part of. Also too, if you look over on the right, you can click and you can see the USAID grant flow. Just by clicking on that button, it'll take you back into that bigger screen that lets you kinda see, okay, Bill's here. What's he up to? So now we jump back over into this screen and start doing some research on the charities that are attached to Bill Crystal. I mean, so many different ways to use the tool, but the most important thing is, again, like we said at the beginning, you have to do the research before you go out and make statements about someone being bad or good. So this lets you dig, and until you find something, you really need to hold your judgment. Like, example, Defending Democracy Together. It's $10,000,000 Doesn't seem like a big charity. I mean, it's $10,000,000 you can see that 2,000,000 came from Fidelity Investments, which is probably a donor advised fund. And then you can also trace it back on down to a high taxpayer funded Tide Center. So what's the Tide Center? Dig in, figure out what the Tide Center is. Why are they getting so much of our tax money? What are they doing with it? Look for news stories, Look for proof they've actually ever even done anything. There's so much to research. There's just no way that a couple of us alone can actually dig in and find everything to where this tax money is being wasted. All right. That's it for today. If you wanna explore these tools yourself, head over to the DataRepublican website. Let me know in the comments what you uncover, and remember to verify everything you find. Guys, thanks for watching. Please subscribe and do more deep dives with the tool. Also, when election season comes back, my old tools will be important again as we go through polling data. So go ahead and check out that. I'll show you here's a example of North Carolina, and that's it. So please subscribe and research responsibly. Thanks, guys.
Saved - January 29, 2025 at 4:12 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I can't believe Buncombe County is issuing parking tickets to disaster victims. Their car is in a public right of way, but it feels beyond absurd to prioritize tickets over compassion. I get there are rules, but this seems so wrong.

@TheShawnHendrix - Shawn Hendrix

🚨 PARKING tickets for disaster victims? Buncombe County found it worth their time to come ticket this disaster victims car they need to move this car as soon as possible. It is in a public right of way. How dare they park their car there? Beyond absurd. I am sure there is some rule they have to follow….

Video Transcript AI Summary
This car is frustrating. Earlier, Buncombe County decided to notify the owner that their vehicle, deemed abandoned on a public right of way, should be towed. It's surprising they focus on this issue when there are likely bigger problems in the county.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: This car infuriates me. If you weren't here earlier when we walked by, Buncombe County found it worth their time. Somebody screenshot this. They found it worth their time to come by and mention to this person that they really should get this tow tow tow get this car towed. They have determined that this vehicle's abandoned on a public right of way. How dare they abandon their their car on the King's Right of way? I'm pretty sure they got bigger problems in Buncombe County. Frankly well, I'm not gonna say it.
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