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Trump has frozen millions in USAID funds for foreign media, causing outrage among liberals. Reports reveal that USAID has been funding outlets like Politico and the New York Times, raising concerns about the U.S. government influencing global journalism. Trump’s recent hold on USAID has cut $268 million from media in over 30 countries, affecting 6,200 journalists and 707 news outlets. This situation parallels past revelations about social media collusion with the government to shape public opinion. Critics argue that while they highlight U.S. involvement in foreign affairs, the real issue is that many media outlets are funded by the U.S., including the BBC, which is the second-largest recipient of U.S. funding after the UK government.

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NewsGuard and GARM pose a serious threat to free speech in the US. NewsGuard's board includes former CIA and NSA heads, working to control the news narrative. They blacklisted 650 news sites during COVID-19 for questioning the origin of the virus. GARM aims to cut funding to alternative news sources spreading misinformation. These organizations collaborate with ad agencies like Publicis Group, which receive taxpayer subsidies. Congress can take action to remove funding from these agencies.

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Brendan Carr, the former FCC chair under Trump, is investigating NPR and PBS for potentially airing prohibited commercial advertisements. This scrutiny comes as both organizations face threats of losing taxpayer funding, which conservatives have long advocated for due to perceived political bias. Carr expressed concerns that NPR and PBS member stations might be violating federal law with underwriting announcements that resemble commercials. NPR and PBS have received federal funding for decades, with the Corporation for Public Broadcasting distributing approximately $535 million for fiscal year 2025. The investigation aligns with Trump's campaign promise to cut wasteful spending. Meanwhile, the wellness company offers various prescription medical kits to help families stay safe and healthy.

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The speaker discusses the sophistication and self-taught nature of the audience, which is feared by the media and established order. They question why Rupert Murdoch paid $878 million to avoid trial, suggesting it wasn't a business or legal decision. They mention Tucker Carlson being fired by Fox News for his views and highlight the irony of paying him not to talk. The speaker emphasizes that Tucker was a valuable asset for populist nationalism. They also mention Governor Ron DeSantis' declining popularity and argue that Murdoch paid a large sum to perpetuate a false narrative. The speaker criticizes the use of threatening letters and the term "election deniers."

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The Obama administration, and even the early Trump administration, used taxpayer money to support the socialist government in Albania. This involved partnering with George Soros on projects aimed at weakening the independence of the Albanian judiciary. This wasn't isolated to Albania; similar activities occurred in Romania, Hungary, Guatemala, and Colombia. Soros, a billionaire, doesn't need this funding, yet the State Department and USAID enabled his influence, allowing him to shape foreign policy and even review funding applications. This taxpayer funding, the speaker argues, indirectly subsidizes Soros’s activities, both domestically and internationally, and is a way for the State Department to oppose conservative agendas. The speaker highlights this as an example of the government funding groups that oppose American interests, while right-leaning organizations are largely ignored. Legal action was necessary to obtain the documents revealing these activities.

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Chris Ruffo, a prominent conservative, is now advocating for censorship, contradicting the conservative principle of free speech. His call for censorship follows a scandal involving foreign influence in right-wing think tanks. Ruffo's article in Compact Magazine, funded by George Soros, criticizes anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and calls for silencing dissenting opinions. Soros, a significant donor to progressive causes in Israel, supports leftist factions, while Rupert Murdoch backs right-wing elements. Both sides of the political spectrum are funded by wealthy Jewish donors with differing visions for Israel. Ruffo's push for censorship targets those exposing these funding dynamics, framing them as harmful to the conservative movement's future.

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SpaceX is owned by the world's richest person, who has direct control over a global communication system. This person spoke about political retribution and stood next to a candidate who normalizes that language. Elon Musk is allegedly spreading political falsehoods and attacking FEMA while claiming to help hurricane victims. Last year, the owner of Starlink shut down Starlink when a U.S. ally was going to attack an adversary. The head of SpaceX has aggressively injected himself into the presidential race and made his viewpoint clear. SpaceX participated via Zoom. The discussion is about SpaceX increasing launches, not other companies.

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George Soros has funded revolutions in various countries and is now targeting America. He has created a shadow party within the Democratic party, similar to his tactics in other countries. There is a lack of scrutiny on Soros, with Glenn Beck facing consequences for exposing his covert operations. Despite the backlash, Beck believes it was worth it. The book "Shadow Party" provides shocking insights into Soros' activities.

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Broadcasters are different than any other form of communication, including here. We're on cable right now. Fox News doesn't have an FCC license. CNN doesn't. ABC, CBS, NBC, those broadcast stations do. with that license comes a unique obligation to operate in the public interest. the FCC walked away from enforcing that public interest obligation. president Trump ran directly at these legacy broadcast outlets, and he exposed them to these market forces. Nexstar, as you noted, stood up and said, look, we have the license, and we don't want to run this anymore. Sinclair did the same thing. So there's more work to go, but I'm very glad to see that America's broadcasters are standing up to serve the interest of their community. We don't just have this progressive foie gras coming out from New York and Hollywood.

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- A fucking MAGA person just bought Dominion Voting Systems. We are officially fucked. - his name is Scott Lienbecker. - the name of this company this man owns is called Liberty Vote. - Dominion, one of the biggest election equipment providers and was used in 27 states. - in his press release, he said they are gonna be in full compliance with Trump's executive order, like it's a fucking law or something. - And not only did he buy it, part of the agreement of the sale was that Dominion would reach undisclosed settlements with former Rudy mayor, New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and Trump lawyer, Sidney Powell. - Nevada's Democratic secretary of state called Lyndecker open, honest, and transparent. - Do you fucking think that if a man who was appointed by a democratic governor was going around buying fucking voting machines the the Republicans would completely ignore it.

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"President President Trump ran directly at these legacy broadcast outlets, and he exposed them to these market forces." "It would it was not remotely market market forces. The market was operating before. It was pure government coercion and threats from Brendan Carr and from Donald Trump and the brow beating of corporations who need the FCC's approval for various broadcast licenses and so on to go and do this." "He is openly broadcasting the fact that this was what we call under the First Amendment viewpoint discrimination. He doesn't like what they're saying." "Under the First Amendment to the constitution of The United States, you have the right to engage in speech that is distasteful and offensive and disagreeable to other people."

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Data Republican released a tool indexing the National Endowment for Democracy Journal, aggregating authors, articles, and NGOs. The speaker claims this tool proves George Soros and the government collaborate. The National Endowment for Democracy is described as a government-financed NGO involved in intelligence operations, with congressional representatives. The speaker highlights authors in the journal affiliated with the Open Society Foundation, asserting that many Open Society Foundation people write for the journal. The speaker points to numerous mentions of Open Society Foundations in the journal's articles. The speaker concludes that this demonstrates the government's deep involvement with George Soros, portraying him as a deep insider within the intelligence community.

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A mediaopoly. Home media is controlled by a few corporations thanks to deregulation by the FCC. Jimmy, Disney, Fox, Westinghouse, and good old GE? They own networks from CBS to CNBC. They can use defective votes, it was an unreported crime. Or when it was boycotted for operating nuclear bomb plants just to squeeze it out. That's a footnote, by the way. A footnote protects you from folks who doubt what you say. Now maybe the voices in k.

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A Soros-backed group is set to acquire over 200 radio stations across 40 markets. Initially, the FCC indicated that this transaction could be reviewed at the bureau level without a full commission vote, but it has now become a matter for the entire commission. This situation is unusual as the FCC typically follows a standard process for transactions with over 25% foreign ownership, which this deal has. Normally, a petition is filed, and national security agencies review the foreign ownership before a vote. However, this case appears to be creating a new shortcut that has not been used before at the commission level.

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Welcome back to National Report. Breaking news from the new FCC chair, Brendan Carr, reveals that President Trump's complaints against NBC, ABC, and CBS can now proceed. Carr has reversed the previous dismissal of these complaints, which include issues related to the coverage of the presidential election and a controversial 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris. The complaints against these networks will be actively reviewed, while the complaint against Fox has been dropped. Former FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel could have prevented this reversal had she acted sooner. We have reached out to CBS, ABC, and NBC for comments but have not received a response yet. This development raises questions about media fairness in covering the Trump administration.

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Makers are investigating the FCC's expedited approval of George Soros' acquisition of 200 radio stations, potentially impacting 165 million Americans before the election. Concerns have been raised about the FCC bypassing its usual review process, particularly regarding foreign ownership rules. Former FCC chair Ajit Pai explained that typically, applicants must justify foreign ownership exceeding 25%, but this requirement has been deferred. Questions arise about potential layoffs, as previous mergers faced scrutiny over job losses. The House Oversight Committee is examining whether political connections influence this expedited process. There are fears this move could threaten conservative talk radio. Ajit Pai emphasized the importance of adhering to established rules to maintain public confidence.

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The speaker expresses alarm regarding a transaction, claiming it is unprecedented at the commission level. They allege the administration is giving a left-wing billionaire, described as a major donor and close ally who funds their dark money efforts, a free pass to control 100 local radio stations. The speaker believes this will flood the airwaves with leftist propaganda and considers it blatant.

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Data Republican released a tool indexing the National Endowment for Democracy Journal, aggregating authors, articles, and NGOs. The speaker claims this journal proves George Soros and the government work together. The National Endowment for Democracy is described as a government-financed NGO involved in intelligence operations, with congressional representatives. The tool identifies authors in the journal affiliated with the Open Society Foundation, which is George Soros. The speaker highlights the number of articles in the journal mentioning Open Society Foundations. The speaker concludes that this demonstrates the government's deep involvement with George Soros, portraying him as a deep insider within the intelligence community.

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NPR and PBS heads testified before Congress this week, facing accusations of liberal bias. The question is whether the government should continue funding public broadcasters. Republicans have long sought to eliminate PBS. The speaker believes NPR is far left and that government subsidies are no longer necessary. These outlets became popular when political polarization was lower. Now that Republicans and Democrats are at odds, such organizations are no longer viable as public entities and should be private.

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The Trump campaign claims that a left-wing group funded by George Soros is responsible for a recent ruling. The ruling involves two organizations, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and Free Speech for People, which are backed by the Democrat-affiliated AgBlue organization and have also received funding from George Soros' Open Society Foundations. These groups are using a law originally meant to prevent confederate rebels from holding office to prevent Americans from voting for President Trump.

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Bezos owning the Washington Post is described as an arm of the CIA, a claim raised by Speaker 0. He suggests that the newspaper is part of a broader pattern where media power is consolidated in the hands of a few billionaires, accusing the outlet of being used to push a particular agenda. Speaker 1 responds dismissively to that assertion and mentions Ellison taking over of [text incomplete in the transcript], signaling ongoing concerns about who controls major media and institutions. The conversation continues with Speaker 0 asserting that Barry Weiss is trying to squash real news and hide it, and that reporters who are doing real journalism are being targeted, framed as investigations or actions run by a few billionaires who control much of the media landscape. A related critique follows, declaring Bill Clinton a “slimeball” for deregulating the Federal Communications Act of 1996. The speakers reference the consequence that there were thousands of independent radio stations, television stations, and newspapers before deregulation, and now six companies control 92% of the media as a result of that action, calling Clinton a “lousy little slime ball.” The discussion moves into personal remarks about Monica Lewinsky, with a claim that “I didn’t have sex with that woman, Monica Lewinsky,” followed by derisive language directed at Bill Clinton, describing him as “that little clown.” The conversation then shifts to the Epstein files, with frustration expressed about why those files are not being released. The speakers criticize the redaction of the Epstein files and question, “Where the hell are these Epstein files?” They argue that the redactions are to protect individuals, using charged language to describe the situation as disgusting, and they call for the files to be made public. The topic then turns to the DOJ’s handling of redactions related to Congressman Thomas Massey. The DOJ reportedly missed deadlines to provide reasons for the redactions to Massey and “walked right past his deadline.” The speakers say they interviewed Massey on the show, reiterating that the DOJ violated the deadline and ignored the will of the people, with the DOJ referred to as the “DOJ, Department of Jerkoffs.” Finally, Massey is praised as one of the top lawmakers, described as one of the few in Congress who is truly respected, and “one of a kind,” with Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 expressing strong admiration for his work and integrity.

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It's astonishing to see left-wing figures, like Bernie Sanders, claim that Donald Trump is trying to silence independent media. Are they really referring to CBS as independent? CBS even edited an interview with Kamala Harris to make her look better. Alex Soros has also shared claims about an unelected cabal in power, which is ironic considering his family's influence. This moment in history feels very strange. There's been no acknowledgment of the exposed corruption; instead, the focus is on preserving an organization without addressing its failings. The priorities seem misplaced, like funding gender fluid dance programs in Turkey or spending millions on Starbucks cups.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Jimmy Kimmel and Sore Cultural Losers, and Charlie Kirk's Spiritual Revival, w/ Bannon & Frank Turek
Guests: Stephen Bannon, Frank Turek
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A weekend memorial, a fiery media reaction, and a faith-driven call to action collide as Megyn Kelly anchors a discussion about Charlie Kirk’s life, his death, and the seismic media climate surrounding it. The memorial is set for Sunday at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, and Kelly is joined by Frank Turek, a Christian apologist who mentored Kirk and was with him the day he died. Stephen Bannon, host of War Room, provides context on their relationship and what Kirk’s legacy means for a rising campus-activist movement among young conservatives. The segment also covers Jimmy Kimmel’s indefinite suspension after remarks about Kirk’s murder and what the incident signals about media power, accountability, and the intensifying political polarization. Across the conversation, Bannon argues that this moment signals a civil war-like shift in American media and politics, insisting the left’s reaction to Kirk’s death shows fear of grassroots power. He frames affiliate stations’ refusals to air Kimmel as market discipline and warns that corporate media are under pressure to protect the public interest while being pressured by political actors. Kelly and Bannon discuss potential federal moves—FCC, FEC investigations, and legal action over in-kind donations—to counter what they describe as pro-Democrat bias embedded in broadcasts. The call is for a maximalist strategy: pursue lawsuits, regulatory scrutiny, and leverage local affiliates to demonstrate that consumer and audience power can shape programming. Meanwhile, the interview with Frank Turek foregrounds Charlie Kirk’s preparation, faith, and philosophy. Frank recalls their friendship, Kirk’s meticulous campus work, and his aim to persuade students with evidence for Christianity and the resurrection. He notes that Frank coauthored I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist and describes Kirk’s own readiness for tough questions. He recounts the Utah night in vivid detail—the security team, the drive to the hospital, and Kirk’s death—then shifts to the family’s resilience and Erica Kirk’s strength. The discussion turns to questions of suffering, meaning, and redemption, with Frank offering theological reflections drawn from scripture about pain, eternity, and ripple effects that wake a nation. The program closes with tributes to Kirk and a call to continue educating young people in truth and faith.

Tucker Carlson

Ep. 100 News Network Banned From TV After Coverage of Trump, COVID and Hunter Biden’s Laptop
Guests: Dan Ball
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Tucker Carlson emphasizes the First Amendment's protection against government censorship of news, criticizing Democrats for attempting to shut down conservative news outlets like One America News (OAN). He argues that the term "disinformation" is misused to silence dissenting voices, particularly regarding topics like the COVID vaccine and the Hunter Biden laptop story. Dan Ball, a host at OAN, recounts how the network faced pressure from Democratic lawmakers, leading to its removal from major cable providers and loss of advertisers. He highlights that OAN was targeted for reporting truths that contradicted mainstream narratives. Ball asserts that the government’s actions against OAN are illegal and reflect a broader trend of silencing conservative viewpoints. He expresses hope for OAN's survival and growth, emphasizing the importance of free speech and the press. Both Carlson and Ball agree that the current media landscape is shifting, with traditional outlets losing credibility while alternative platforms gain traction. They call for a defense of First Amendment rights against government overreach and media manipulation.

Breaking Points

Tearful Kimmel RETURNS As Trump THREATENS Lawsuit
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An offhand joke about a political controversy becomes a test of power when a network pulls a beloved host and the White House weighs in. Jimmy Kimmel was pulled from most Disney ABC broadcasts after pressure tied to remarks about a death linked to Trump, and affiliates Nextar and Sinclair chose not to air his program. Public backlash, including Disney subscriptions cancellations, pushed Disney to bring him back. Kimmel addressed the moment with emotion, stating he never intended to minimize the killing and that his aim was not to blame a group, while acknowledging some found the remarks ill-timed. The panel notes skepticism about the sincerity of a pseudo-apology, and discusses whether the move was a principled stand or a business decision, given the risk to bottom lines. During the segment, Joe Rogan urged that government should not dictate a comedian’s monologue, while noting pressure from networks and the possibility of government influence. The conversation expands to media consolidation, platform influence, and the risk of a chilling effect on journalists and comics who fear government retaliation. They point to Fox News, Nextar, Sinclair, and talk of a CBS free-press merger as signs of a shifting landscape.
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