From organizing and inciting violence at Trump rallies, to paying mentally ill and homeless people to cause trouble, this is the DNC under Hillary Clinton.
These people are beneath contempt. Please Share
From organizing and inciting violence at Trump rallies, to paying mentally ill and homeless people to cause trouble, this is the DNC under Hillary Clinton.
These people are beneath contempt. Please Share

That old maxim, that a week is a long time in politics seems to be a gross understatement in 2016.
Most recently, during the six days since the second presidential debate, we have been treated to the transformation of the MSM from thinly veiled vehicle for the progressive narrative, to fully broken from cover panto-propaganda machine.
It should have been abundantly clear to anyone watching the hatchet job of a debate, that despite gross and transparent bias by the moderators, at times Trump threw Clinton like a pitiful ragging on a chew toy.
Cue the willing errand boys of propaganda to limit the damage inflicted: CNN; NBC; ABC; Huff Po; NYT et al. Who got straight to work spinning the yarn of an alternate reality in which destroying subpoenaed evidence and threatening Bill’s rape victims was eclipsed by Trumps lewd sexual comments a decade before.
After a week of having this perverse manufactured reality imposed upon us by the most mendacious and unscrupulous of players, finally some hope & promise that all is not lost. According to Infowars, it would seem that back in the real world, they are not buying it:
Internet users are vastly more interested in Wikileaks releases than allegations about Donald Trump, that have been given blanket coverage by the mainstream media.
The only reason why they are so openly and transparently trying to impose their will upon the populations of western nations, is because they appreciate better than anyone that another defeat the size of Brexit could be just weeks away.
The current presidential campaign is notable because the longer it goes on, the more it exposes the underlying reality of American society; a society that has been thoroughly penetrated by globalist control that is at odds with the fundamental nature of a republic. The longer the campaign continues and the more Trump is attacked, the more he fights back by speaking bluntly about the reality of America and its current sociopolitical and economic situation.
And as globalists push toward their goals in the 21st century, people will increasingly turn to the Internet to find out what’s going on. Trump has actually speeded up this process. Read Full Article
After a full six days of progressive carpet bombing with pussy tapes and faux moral outrage at the idea that Trump pays a little tax as is legally possible, the cracks are starting to show…
Even the Wall Street Journal is now fed up with the biased media coverage of the 2016 Presidential election as revealed by a scathing article written by Kimberly Strassel, a member of their editorial board. As Strassel points out, it’s almost impossible to turn on the TV without hearing about Trump’s “lewd” comments while coverage of Hillary “uniformly ignores the flurry of bombshells” inherent in the various WikiLeaks, FOIA releases and FBI interviews. Read Full Article
Manufactured polls have been created to give the illusion that Hillary is 11 points ahead after the second debate; a reality that is unexplainable given the poor performance under pressure and the weak substance of scandals being hammered home day and night. It turns out that the research companies who have come up with the data putting Clinton 11 points a head are run by, and paid for, by Clinton Super Pacs.
The whole illusion of popularity with voters has been manufactured. Read More
Paul Joseph Watson & Stephan Molyneux discuss this week’s events:
Ivan Penaluna

Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall, an outspoken critic of Liberal climate-change policy, lashed out Monday at Justin Trudeau for “unilaterally” imposing a carbon price on provinces and territories.
The prime minister kicked off a House of Commons debate about ratifying the Paris climate change accord with surprise news: Ottawa will set — and enforce, if necessary — a minimum price for carbon production.
The federal plan, a “floor price” of $10 a tonne in 2018 that increases to $50 a tonne by 2022, to be forced on the provinces if they don’t co-operate, will hurt Saskatchewan the most, Wall said in a blistering statement.
“The level of disrespect shown by the prime minister and his government today is stunning,” Wall said.
“This is a betrayal of the statements made by the prime minister in Vancouver this March and this new tax will damage our economy.”

Theresa May went all Game of Thrones during her address at the Conservative Party conference in Birmingham on Sunday, as she basically told E.U. federalists to ‘Bring it!’
In a clear display of Elizabethan sovereign defiance in the face of constant E.U. bullying & threats since last June’s vote, May laid to rest any uncertainty and stated that Britain would leave the E.U. no later than 31st March 2017, with full exit completed by early 2019.
“Let me be absolutely clear, there will be no unnecessary delays in invoking Article 50; we will invoke it when we are ready, and we will be ready soon. We will invoke Article 50 no later than the end of March next year.”
May’s Conservatives have embraced a ‘hard exit’, which means there will be no soft landing for Britain, but made it clear that control over immigration was a non-negotiable.
Addressing Conservative conference for the first time since becoming Prime Minister, Mrs May made clear that border controls are a red line in the Brexit negotiations, saying that, “we are not leaving the European Union only to give up control of immigration again”. Full Article
It capped an awful day for the E.U., as Hungarians had earlier overwhelmingly voted to reject an E.U. migrant quota.
Hungarian Prime minister Viktor Orban has delivered a huge blow to the European Union after 95 per cent of the Hungarian public soundly rejected EU migrant redistribution plans.
The Hungarian referendum on the redistribution of migrants and asylum seekers by the European Union has faced an almost unanimous result among Hungarian voters. An overwhelming majority of those who cast their ballot agree with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban that Hungary should not be forced by the European Union to accept migrants via redistribution.
The problems are stacking up for the federalists; lines of defiance are now clearly being drawn in the sand, and with Monday morning only hours away, they’ll now be busy getting ready for the re-opening of the Deutsche Bank rollercoaster after the weekend. Read More


Given the chance to address, say, the local numismatics society, or even the rotary club, the wise citizen would gladly choose either of these over the opportunity to speak in front of the ill-named United Nations. The stamp collectors and the Rotarians at least have the virtue of being what they say they are, and when they offer the podium to an outsider, they do so with the honest belief that the speaker will have something interesting or useful to say, and that he or she will actually be listened to.
This week, it was our dewy-fresh prime minister’s turn to address this esteemed body and, either out of vanity or innocence, he didn’t turn down the invitation. As to the substance of his effusion, one would need an intellectual Geiger counter to find any. The speech was described by the National Post’s John Ivison as “thin as soup made from the carcass of a starving pigeon.” And that’s being generous.
As we suggested for some time, the world is splitting into two camps: Globalists & Nationalists.
But what is a globalist? The Rebel’s Lauren Southern explains: