Join Jacob Eggers as Truther Odyssey peels back today’s unraveling headlines: Dan Bongino storms out after DOJ’s Epstein memo absolves key players—no client list, “missing” suicide footage. Kash Patel faces backlash over polygraph probes and loyalty tests—his girlfriend now at the center of honeypot conspiracies. MAGA circles lash out, and insiders turn on each other as the facade crumbles.
This isn’t just fallout. It’s a reckoning.
🕵️♂️ Hidden truths. Political fractures. Tonight, we connect the dots. 📡 Streaming simultaneously on Rumble, Locals, and beyond.
I’ve long said that what the elites call “peace” is often just a rebranding of control. And after digging into Sebs Solomon’s powerful exposé on Unlimited Hangout, it’s clearer than ever: the so-called Peace to Prosperity plan for Palestine isn’t about liberation—it’s about technocratic colonization.
This isn’t diplomacy. It’s digital conquest.
🔍 Kushner’s Bahrain Blueprint: Gaza as a Blockchain Colony
In 2019, Jared Kushner hosted a flashy conference in Bahrain to unveil his Peace to Prosperity plan. But behind the polished optics was a blueprint for economic domination:
This wasn’t peace. It was a digital cage.
🧬 Technocratic Governance: Netanyahu, Bennett, and Musk
Fast forward to today, and the architecture ...
I’m calling BS on the Wall Street Journal’s latest hit piece about Trump and Epstein. They’re claiming Trump wrote a birthday letter to Epstein in 2003, featuring a drawing of a naked woman with the name “Donald” signed as her pubic hair. But here’s the thing—they don’t show the actual letter. No image, no forensic proof, just typed excerpts and anonymous sourcing. That’s not journalism. That’s narrative warfare.
The letter was allegedly part of a birthday album compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell for Epstein’s 50th birthday—a leather-bound book filled with messages, poems, and illustrations from Epstein’s inner circle. According to the Journal, Trump’s letter included a typewritten note framed by a hand-drawn nude sketch. But again—no image, no authentication, and no clarity on who actually wrote or drew it.
Let’s be real: “Donald” is a common name. That squiggly signature could belong to anyone. And the fact that they won’t release the actual document makes the ...