Here are 6 things you may not have noticed, but these short items are important
- ADL Lied About Charlie Kirk When He Was Alive – Now They are Deleting False Remarks – And the Military is Deleting Them From Their Vendor List
The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) claimed Charlie Kirk was a “fascist”, a “racist and bigot” and a “Christian Nationalist”. Charlie Kirk was a Christian who believed in Jesus Christ, and he spoke truth in love. He also believed in individual freedom, the exact opposite of fascists.
The Anti-Defamation League did it in its “Glossary of Extremism”.
According to the “glossary,” Turning Point USA is “a right-wing student group whose leaders & activists have made multiple racist or bigoted comments & have been linked to a variety of extremists.”
The ADL also claimed TPUSA’s “leadership” appeared to “defend Hitler’s nationalism.”
They deleted these falsehoods after the assassination hoping no one would notice.
Now the Department of War has cut off money and the use of their lies for the military.
- No Apology to Christian from Radical Muslim
Dearborn, Michigan held the first city council meeting since Mayor Abdullah Hammoud’s disgusting insult with a local Christian. That went viral after a heated exchange over a controversial naming of two streets after Hamas and Hezbollah terrorists,
The Mayor declined to apologize for saying the Christian was “not welcome here” and that he would “launch a parade” when he left town.
Ted Barham opened his remarks at the council meeting by saying, “The mayor, in a way, cursed me, as was seen around the world. And I would like to repeat what I said that day to you, Mr. Mayor: ‘God bless you.’”
- State Department Cuts More Ideology Waste
The State Department allocated $110 billion to global AIDS prevention.
But only 40% of the $110 billion tax money was spent on global HIV/AIDS prevention since 2003.
The remaining funds were lost to overhead costs, steep executive salaries, and the pushing of “leftwing ideology,”
For example, the funding of a “Transgender Day of Remembrance” and a “decolonizing development series.”
There was a $1.2 million CEO salary for a “DEI director position.”
And a report on “white supremacy culture”
- Jimmy Kimmel’s Big Viewership Spike
Jimmy Kimmel’s show, on the night he was on the air, his monologue racked up nearly 9 million views and 25 million YouTube views.
- Historic Charitable Giving in 2024 – American Greatness at Its Best
U.S. charitable giving increased 3.3% to U.S. $593 billion in 2024.
Individual donors provided the nation’s largest charitable gifts. Individuals gave $392 billion to charity, accounting for two-thirds of the year’s total.
Giving by individuals grew 5.1% in 2024 from 2023.
Corporate giving rose even faster. It was up 6% to a record $44 billion.
Giving to religious causes received 23% of all donations, a total of $147 billion for 2024.
Giving to human services nonprofits, such as food banks and homeless shelters, increased to about 14% of all donations totaling $91 billion
Giving to education, which primarily consists of donations to colleges and universities was a record high in 2024, rising nearly 10% from a year earlier. The $88 billion in gifts received for education in 2024 was up more than 22% from 2015 to 2024.
Health was $61 billion.
Arts, culture and humanities, at $25 billion.
Environment and animals, at $22 billion.
- Gold is Outperforming Bitcoin!
Gold is outperforming the bitcoin digital currency.
In many ways, their appeal overlaps: They’re scarce, immune to central bank printing presses and attractive to investors who believe government can’t be trusted. There is danger of world conflict, and the days of fiat currency (money issued by governments) are numbered or are being abused (as they are).
Inflation ahead? Instability? Gold and bitcoin are the best alternatives.
Gold has been climbing 45% since January 2025 while bitcoin trails at just 20%.
Gold is outpacing bitcoin in 2025 as nervous central banks and pension funds, rattled by continuing massive deficits, and global chaos, reallocate their money for protection.
Both bitcoin and gold are scarce, immune to government central bank printing presses.
Bitcoin, born in 2009, initially trading at mere cents, has rocketed past $100,000, a wild ride fueled as much by tech-like hype as its sound money bonafides.
Gold meanwhile has plodded along, drifting sideways after its 2012 peak near $1,800 and only breaking out to double that in the last two years.
Ed Egilinsky, who runs alternative investments at ETF-provider Direxion, puts it bluntly: “Bitcoin’s a risk-on bet until it proves otherwise.” His firm’s Daily Gold Miners Index Bull 2X Shares, with $990 million in assets, has surged more than 300% this year, riding gold’s wave as a safe haven (leveraged ETFs like this one are designed for short-term active trading and need to be monitored daily).
