Wikileaks’ Assange Loses Internet in Midst of Podesta Email Dump, Blames a ‘State Party’
Wikileaks claims its founder, Julian Assange, has lost Internet service thanks to “a state party.”
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Wikileaks claims its founder, Julian Assange, has lost Internet service thanks to “a state party.”
Throughout the 2016 presidential election cycle, I’ve offered prayers for the nation, for the GOP, for the conservative movement, and other causes.
Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood has long been a haven for gang violence and gun crimes. But the community’s response to a recent shooting calls attention to a two-word phrase that has compromised public safety and cost countless lives: Stop snitchin’.
There’s been a lot of justifiable hand-wringing regarding the Christian vote in this election cycle. Unfortunately, the reality is even worse than the perception.
There are more immigrants living in the United States than ever before. The foreign-born are more likely to come from China and India—often equipped with skills and a higher education—than Mexico.
We’re not hearing much about Aleppo’s Christians.
Julian Assange, founder and owner of WikiLeaks, has released, so far, over 5,000 (of a promised 50,000) emails hacked from Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager John Podesta, who was also the former chief of staff to President Bill Clinton.
The blizzard of WikiLeaks revelations of collusion between the “mainstream media” and the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign are highly disturbing.
During the last year of his reign of error, our beloved Nobel Peace Prize winner, Obama ran out of government accounting gimmicks to falsely proclaim Federal deficits have been falling.
Gov. Pat McCrory called the weekend firebombing of a North Carolina Republican headquarters “an attack on our democracy.”
