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Finally: The News That J6 Political Prisoners Have Been Waiting Years to Hear…

Dear J6 political prisoners, don’t give up—the cavalry is coming.

If you’ll recall, during the 2024 primary, President Trump made it clear that he would support pardons for J6 political prisoners.

The political persecution these poor people have endured has been nothing short of horrific. For many non-violent January 6 attendees, it’s been a relentless nightmare. They’ve been smeared and demonized by the regime-run media and uniparty politicians desperate to score cheap “battle points” against President Trump. Jobs have been lost, families torn apart, and friendships destroyed in acts of unforgivable betrayal. All because they were angry—angry that their votes were stolen in the most ridiculous election in US history. An election, we might add, that looks even more questionable after 2024, as more people start to notice that the math just doesn’t add up.

Many of these folks are guilty of little more than strolling through the Capitol—some even happily escorted by police like tourists—yet they’ve been branded “insurrectionists,” jailed, or slapped with sham charges. The toll has been devastating. Lives have been destroyed so thoroughly that some have tragically ended in suicide. This is, without question, one of the darkest and most shameful chapters in American history. The government should hang its head in disgrace and shame for treating non-violent citizens like enemies of the state.

But now, with President Trump’s sweeping landslide victory, there is hope. Their pain and suffering could finally come to an end, and this latest news from a federal judge is proof that this nightmare is close to over.

(Read more from “Finally: The News That J6 Political Prisoners Have Been Waiting Years to Hear…” HERE)

Mystery Surrounding the Remaining Political Prisoners in Cuba

Photo Credit: Sharon MollerusAn air of secrecy surrounds the fate of 53 political prisoners whom Cuba agreed to free in its historic deal with the United States last month, as Washington and Havana’s refusal to publicly identify the dissidents is fueling suspicion over Cuba’s intentions.

Almost three weeks after the agreement, neither dissidents on the island nor leaders in the Cuban exile community know how many have been let out or whether any of the prisoners they are aware of are among those scheduled to be freed.

Both the White House and the State Department refuse to publicly name the prisoners included on a list U.S. negotiators provided their Cuban counterparts amid negotiations to normalize relations, although officials said a prisoner release was not a precondition for renewing diplomatic ties. White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Monday that not everyone on the list has been set free yet, but it was always understood that they would be released “in stages.”

“Well, we know who’s on there. And the Cuban government knows who’s on there,” said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki, expressing doubts that the list would be made public.

The lack of transparency is contributing to a growing sense of concern that Havana will not follow through on its promises. Francisco Hernandez, president of the Miami-based Cuban American National Foundation, cited the Cuban government’s track record of slipping in unwanted common criminals with legitimate political prisoners headed for refuge in other countries. (Read more about the political prisoners in Cuba HERE)

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Google Earth Exposes North Korea’s Secret Prison Camps

Rights groups are pushing the United Nations high commissioner for human rights to open an international investigation into Pyongyang’s “deplorable” record on its citizens’ rights, including a system of political prisons that has operated for more than 50 years.

Pyongyang insists that the camps do not exist and are merely foreign propaganda, but the advent of high-resolution, free images from outer space has disproved that claim.

On January 18, the North Korean Economy Watch website announced that a new camp had been identified alongside an existing detention facility in Kaechon, South Pyongan Province.

Using newly provided Google Earth images, analyst Curtis Melvin was able to conclude that the new camp sits alongside Camp 14 and has a perimeter fence that stretches nearly 13 miles.

The facility was built since the last images of the site were released, in December 2006.

Read more from this story HERE.

Plea For Help From Chinese Labor Camp Worker Paid $1.61 per MONTH Found Stuffed in Oregon Woman’s Halloween Decorations from Kmart

photo credit: kent wang

Oregon mother Julie Keith expected to find Styrofoam headstones in the graveyard kit she bought at Kmart for Halloween. What she didn’t expect was a desperate plea for help from one of the Chinese laborers forced to make the holiday decorations in brutal conditions.

The 42-year-old charity worker from Portland discovered the chilling letter hidden between the two novelty headstones when she opened the kit in October.

‘Sir: If you occasionally buy this product, please kindly resend this letter to the World Human Right Organization,’ the unsigned note, that was folded into eighths, read.’Thousands people here who are under the persicution [sic] of the Chinese Communist Party Government will thank and remember you forever.’

The letter’s author said the Halloween product was made in Masanjia Labor Camp in Shenyang, China, where laborers are forced to work for 15 hours a day without time off on the weekends and holidays.

‘Otherwise, they will suffer torturement, beat and rude remark. [sic] Nearly no payment,’ they wrote in choppy English accompanied by Chinese characters. The plea said workers at the labor camp make only 10 yuan per month – the equivalent to $1.61.

The China director at Human Rights Watch, Sophie Richardson, told The Oregonian that the origin or authenticity of the letter couldn’t be confirmed. ‘We’re in no position to confirm the veracity or origin of this,’ she said. ‘I think it is fair to say the conditions described in the letter certainly conform to what we know about conditions in re-education through labor camps.’

China’s re-education through labor is a system of punishment that allows for detention without trial. Masanjia labor camp is located in the industrialized capital of the Liaoning Province in northeast China.

Read more from this story HERE.