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U.S. Congressman from Tennessee Tim Burchett is demanding transparency in one of Washington’s most sensitive unsolved cases: the 2016 killing of DNC staffer Seth Rich. Earlier this week, Burchett announced that he had formally asked FBI Director Kash Patel to release all FBI records related to Rich’s death.

His office said plainly that the American people deserve answers. Rich was only 27 years old when he was shot and killed while walking home in Washington, D.C., in the early morning hours of July 10, 2016. Police called it a botched robbery, but the case remains unsolved nearly a decade later amidst a bevy of questions that have never come close to being answered.

Rich’s death became the center of intense public speculation after claims emerged that he may have been connected to leaked DNC emails. Those claims remain disputed, but what is not disputed is that the FBI’s handling of records has raised serious questions.

Attorney Ty Clevenger spent years fighting through FOIA requests in an attempt to get some semblance of transparency regarding the case. The FBI initially claimed it had no relevant records, but later admitted it had more than 20,000 pages of potentially relevant material, along with Rich’s work laptop and an image of his personal laptop.

Now, Clevenger says more documents may have surfaced inside a previously concealed FBI room — though that has not been confirmed by the bureau. Burchett is right. The FBI must release all the documents. It is clear to anyone who has peered into the case that Rich was likely murdered, perhaps as another name on the infamous Clinton Kill List.

Sunlight is the only way to disinfect the deep state, and that should begin with getting all of the Seth Rich files disclosed to the public.

President Donald Trump is taking the fight over birthright citizenship back to the Supreme Court. On Wednesday, President Trump announced he will ask the high court to rehear its recent decision striking down his executive order restricting automatic citizenship for children born in the United States to foreign nationals.

The president pointed to reports of hospital billboards near the southern border and in Mexico advertising childbirth packages to foreign nationals. One South Texas hospital reportedly promoted deliveries starting at $3,950 for a natural birth and $5,525 for a C-section, just miles from a U.S.-Mexico border crossing.

In a Truth Social post, President Trump warned that birthright citizenship is being marketed like a commercial service, with American citizenship effectively sold to anyone willing to pay for delivery inside the United States. Texas Governor Greg Abbott has already called for an investigation into Mission Regional Medical Center.

The hospital says the marketing materials are no longer in use and denies facilitating unlawful activity. But the larger problem remains. American citizenship should be a sacred national inheritance — not a loophole, not a tourist package, and not a business model for hospitals or immigration brokers. These misinterpreted rules have made a mockery of the Constitution and hastened the demographic demise of our country.

President Trump is right for chastising the Supreme Court for getting this wrong. Either America controls the meaning of citizenship, or the open-borders lobby turns it into another commodity for sale. President Trump should not stop until there is another hearing, and the Supreme Court defends the rule of law against the illegal invaders.

On the morning of Thursday, July 9, 2026, in Palm Beach, Florida, what was formerly Palm Beach International Airport officially became President Donald J. Trump International Airport.

In classic Trump style, the Commander-in-Chief’s iconic 757, known as Trump Force One, touched down, making history as the first aircraft to land at the permanently renamed President Donald J. Trump International Airport, which will forever carry the name and airport code DJT. This renaming is completely unprecedented and truly historic.

It marks the first time a sitting U.S. president has had an airport named after him.

The rebrand was supported by the people of Florida, and proceeded despite pushback and lawsuits from critics who raised concerns about costs and described the initiative as a political stunt.

New signage, fresh logos, uniforms, and marketing materials are being implemented in phases to complete the transition while keeping operations running smoothly.

The Trump Organization provided a perpetual license for the project, and the airport code transition has integrated efficiently for pilots, airlines, and passengers.

On board Trump Force One for the historic landing were Congressman Byron Donalds and his wife Erika, along with Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and other supporters. Eric Trump stated, “There is no person who has done more for Florida and our country, and no one more deserving of this incredible honor.”

The renaming celebrates the administration’s strong economy, secure borders, and restored respect and love for America, achievements that Florida proudly recognizes. The airport will continue to welcome millions of travelers drawn to the sun, golf, and opportunities, positioning DJT as a gateway to the American Dream.

Travelers arriving at the facility now encounter the new identity upon landing. Looking ahead, airport officials will continue rolling out signage, branding, and operational changes in phases.

Other U.S. airports named after presidents include those honoring Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and George H.W. Bush.

The implementation has followed FAA procedures to ensure safety and continuity in air traffic management and passenger processing.

The Trump administration’s Justice Department announced it will send federal election monitors to 15 jurisdictions in six states during the upcoming 2026 primaries.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon addressed the decision in early July, describing the deployment of election monitors as part of the Justice Department’s long-standing efforts to ensure compliance with federal voting laws and protect election integrity.

Thesemonitorswill examine polling place operations, including language access for voters who need it and accommodations for people with disabilities, while also ensuring ineligible votes do not cancel out those of eligible citizens.

Dhillon posted a video on social media announcing that the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division is sending election monitors to jurisdictions in Arizona, Michigan, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Virginia.

In recent cycles, the department deployed monitors in nine jurisdictions for the 2022 primaries and 27 for the 2024 general election, with the program expected to expand further ahead of the November 2026 midterms. This type of oversight is nothing new. Federal election monitoring has existed for over a century and remains a long-standing, bipartisan function of the Department of Justice.

The move coincided with nationwide DOJ letters warning election officials of potential criminal liability for knowingly allowing noncitizen voting or failing to maintain accurate voter rolls.

AG Dhillon called the monitoring a standard procedure focused on jurisdictions with recent issues and gave officials five days to respond.

This type of oversight is nothing new.

Federal election oversight has existed for over a century and remains a long-standing, bipartisan function of the Department of Justice, regardless of which administration is in power. For decades, both Republican and Democratic administrations have sent federal monitors to polling places to enforce key laws such as the Voting Rights Act.

The timing aligns with other DOJ actions.

That same day, the department sent letters to election officials in all 50 states and Washington, D.C., warning them of potential criminal liability if they knowingly keep noncitizens on the voter rolls or allow them to vote in our elections.

Dhillon stressed that keeping voter rolls accurate is critical to protecting the core principle that every eligible citizen’s vote counts equally.

Some deployments are drawing particular attention in Michigan, where the DOJ plans to send observers to Detroit, Lansing, and East Lansing ahead of the August 4, 2026 primary.

Letters to local officials cited issues observed during the 2024 election, including shortages of provisional ballots and malfunctioning voting machines in some precincts.

Michigan officials have pushed back strongly. Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey called the allegations “false” and dismissed them as a pretext for extra scrutiny.

Dhillon stated: “Unfortunately, some leaders in Michigan, including the Attorney General and the Governor, have pushed back against this effort. But to be clear, both Republican and Democratic administrations have sent monitors to Michigan and these other jurisdictions in the past.

This is a proper exercise of our oversight and enforcement responsibilities under important federal statutes, including the National Voter Registration Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Civil Rights Act of 1960.”

This aligns with the DOJ’s broader lawsuits and demands for voter roll data from numerous states, along with a strong emphasis on stopping illegal aliens from voting in our nation’s elections, a top priority for the Trump administration.

Critics on the left view the moves as intimidation or partisan targeting, while most Americans see this as necessary enforcement.

Dhillon has cited past irregularities in places like Detroit and several of the other listed jurisdictions, as a reason for the monitoring.

The monitoring initiative will bring federal oversight to key election jurisdictions across Massachusetts, Minnesota, Arizona, Michigan, New Hampshire, and Virginia.

In follow-up comments (including on the Joe Pags Show), Dhillon named examples such as: Boston (MA), Maricopa County (AZ), Fairfax County (VA), Detroit (MI), Ramsey County (MN), Prince William County (VA), Lansing/East Lansing (MI), Hennepin County (MN), New Bedford (MA), Nashua/Manchester (NH), Apache/Pima Counties (AZ), and Hamtramck (MI).

Many Americans view these deployments as a welcome boost to transparency, strengthening public trust by placing neutral federal observers in high-risk or historically problematic locations.

Drawing on knowledge of past issues in certain jurisdictions, Dhillon put it simply: “The more eyes on elections, in my opinion, the better.” Overall, this added scrutiny aims to safeguard election integrity and reassure Americans that their votes are protected and counted accurately.

As primaries continue and this initiative gains momentum ahead of the general election, these election monitors from the Trump Justice Department are set to become a prominent presence in the 2026 midterms.

This effort aims to deter fraud and irregularities while restoring public trust, even amid partisan debate. While critics on the left decry potential pressure on local officials over voter ID, mail-in ballots, and voter rolls, most taxpaying Americans see it as a long-overdue, commonsense measure to ensure smoother, more secure elections in jurisdictions with documented past issues.

Mayor Mamdani may remove Little Italy from an official map, but he cannot remove it from history.

There are moments when a government document reveals more about the worldview of those who produced it than perhaps they ever intended. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s newly released official map identifying the city’s immigrant enclaves is one such document. Presented as a celebration of the diverse communities that have enriched New York, the map identifies thirty neighborhoods associated with immigrant populations, highlighting communities such as Little Palestine, Little Haiti, Little Egypt, Little Senegal, Little Yemen, and Little Poland. Yet conspicuously absent from this official portrait of New York’s immigrant heritage is one of the most famous ethnic neighborhoods in the history of the United States. Little Italy is simply gone.

City Hall has attempted to explain away this glaring omission by claiming the map reflects neighborhoods with substantial contemporary foreign born populations rather than historic immigrant communities. That explanation only deepens the offense. It suggests that once an immigrant community succeeds, assimilates, raises generations of proud Americans, and becomes woven into the fabric of the nation, its story somehow loses its value. Such reasoning transforms success into historical invisibility. It substitutes ideology for history and revisionism for gratitude.

Little Italy is not merely another neighborhood on a tourist brochure. It is one of the sacred landmarks of the American immigrant experience. During the late 19th century and early 20th century hundreds of thousands of Italians arrived in New York carrying little more than faith, determination, and an unshakable belief that America offered possibilities unavailable anywhere else on earth. They settled in crowded tenements, worked impossible hours, endured prejudice that would shock modern sensibilities, and slowly built lives that transformed both their families and the city around them.

These were the men who excavated subway tunnels beneath Manhattan’s streets, erected towering skyscrapers that forever altered the skyline, built bridges connecting boroughs, labored on docks, filled factories, and helped create the greatest city in the world through sweat, sacrifice, and perseverance. Italian American craftsmen became synonymous with excellence in construction, masonry, and engineering. Their entrepreneurial spirit filled neighborhoods with restaurants, bakeries, grocery stores, and family businesses that became institutions. Their devotion to faith and family established churches, civic organizations, charitable societies, and cultural traditions that continue to define New York generations later.

The Feast of San Gennaro remains one of the city’s most celebrated festivals because it represents something far greater than food and entertainment. It is a living reminder of a people who carried their traditions across an ocean while embracing their new American identity with extraordinary patriotism. Mulberry Street became a symbol recognized throughout the world because it embodied the promise that immigrants could preserve the best of their heritage while becoming fully American. That story deserves honor rather than omission.

Italian Americans did not arrive in this country to universal applause. They encountered suspicion, ridicule, discrimination, and violence. They endured restrictive immigration quotas and social exclusion. The largest mass lynching in American history was inflicted upon Italian immigrants in New Orleans. Countless businesses openly refused to hire them. They were stereotyped in newspapers, mocked in popular culture, and treated as second class citizens despite their unwavering loyalty to their adopted nation. Rather than embrace permanent grievance, they embraced opportunity. They fought in America’s wars. They joined police departments and firehouses. They became judges, doctors, teachers, scientists, artists, entrepreneurs, legislators, and public servants. They earned their place in American history through discipline, resilience, and love of country.

That remarkable story is precisely why the omission of Little Italy carries significance far beyond the boundaries of lower Manhattan. When government officials choose which communities deserve official recognition and which are quietly discarded, they are making a statement about whose history matters. A city that proudly highlights newly established immigrant neighborhoods while erasing perhaps its most celebrated immigrant neighborhood is engaging in historical revisionism whether it acknowledges the fact or not.

This pattern is entirely consistent with Mayor Mamdani’s broader political philosophy. His administration consistently views society through the narrow lens of identity politics, dividing Americans into categories of favored and disfavored groups based upon contemporary ideological preferences rather than historical reality. Communities that reinforce fashionable political narratives receive celebration, while communities whose stories emphasize assimilation, patriotism, self reliance, and economic achievement become inconvenient reminders that the American dream has worked for generations of immigrants willing to embrace it.

The irony is impossible to ignore. Diversity is celebrated so long as it fits within an approved ideological framework. Yet one of the most successful immigrant communities in American history suddenly becomes invisible because its descendants became fully integrated into American life. Success itself appears to be treated as disqualification. Assimilation becomes grounds for exclusion rather than the ultimate triumph of the immigrant experience.

This past Columbus Day in 2025, I wrote an article entitled “Why Columbus Day Must Be Revered and Why Our Italian Heritage Is the Bedrock of the American Story”. In that essay, I chronicled the extraordinary contributions Italian Americans have made to the United States from the nation’s earliest years through the modern era. I argued that no honest accounting of American history can be written without acknowledging the indispensable role played by generations of Italian immigrants who helped build our industries, defend our freedoms, enrich our culture, and strengthen our institutions. That argument has only become more compelling in light of this latest insult from City Hall.

Italian American organizations have rightly condemned this omission as cultural erasure. Their outrage is entirely justified because history belongs to all Americans, not merely to those who satisfy the political preferences of the moment. Public memory should unite rather than divide. Official recognition should reflect historical truth rather than ideological fashion. Little Italy has earned its place in the American story through more than a century of extraordinary contribution, and no municipal map can erase that legacy from the hearts of millions who continue to honor it.

New York achieved greatness because generation after generation of immigrants came to this city determined not merely to preserve their old identities but to become Americans. Few communities embodied that aspiration more completely than the Italians of Little Italy. Their labor built the city. Their families strengthened its neighborhoods. Their patriotism defended the Republic. Their culture enriched the nation. Their descendants continue to serve every profession, every branch of government, every corner of commerce, and every level of public life.

Mayor Mamdani may remove Little Italy from an official map, but he cannot remove it from history. He cannot erase the bricks its builders laid, the bridges they constructed, the churches they established, the businesses they created, or the enduring spirit they infused into New York City. Little Italy remains one of the defining chapters of the American immigrant experience, and any official history that pretends otherwise is not merely incomplete. It is intellectually dishonest and historically indefensible.

Every Republican contender in 2026 must aggressively lean into MAGA or risk handing the country to a generation of socialists who view the United States itself as an entity that must be toppled.

The Democrat primaries are pumping out a fresh crop of unapologetic socialists who make Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez look like a patriotic moderate from the JFK era. These proud democratic socialists, many with deep ties to the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), who openly champion abolishing ICE, defunding law enforcement, slashing military aid to Israel while labeling its defensive actions “genocide,” and imposing single-payer healthcare and wealth taxes that would devastate American prosperity by design

Their recent victories in deep-blue strongholds expand the “Commie Corridor” across New York and signal a broader leftward lurch that should alarm every American who values the rule of law, the Constitution, Christianity, capitalism and civilization itself.

In New York, the wave crested in June’s primary. State Assemblywoman Claire Valdez, a union organizer and avowed DSA member, captured the Democratic nomination in the 7th Congressional District. Backed by socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani, Valdez has called ICE “a rogue federal agency terrorizing our neighborhoods” and demanded for the agency to be abolished.

A July 4th social media post from Valdez framed American freedom in terms antithetical to the vision of the Founding Fathers—requiring government-provided healthcare, housing, education, and “job dignity,” while blaming “billionaires, bosses, and war profiteers” for a “rigged system and poisoned planet.” She won affluent, highly educated precincts but was crushed in lower-income and Black areas, showing the elitist character of this rising socialism that flies in the face of true working class values.

Even more stunning was the upset in New York’s 13th Congressional District, where 32-year-old doctoral student and DSA activist Darializa Avila Chevalier toppled five-term incumbent Rep. Adriano Espaillat, chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Chevalier’s campaign explicitly attacked Espaillat for not being there “when ICE is kidnapping his constituents” and for voting to “spend billions on bombs overseas when we’re struggling to afford rent and groceries.” She pledged a brand of politics that rejects “cashing checks from AIPAC, real estate developers, or corporations.” She even made social media comments about wiping her hands on Old Glory. One campaign line captures her extremism succinctly: “End policing full stop.”

Former NYC Comptroller Brad Lander completed the New York socialist sweep by crushing incumbent Rep. Dan Goldman in the 10th Congressional District. Lander, once a dues-paying DSA member, has since re-embraced the coalition he once left due to growing antisemitism. He has since called Israel’s Gaza campaign a “genocide,” vowed to block additional U.S. military aid and support the recognization a Palestinian state. Earlier, as comptroller and council member, Lander was a leading voice to defund the police—demanding $1 billion in NYPD cuts, suspension of arrests for low-level offenses, mass releases from Rikers Island, and even the disbandment of the Vice Unit plus decriminalization of prostitution.

Out west, 29-year-old lawyer-turned-doctoral-student Melat Kiros stunned the Democrat establishment by defeating 15-term incumbent Rep. Diana DeGette in Colorado’s 1st Congressional District. Endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, Justice Democrats, and the DSA, Kiros built her campaign around rejecting corporate money, defending students protesting Israel’s “brutal genocide in Gaza,” and promising to abolish ICE, enact Medicare for All, and “end the genocide in Palestine.” She was reportedly fired from a law firm after refusing to delete a post defending thuggish, anti-American student protesters from legitimate claims of antisemitism.

On the Senate side, Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan and Peggy Flanagan in Minnesota remain highly competitive for their parties’ nominations. El-Sayed, a doctor and former public health official endorsed by AOC, pushes Medicare for All, abolishing ICE (calling it “corrupted at its soul”), and has a resurfaced 2020 record of explicitly supporting the defund-the-police movement by redirecting funds to mental health and education. Flanagan, Minnesota’s lieutenant governor, vows to “rip ICE apart,” codify abortion on demand, and “avenge Minnesota” by prosecuting those responsible for Trump-era policies once Democrats regain power.

Republicans should celebrate the development—for now. These radical candidates can be ticking time bombs. Look no further than Maine’s Democrat U.S. Senate nominee Graham Platner. The far-left Marine veteran and private security contractor won his primary with enthusiastic progressive and DSA-adjacent support. Within weeks, his campaign collapsed under the weight of multiple scandals: a chest tattoo widely recognized as a Nazi symbol, old social-media posts suggesting sexual-assault victims “just take some responsibility for themselves,” reports of sending inappropriate text messages while married, and a fresh allegation from a former girlfriend that he entered her home uninvited while intoxicated and sexually assaulted her as she attempted to resist. Top Democrats, including Senate leadership and his prominent far-left supporters, quickly called for Platner to drop out.

Platner’s implosion proves the point: the same ideological fervor that produces “abolish ICE” and “end policing full stop” platforms also attracts or tolerates personal conduct and historical baggage that can explode under scrutiny. These are not stable, electable figures tailor made for swing terrain. These are a pack of fools who could be the key for Republicans to main control of both chambers during the midterms.

But we must not get arrogant. These radical socialists can—and will—beat establishment Republicans who are corrupted, disingenuous, and beholden to the donor class and the reviled Washington D.C. swamp. Weak, squishy GOP candidates who triangulate and apologize can be defeated by the energized, well-organized left in too many places. However, MAGA is their kryptonite.

That is why the party needs more warriors like Anthony Constantino in New York’s 21st Congressional District—a Trump-endorsed businessman and unapologetic MAGA force taking on the establishment and self-funding his race to thumb his nose at the special interests. In the great state of Texas, State Representative Steve Toth crushed RINO Dan “Eyepatch McCain” Crenshaw in a primary by double digits running on a Freedom Caucus platform. Attorney General Ken Paxton just toppled incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in a Trump-backed primary runoff, proving that hard-charging America First conservatives can defeat even powerful Senate incumbents with a seemingly endless amount of resources. And 2nd Amendment champion Brandon Herrera is set to replace disgraced former Congressman Tony Gonzales Texas’s 23rd congressional district.

Every Republican contender in 2026 must aggressively lean into MAGA—securing the border, deporting illegals, enforcing law and order, enacting an America First foreign policy, implementing fiscal restraint, and offering unapologetic defense of Western civilization—or risk handing the country to a generation of socialists who view the United States itself as an entity that must be toppled. The midterms offer a choice, not an echo. Choose fighters, or prepare to explain to your children how America fell to socialism and despair because the so-called “adults in the room” stayed genteel when the moment demanded a donnybrook.

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WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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