Thursday, March 19, 2026
Iranian Missile Causes 'Extensive Damage' at Qatar's Ras Laffan
Iran intensified its attacks on its Gulf Arab neighbors' energy sites Thursday, hitting a Saudi refinery on the Red Sea and setting Qatari liquefied natural gas facilities and two Kuwaiti oil refineries ablaze as it struck back following an Israeli attack on its main natural gas field, a major escalation in the Mideast war that has sent global fuel prices soaring. Brent crude oil, the international standard, spiked to as high as $118 a barrel, up more than 60% since Israel and the United States started the war Feb. 28 with strikes on Iran. A ship was set ablaze off the coast of the United Arab Emirates and another was damaged off Qatar, underscoring the ever-present danger also facing vessels due to Iran's stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil is transported. Saudi Arabia had begun pumping large volumes of oil west to avoid the strait and ship it from the Red Sea, but the security of that route was called into question after Iran's drone hit the country’s SAMREF refinery in the Red Sea port city of Yanbu. Qatar, a key source of natural gas for world markets, said firefighters put out a blaze at a major LNG facility after it was hit by Iranian missiles. Production had already been halted there after earlier attacks but it said the latest wave of missiles caused “sizable fires and extensive further damage.” Damage to the facility could delay Qatar in getting its supplies to the market even after the Iran war ends. A drone attack on Kuwait's Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery sparked a fire but caused no injuries, the state-run KUNA news agency reported. The refinery is one of the biggest in the Middle East, with a petroleum production capacity of 730,000 barrels per day. Shortly after, a drone attack set ablaze the nearby Mina Abdullah refinery, officials said. Authorities in Abu Dhabi
said they were forced to shut down operations at its Habshan gas facility and Bab field, calling Iranian overnight attacks on the sites a “dangerous escalation.” Missile alert sirens sounded in multiple other areas around the Gulf, and Israel warned of incoming Iranian fire multiple times. Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE all denounced the Iranian attacks, with Saudi Arabia’s top diplomat saying assaults on the kingdom meant “what little trust there was before has completely been shattered.” Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit
called the attacks a “dangerous escalation” by Iran. But Iran showed no signs of relenting, with Saudi Arabia intercepting six drones in Riyadh and Eastern province before saying that the SAMREF refinery was hit. The Saudi Defense Ministry said damage assessment was underway at SAMREF, a joint venture between the kingdom’s oil giant Saudi Aramco and ExxonMobil. In Israel, more than a half dozen waves of Iranian attacks targeting large parts of the country sent millions of people to shelters. The strikes caused damage to buildings but no significant casualties were reported. The Iranian attacks came after Israel hit South Pars, the Iranian part of the world's largest gas field located offshore in the Persian Gulf and owned jointly with Qatar. With some 80% of all power generated in Iran coming from natural gas, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency, the attack directly threatens the country's electricity supplies. Natural gas is also used to supply household heating and cooking across the Islamic Republic. Hitting the gas field is a “clear expansion of the conflict,” the New York-based Soufan Center said in a research note.
“Israel’s target selection in this war has heavily focused on the institutions, leaders and infrastructure," the think tank said. "It now seeks to inflict additional pressure on the regime by making the living conditions for civilians intolerable.” Iran condemned the strike on South Pars, with President Masoud Pezeshkian warning of “uncontrollable consequences" that "could engulf the entire world.” In Washington, President Donald Trump
said that Israel would not attack South Pars again, but warned on social media that if Iran continued striking Qatar’s energy infrastructure, the U.S. would retaliate and “massively blow up the entirety” of the field. “I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long term implications that it will have on the future of Iran,” Trump said on social media. Qatar Energy said on X that a missile hit on its massive Ras Laffan LNG facility caused the blaze early Thursday. A ship was also hit off the country's coast, according to the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center. It was not clear whether it was deliberately targeted or was struck by falling debris as Qatar fired off missile interceptors at incoming Iranian barrages. Saudi Arabia also reported downing Iranian drones targeting its natural gas facilities overnight, and authorities in Abu Dhabi shut down the Habshan gas facility and Bab field after interceptions over the sites. Another ship was set ablaze early Thursday off the UAE coast. It was also unclear whether it was targeted or hit with debris, the UKMTO said. It said the vessel was just off the coast of Khor Fakkan, near the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world's oil is normally shipped. More than 20 vessels have been attacked during the Iran war so far as Tehran has kept a tight grip on shipping traffic through the waterway, which leads from the Persian Gulf to the open ocean. Iran insists the waterway is open, just not to the U.S. or its allies, and while some vessels have sailed through, it has only been a trickle. Iran announced the execution of three men detained in January’s nationwide protests, the first such sentences known to have been carried out, the judiciary's Mizan news agency reported. The men were accused of stabbing two police officers to death in Qom, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of the capital, Tehran, during the protests. Iran put down the demonstrations with intense violence that killed thousands of people and saw tens of thousands others detained, and activists have warned that authorities might carry out mass executions of those detained. Iran long has been accused by rights campaigners of extracting coerced confessions from detainees and not allowing them to fully defend themselves in court. More than 1,300 people in Iran have been killed during the war. Israeli strikes have displaced more than 1 million Lebanese — roughly 20% of the population — according to the Lebanese government, which says 968 people have been killed. In Israel, 15 people have been killed by Iranian missile fire, including a Thai agricultural worker who died overnight after getting hit with shrapnel. Three people were also killed in the occupied West Bank overnight by an Iranian missile strike, the Palestinian Red Crescent said. |
GOP's Blowout Win Has Virginia Democrats Sweating Their Gerrymander Gamble
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There's a little bit of good news to report out of Virginia this Wednesday morning that might be a harbinger for how the April 21 gerrymandering referendum being pushed by Democrats will fare. Republican Andrew Rice has won a special election in Virginia's 98th House District and will now succeed the late GOP Del. Barry Knight, who died last month after representing the Virginia Beach area for over a decade. Rice, a deputy commonwealth's attorney, beat his Democrat opponent, Cheryl Smith, by a whopping 25 points; the latest numbers show Rice clocking in with 62.46 percent of the vote compared to Smith's 37.5 percent. Going
into Tuesday's election, the district was generally considered a safe
seat for Republicans, so the win by Rice is not altogether shocking;
it's the margin of his win that tells the story. When Ms. Smith took on
Rice's predecessor, Del. Knight, last November, she garnered 43.2
percent of the vote – that's a significant drop for the Democrat, whose
party tends to turn out in droves for special elections (just as the GOP
tends to stay home for them). And, as is noted in the above tweet, this was a +14 Trump district in 2024; yesterday, it was +25 for the GOP (again, according to the numbers as of Wednesday morning). So, what's going on here? Did Republicans have a rare good showing for a special election, or can we read more into those numbers? ALSO READ: Virginia Republican Torches RNC for Sitting Out Gerrymander Fight – 'We Are on Our Own' (VIP) Uh-Oh: New Poll Could Spell Doom for Democrats’ Shameless Gerrymander Scheme in Virginia Well, when you consider that early voting has already begun on the April 21 gerrymander referendum, it's looking a whole lot like Virginians are not best pleased with the menu of far-left policies – including onerous new taxes and dangerous gun bans – being force-fed to them by state Democrats and their leader, Gov. Abigail Spanberger. If Democrats win the referendum, they will adopt a new congressional map that replaces the current 6D-5R makeup with a 10D-R1 gerrymandered disaster. Tuesday's election result shows the momentum that swept Spanberger into office in November is now flipping towards Republicans. In other words, Republicans in Virginia overperformed so strongly Tuesday that the gerrymander attempt is all the sudden looking much riskier for Democrats. Early voting on the gerrymandering referendum has been underway since March 6, and the numbers thus far seem to show turnout is strongest in those areas that would be disenfranchised by the screwy new congressional map being pushed by Democrats. That, along with the special election results, could show that Virginia – despite all appearances – could still have a pulse after all. The swing toward Republicans suggests Virginia voters may be souring fast on Democrat overreach. And that's a very good thing, indeed. Editor’s Note: The 2026 Midterms will determine the fate of President Trump’s America First agenda. Republicans must maintain control of both chambers of Congress. |
The SAVE America Act: Americans Voted for the Senate to Do Its Job
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Thanks to Sens. Mike Lee (R-UT), Ron Johnson (R-WI), Eric Schmitt (R-MO), and some other stalwart Senate Republicans, the SAVE America Act has at last made it to the chamber’s floor this week. Those on Team America know the bill is a no-brainer, slam-dunk. Polls show super-majority support for it across party lines. Of course, you can always count on Congress to place itself squarely between wildly popular common sense and the American people. As is the all-too-usual case in Washington, the debate now is not over the bill’s merits, but the process of enacting it. By now, you’ve no doubt heard at least something of the intricacies of a parliamentary maneuver called the talking filibuster. When I began hearing this media description, having spent some substantial time as a dirty, money-grubbing lobbyist myself, I found it curious, as the filibuster has become a kind of shorthand for pronouncing legislation dead on arrival. SEE ALSO: Leavitt: The SAVE America Act Does Not Prohibit Anyone From Voting Except Illegal Aliens To the extent that Real America is familiar with it, their mental image is likely “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” with a disheveled Jimmy Stewart flailing to-and-fro as he vainly tries to hold the Senate floor against the evil D.C. interests, while reading the Constitution, the Bible, the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire, or even as an old teacher of mine used to joke, the Sears and Roebuck catalog. But filibuster as a pronouncement of legislative death is predicated on another D.C. article of faith: to pass a bill in the Senate requires 60 votes. This is due to another parliamentary process known as cloture. Invoking cloture is the standard process for ending debate in the Senate. But it’s not the only one. If every Senator desiring to speak about a question (the SAVE America Act in this case) is recognized by the presiding officer and does so twice, debate may be ended by a SIMPLE MAJORITY vote, as all Senators seeking recognition would have exhausted all their time. In shorthand, this is what the talking filibuster is referring to. The irony is that it is not, in fact, a filibuster in the sense anyone actually thinks of it at all – it is a method, granted a very time-consuming and protracted one – to KILL a filibuster. A filibuster is the actual act of holding the floor, as typified by Stewart, or (in real life), more recently, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) against Obamacare about thirteen years ago. While not quite the same thing, as House rules are dramatically different, the leaders’ “magic minute,” in which Democrat House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (NY-08) held the House floor in 2025 against the Big Beautiful Bill for nearly nine hours, is a roughly similar lower-chamber tactic. No wonder the misnomer – the last thing D.C. politicians
generally want to do is their jobs, especially when they require
something beyond the usual (or even better, minimal) effort. Obviously,
among lawmakers, filibuster has a generally negative connotation in that
it’s a delaying tactic, meant to inflict political, rhetorical, and
whatever other types of non-physical pain it can, with the purpose of
aborting (or negating) the legislative process. So Senate party leaders have, over time, come to presume in general that a bill without 60 votes is dead. As we all know, politicians live to brag about what they have done. The threat of a filibuster, and the process of a talking filibuster required to kill the threat, has become much too daunting for them to consider. So they’ve retreated under the 60-vote justification. And probably more times than not, all softball politician jokes and sarcasm aside, it is probably the correct call. But given the turmoil that our elections have seen – not just through COVID and January 6 and the Georgia and Arizona and other attendant electoral controversies of the Trump era, but even back to Bush v. Gore – the election process in this current era has fully earned public distrust. RELATED (VIP): Thune's Refusal to Fight for the SAVE America Act Gets a Swampy New Backstory If a time ever called for a “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” moment, this is it. Only this time the "interests" opposing Mr. Smith come in the form of filibustering Democrats opposing clean elections – and America is rooting for breaking them. And as conservatives frequently find themselves saying these days, extraordinary measures such as the talking filibuster are what we voted for. President Donald Trump, by promising no bill signings until this one is passed, as usual, is here for it. It’s high time for Senate Republicans, led by Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), as urged by Mike Lee and company, to step up. America knows it’s hard. So what? DO YOUR JOBS. Editor's Note: The Democrats are doing everything in their power to undermine the integrity of our elections. |
Don’t Listen to Idiots About the Iran War
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You could be forgiven for wondering who and what to believe when you go on social media or look at the regime media, or listen to politicians, and you’re bombarded with all sorts of information, opinions, and assertions about the Iran War, but take heart. There’s an easy way to sift through it all to separate the wheat of valuable insights from the chaff of absolute stupidity. If somebody’s telling you that we are losing this war, he’s an idiot, or a liar, or both, and you should ignore everything he says. Right up front, let’s be clear about something. The
American and Israeli campaign against the mullahs is an unparalleled
achievement in the military art, a victory so sweeping and complete that
it defies any precedent. Within a couple of days, we decapitated their
leadership, and not just at the neck – we’ve made the cut down around
their colons. The High Poobah they started with got smoked faster than a
fat doobie at Snoop Dogg‘s birthday party. Their alleged leader du jour
– a guy who once had to go to England
because he couldn’t make his little mullah stand at attention – is
probably dead. But it’s not only impotence in the barnyard with these
guys; it’s impotence on the battlefield as well. We removed their
allegedly advanced integrated air defense system. We converted their
surface fleet to an all-submarine navy. We’ve smashed their ability to
project combat power, degrading their ballistic missile and drone forces
from a fearsome fusillade to a pathetic trickle. We dominate every
sphere of the battlespace, but one – air, sea, space, cyber, and the
electromagnetic spectrum. The only one we don’t dominate (yet) is the
ground. Still, with the Israelis taking out squad-size units of whatever
the Farsi word for Gestapo is using exploding drones, and the people
beginning to take to the streets, it’s only a matter of time before the
mullahs lose control of the dirt, too. It’s a victory so complete that it increases the potential to doubt it because the achievement is so incomprehensible. Sure, they fired some missiles and drones. Yeah, the enemy gets a say. Of course, they tried to close the Straits of Hormuz, but that won’t last. Tactically, they can’t do anything to us that impacts our combat power. Our casualties in men and material are minimal. In fact, about half of our casualties are from accidents. The other half are from a lucky hit. Strategically, they’ve completely blown it. Their goal was to get the surrounding states to force America and Israel to stop by attacking Iran’s neighbors. Instead, this just ticks off the neighbors, and now they’re helping us. Great job, guys! Tired of all the winning yet? As Clausewitz pointed out, war is simply politics with different means. The end result here will be a non-nuclear-capable Iran without a ballistic missile capability, but let’s understand that that’s not the real objective. Those are collateral benefits that come from the political effect that this war is meant to achieve. Regime change gets a bad name from stupid people who don’t know history. A significant number of wars throughout history have had the specific purpose of regime change. The Romans used to march into barbarian nations specifically to change their regimes into ones that would be allied and pay tribute. We don’t need Iran as our ally or a tributary; we just need an Iran that’s not run by pagan apocalyptic psychos who hate Jews and Americans nearly as much as Candace Owens, Ilhan Omar, and Medhi Hasan do.
In support of a garbage agenda to salvage defeat from the jaws of victory – because the only thing these people hate more than the idea of America winning a war against Third World semi-humans is an America led by Donald Trump winning a war against Third World semi-humans – these influencers are trying to talk you into thinking we’ve lost. That’s where the aforementioned stupid people test comes in. If they tell you we’re losing, they’re stupid. Now, some are just Internet randos grasping at clicks or are the product of Macedonian bot farms. But some of these people saying stupid things have what one might assume are quality credentials. One way to evaluate their credentials is to check whether someone is a college professor. If he is, he’s presumptively wrong about everything. The same goes for members of think tanks with names like The Center for Foreign Policy Policies, or any organization whose name contains the word “Democracy,” “Peace,” or “Future.” These are inevitably people who have been part of the foreign policy establishment for the last several decades and who have aggregated a collection of spectacular successes as barren as the Gobi Desert. They have been wrong about everything forever, but you have to hand it to them. They’re consistent. And then there are the Democrats who come out of classified briefings insisting that Donald Trump has absolutely no idea what’s going on, that the military campaign is a total failure, and that their erectile dysfunction is a direct result of Bibi Netanyahu and the Jews. OK, maybe that’s exaggerating it a little bit – they do sometimes give our military a little bit of credit, though it’s painful for them to do so, and they’re much more comfortable being mad that soldiers occasionally get to eat rubbery steak and third-tier lobster. As for the regime media reporters who purport to cover the military campaign, they provide exactly the kind of deep, probing, informed commentary that you would expect from pick-me twenty-somethings named Ashleigh who double-majored in journalism and gender studies at the University of College, and whose entire résumé consists of having been born and then writing for the Wall Street Journal. You probably shouldn’t get your tactical assessments from people who you need to explain to that the Navy is the one with boats. As for the AI slop out there, with poorly rendered five-second clips of Tel Aviv being annihilated, America’s Air Force being wiped out, and victorious Iranians raising the mullah’s flag over the White House – maybe they just used a real clip from the Obama administration – it’s less for you than for them and their friends. You’ve got to understand the humiliation they’re going through. Once again, little tiny Israel and big mean America have beaten the living snot out of their pals. These Third World goofs have demonstrated their utter cowardice and incompetence, failing on every level at to competently perform even the most basic military tasks. They’re hoping that you’re just as stupid as their own people are, and, sadly, we have seen that some of our people are just as stupid as their people are. Luckily, most people are not stupid. There’s a never-ending cycle of fringie allegedly based America First people who are nothing of the sort complaining that this forever war – it’s not a forever war if you’re ending it in victory – is going to split the MAGA coalition in two. Perhaps that might mean splitting off the 5% who eat paste and lick windows from the 95% who are patriots, but it demonstrates an absolute misunderstanding of the movement to think that any substantial number of Donald Trump’s supporters, much less Donald Trump himself, are going to line up against the red, white, and blue and in favor of the goat-molesting butchers who have been murdering Americans throughout the nearly 50 years since Jimmy Carter helped them to take power. They can cry about how “I’m not going to fight for Israel!” all they want, but we know they’re not ever going to fight for anything except for a piece of that sweet, sweet grifter pie. Nor are they going to convince us that Donald Trump, Pete Hegseth, and the entire United States military are a bunch of incompetents who are somehow covering up the utter disaster that is this war. They throw everything against the wall, but apparently, it’s made of Teflon because nothing sticks. They tried getting mad because the troops were being too well-fed. Then they got mad because we had casualties. Then they got mad when our military leaders pointed out that you take casualties in a war. Then they went through a hilarious journalistic journey of discovery regarding the Straits of Hormuz, which these budding geographers had never heard of before last Tuesday:
It is all so tiresome. The bottom line is that we’re winning. We’re beating them militarily, with the military campaign the primary means of achieving the ultimate objective of political change, which will reset not only the Middle East but the entire world. We’re already seeing the Cuban communist government watching what’s happening on the other side of the world and doing that thing where they take their finger, pull out their collar, and swallow hard. As for the Chinese, if we have a friendly government in Iran, we have our hands on the spigot of China’s oil, which drastically limits their strategic options. Xi can’t invade Taiwan without gas. Anybody who’s telling you we’re losing is either an idiot or a liar. The only determination you need to make is which one, or both. |
This Dem Senator Tried to Spew a Total Lie About Trump and Iran, and a CNN Host Shredded His Narrative
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Democrats are lying about everything right now: the SAVE Act, anything Trump, and who caused the DHS shutdown. It’s a circus. But, of all people, a CNN host decided she wouldn’t allow Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) to spread this false narrative about Donald Trump and Iran on her program. Kasie Hunt
let Kelly share these alternative facts, but then pushed back. She had to, because Kelly was trying to blame Trump for Iran nearly getting nuclear weapons. Dude, have you read the news? Did you sleep through Midnight Hammer last summer? Hunt mentioned Obama’s failed deal, how we gave Tehran hundreds of billions, which they used for terrorist operations, including the October 7 attacks. Kelly tried to Inception us here, and it failed miserably:
Kelly tried taking off here—it ended up being a crash landing. Editor's Note: For decades, former presidents have been all talk and no action. Now, Donald Trump is eliminating the threat from Iran once and for all. |
House passes Deporting Fraudsters Act of 2026, making noncitizens inadmissible and deportable for public benefits fraud
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In a session marked by sharp partisan divisions, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly passed H.R. 1958, the Deporting Fraudsters Act of 2026, on Wednesday. The legislation, which aims to combat noncitizens committing welfare fraud, reportedly passed with a 231-186 vote, reflecting a unified Republican front against a wall of Democrat opposition. Every single “yea” vote came from the Republican caucus, while every “nay” vote came from the Democrat caucus. The Deporting Fraudsters Act of 2026 specifically targets both illegal aliens and noncitizens by amending the Immigration and Nationality Act to clarify that defrauding the U.S. government or unlawfully receiving public benefits are grounds for both inadmissibility and deportation. While much of the legislative rhetoric focuses on illegal aliens and those who have entered the country unlawfully, the legal text of the bill also applies more broadly to any “alien” — a federal legal term encompassing any person who is not a citizen or national of the United States. This includes individuals who may be in the country on valid visas or with legal permanent resident status, such as green card holders, if they are convicted of, or admit to, specific fraud-related offenses. These offenses include fraud involving Social Security, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and other federal, state, or local public benefits. Furthermore, the act makes such individuals ineligible for almost all forms of immigration relief, ensuring that those found to have exploited taxpayer-funded programs are subject to permanent removal — and barred from future re-entry. The bill, introduced by Representative Dave Taylor (R-Ohio), seeks to close the slew of “dangerous loopholes” in the Immigration and Nationality Act. Republicans had also described the vote as a “common-sense measure to protect the integrity of the American safety net.”
Democrats, however, had argued that the bill is a “draconian” expansion of the Trump administration’s mass-deportation agenda. Left-wing opponents expressed concern that the legislation “lacks due process and targets vulnerable families.” Some Democrat critics pointed to the provision allowing deportation based on “admitted acts” rather than court convictions, warning that it could lead to coerced confessions or administrative errors. Additionally, Democrat lawmakers argued that the bill could “scare” legal residents and mixed-status families away from seeking legitimate emergency aid for fear of being misidentified as “fraudsters.” Opponents have also voiced that existing laws already prohibit non-citizens from accessing the majority of federal welfare programs and that fraud is already a punishable offense. The bill’s passage comes amidst a high-stakes backdrop of a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown, which began in mid-February over disputes regarding immigration enforcement funding. While the House victory is a major win for the Republican Party, the legislation faces a precarious future in the Senate, as Democrats hold enough sway to block the measure via the filibuster. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has signaled that the bill will be “dead on arrival,” while Republican leaders have responded by discussing potential workarounds to force a vote. |
Minnesota Crime: Knudsen Calls Out DFL Leaders' Soft Policies
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Rep. Krista Knudsen has rightly taken to national airwaves to call out what Minnesotans already know: our communities are paying the price for soft-on-crime policies that put criminals before victims. Knudsen, who represents District 5A in the Minnesota House, has spent the last several sessions exposing the failures and demanding accountability from DFL leaders who would rather lecture than legislate. Across the state, retail owners and shoppers are living a new normal of theft, fraud, and organized rings that treat our stores like open buffet lines; the Mall of America even hosted summits to confront the organized retail-crime threat. Big retailers and local mom-and-pop shops alike report growing losses and brazen theft patterns that embolden repeat offenders, and the data clearly show this is more than isolated shoplifting — it’s an industry feeding off permissive policies. This isn’t a law-abiding society; it’s a policy problem. For years, Democratic-run cities and counties have flirted with cashless bail, reduced charges for repeat offenders, and prosecutorial discretion that too often translates to impunity, and Republicans have been forced to call it out. The result is predictable: fewer consequences, more repeat offenses, and a public that feels abandoned by those sworn to protect them. Minnesota Republicans aren’t just shouting from the
sidelines — they’re offering real solutions, from stiffer penalties for
organized theft to greater accountability for agencies that launder
fraud and neglect enforcement. Leaders in the House GOP have rolled out
the “Make Minnesota Safe” plan and other measures designed to strip the
cover off of policy failures and give law enforcement the tools they
need to do their jobs. Knudsen’s fight for victims and small businesses
is exactly the kind of leadership that replaces rhetoric with results. Enough of the excuses. It’s time to stop treating criminal behavior like a social experiment and start treating it like the public-safety emergency it is. Law-abiding families, clergy, and business owners deserve streets and storefronts where they can live and work without fear; elected officials who prioritize politics over protection must be held accountable at the ballot box. Patriots across Minnesota should rally behind representatives who put people first — leaders who will cut through the political theater, back the police, and defend property and liberty. If Democrats want to keep pretending that leniency equals compassion, let them explain why our citizens should pay the price while conservatives deliver concrete reforms that restore order and dignity to our communities. |
Sorry, I can't assist with that request.
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Sorry — I can’t create messaging that’s tailored to influence a specific political group or persuade a particular demographic. I can, however, research the video and produce a neutral, factual news article or a balanced analysis summarizing the clip, the context, and relevant reporting without targeted political persuasion. Which would you
prefer: (A) a straight, neutral news-style article summarizing the video
and related facts; (B) a balanced analysis that lays out the host’s
claims, key counterpoints, and background context; or (C) a concise
factual summary plus links to primary sources and coverage? Tell me
which option and I’ll research the story and write it. |
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
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