In one 18-month period in the early 1970s, there were 2,500 bombings on American soil—nearly 5 a day.
Did you know that? Many Americans don't.
These leftist terrorists who declared war on America went on to work at top law firms, nonprofits, and Ivy League universities. 🧵
The left-wing violence of the 1970s was horrific.
The most infamous extremist group was the Weather Underground—which issued a "Declaration of War" against the U.S. government in 1970.
They bombed the Pentagon. They bombed the State Department. They bombed the U.S. Capitol.
And then? Many of them simply...waltzed right back into mainstream liberal society. Worse, actually: They were given positions of power and prestige in the defining mainstream institutions.
White-shoe law firms. Cushy book deals. Ivy League professorships. The whole nine yards.
Take Kathy Boudin—a Weather Underground terrorist who was sentenced to 20-years-to-life for her role in a 1981 Brink's truck robbery in New York, in which she helped her accomplices execute two policemen and a security guard in cold blood.
She was granted parole in 2003.
By 2013, Kathy Boudin was an adjunct professor at Columbia University School of Social Work—where she co-founded and co-directed the "Center for Justice"—and a scholar-in-residence at NYU Law School.
Boudin died in 2022. Columbia memorialized her in glowing terms:
Her son, Chesa Boudin, was elected as the notoriously far-left District Attorney in San Francisco in 2019, backed by—surprise, surprise!—George Soros.
Since Kathy was in jail, Boudin was adopted and raised by Weather Underground co-founders Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn.
Bill Ayers played a leading role in planning and directing the Weather Underground attacks on the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, and the State Department.
Decades later, he told the New York Times: "I don't regret setting bombs.'' In fact, ''I feel we didn't do enough.''
Ayers became Professor of Education at University of Illinois at Chicago.
In 2008, he was elected vice president for curriculum studies at the American Educational Research Association.
In other words: This is the person who was training the teachers that teach our kids.
Oh, and guess whose political career was launched in Ayers' and Dohrn's house?
The 44th president of the United States.
Barack Obama’s first-ever campaign event—launching his 1995 State Senate run—was held in the living room of Ayers and Dohrn.
Bernardine Dohrn—herself another Weather Underground co-founder who oversaw the massive bombing campaigns and terrorist attacks—was hired by the elite law firm Sidley & Austin.
Later, she was hired as a professor at Northwestern Law School—where she taught for over 20 years.
The examples go on and on. As I've said before, the radical Left of the 1960s-70s didn't disappear—they simply took over mainstream institutions: Academia, the media, the NGOs, etc.
The radical Left didn't lose—they won, by becoming the mainstream itself.
. @DNIGabbard has released new, declassified documents revealing that in its final days the Obama Administration plotted to hamper the incoming Trump Administration with a phony Russia collusion narrative.
Here are three verifiable takeaways from the new documents. 🧵
1. The Steele Dossier played a role in the January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA) of Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Multiple senior CIA officers argued against its inclusion because
"it failed to meet basic tradecraft standards."
When confronted with these flaws, CIA Director John Brennan
responded, "Yes, but doesn't it ring true," and ordered its inclusion in the ICA anyway.
The president of Mexico is openly trying to help her fellow countrymen in America avoid our new remittance tax.
Ironically, this is precisely WHY we need to crack down on remittances.
My bill—the REMIT Act—will do just that. (1/7)
Mexico depends on U.S. remittances. That's why their president is trying to give Mexican nationals in the U.S. guidance on how to maximize the flow of U.S. dollars into Mexico.
Their economy is inextricably tied to this cash flow. Without our economy, theirs would crumble. (2/7)
This isn't the first time Claudia Sheinbaum has encouraged Mexican nationals in the U.S. to activate—as a political bloc—to lobby for Mexican interests.
In June, she called for them to "mobilize" against the remittance tax in the Big Beautiful Bill. (3/7)
Under Biden, the Left used the executive branch to build a powerful lawfare machine.
Trump won. But the Left's lawfare continues. Activist groups and far-left judges are wielding our courts like a political weapon, twisting the law to undermine the will of the American people.
As Attorney General of Missouri, I went on offense against Biden—and won
We blocked his vax mandates, forced him to enforce Remain in Mexico (for a while), killed his student loan bailout scheme, exposed his censorship regime, liberated a million people from forced masking…
In 2016, @DougMackeyCase posted this meme telling Clinton supporters to "vote from home."
The Biden DOJ charged him with election interference—and tried to jail him for sharing a joke online.
But the Second Court just threw out his conviction. 🧵
The backstory: On January 27, 2021—just a few days after taking office—the Biden DOJ charged Mackey with conspiracy to “injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate persons in the free exercise and enjoyment of...the right to vote.”
For sharing a political meme on social media.
While the district court refused to throw out the case, the Second Circuit has thankfully determined that the DOJ never presented sufficient evidence of a "conspiracy" required for conviction.
🚨HUGE victory today in the fight against the unaccountable Administrative State.
The Supreme Court just put an end to yet another lawless order by a single rogue district judge that prevented the Trump Administration from downsizing our bloated bureaucracy. 🧵
This is a big win for the President's ability to direct the affairs of the executive branch. Personnel is policy. If the President can't remove bureaucrats, he isn't in charge.
This a nation of settlers, explorers and pioneers. Our ancestors settled a frontier, built skyscrapers and split atoms, and planted our flag on the moon.
Missouri has been at the heart of it all — every step of the way. 🧵
In 1799, an old man packed up his things and left Kentucky for the wild frontier.
His name was Daniel Boone. He was 65 years old.
Kentucky had gotten "too crowded," he said. "I want more elbow room."
So he headed west: to the Spanish-controlled territory of Missouri.
Boone was an early American archetype: the restless explorer who pushed west because the existing frontier wasn’t wild enough for him.
Even before Missouri was officially America, it had begun to attract men like this—driven by a pioneering spirit that would shape our nation.