Anti-ICE Agitators Trap Federal Agents in NYC Garage During Deportation Push
On November 29th, in New York City’s sanctuary jurisdiction, federal Immigration & Customs Enforcement agents conducting deportation operations in the Canal Street vicinity found themselves confined within a parking garage near Centre Street and Howard by a group of masked far-left protesters who blocked exits with barricades and vehicles while chanting “ICE out of New York,” as documented in multiple eyewitness videos shared across social media platforms. The confrontation escalated as demonstrators shoved aside NYPD barricades, obstructed roads with debris, and clashed with officers from the Strategic Response Group who deployed smoke and mace to secure passage for the agents’ white vans, resulting in several arrests including one individual attempting to scale the garage structure amid ongoing calls for rapid response to impede federal enforcement aligned with President Trump’s directive for mass removals of illegal immigrants. Eyewitness footage captured NYPD reinforcements in riot gear facilitating the agents’ departure under duress, highlighting the persistent interference with lawful immigration proceedings in a city long resistant to federal authority on border security matters, with the incident unfolding in real time and underscoring the challenges faced by officers upholding national sovereignty.
Trump Voids Biden’s Autopen-Signed Documents Over Unauthorized Use
President Trump has declared all documents purportedly signed by former President Biden via autopen as void and without legal force, citing a lack of presidential authorization in a Truth Social post on November 28th, while warning of potential perjury charges should Biden assert personal involvement in the process. Trump asserted that 92 percent of Biden-era signatures employed the mechanical device, which replicates handwriting but requires explicit presidential approval under longstanding protocols, and accused unelected staffers of unlawfully operating it amid Biden’s evident cognitive limitations, thereby usurping executive authority. This action targets the 162 executive orders, numerous memoranda, proclamations, and notices issued during Biden’s term, building on Trump’s January 2025 rescission of nearly 80 such orders and now extending to others like Executive Order 14087 on prescription drug costs, Executive Order 14096 on environmental justice, and Executive Order 14110 regulating artificial intelligence. Legal precedent from the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel affirms autopen legitimacy only with presidential consent, a threshold Trump claims was breached, echoing concerns from former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Tom Dupree about irregularities in the Biden White House. The move underscores ongoing scrutiny of administrative practices, with validation of original signatures pending further review.
Sources: PJ Media, The Gateway Pundit
US Labs Breeding Exotic Ticks Risks Unleashing Deadly Foreign Disease
Government-funded research facilities across the United States, including the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service in Manhattan, Kansas, UC Davis in California, and Texas Tech in Lubbock, Texas, are actively breeding colonies of invasive Hyalomma ticks imported from Africa to study the transmission of Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever, a highly lethal virus with a 30 percent fatality rate that has never appeared on American soil. This work, supported by a $3.7 million Department of Defense grant to EcoHealth Alliance from 2020 to 2024 and involving at least 10 USDA contracts for mRNA vaccine development through March 2026, focuses on assessing virus spread in livestock such as cattle, sheep, and goats while evaluating ecological risks for U.S. establishment amid changing climates. The White Coat Waste Project has highlighted these efforts, warning of catastrophic potential from lab accidents or escapes, given historical precedents like tick-borne pathogen experiments at Plum Island and Fort Detrick during the Cold War, as well as EcoHealth’s prior role in gain-of-function research linked to COVID-19 origins by federal assessments. With ticks notoriously difficult to contain and past incidents resulting in unintended human infections, these operations in key livestock regions underscore vulnerabilities to agricultural devastation and public health crises from exotic pathogens.
Sources: The Washington Examiner, FOX News
Patel Orders Release of Hidden FBI Burn Bag Documents Tied to Russia Probe
FBI Director Kash Patel announced on November 26th, during an interview at the agency’s Washington headquarters, that sensitive documents discovered in burn bags at FBI headquarters will be fully disclosed to the public, either through ongoing investigations, public trials, or direct release to Congress. Patel, who uncovered multiple burn bags containing thousands of classified materials linked to the 2016 Trump-Russia probe known as Crossfire Hurricane in a previously sealed secure compartmented information facility within the J. Edgar Hoover Building earlier in 2025, emphasized transparency in addressing what he described as efforts by prior leadership to conceal evidence related to the investigation’s origins. Sources indicate these documents include a classified annex to former Special Counsel John Durham’s report detailing underlying intelligence reviewed during the probe, along with hard drives associated with former FBI officials such as James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, and Lisa Page. The declassification process involves coordination with CIA Director John Ratcliffe, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and Attorney General Pam Bondi, aiming to provide accountability for the handling of politically charged investigations without compromising national security.
Sources: The Epoch Times, FOX News
Another Afghan National Arrested for Bomb Threat in Fort Worth, Courtesy of Biden Refugee Entry
The Department of Homeland Security confirmed the arrest of Mohammad Dawood Alokozay, an Afghan national admitted as a lawful permanent resident on September 7th, 2022, under the Biden administration’s Operation Allies Welcome program following the 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal, after he posted a TikTok video indicating he was constructing a homemade bomb targeted at the Fort Worth, Texas, area, leading to state charges of making a terroristic threat by the Texas Department of Public Safety and FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force on Tuesday, November 26, 2025; this incident marks the second such case involving an Afghan entrant from the same program within a week, coming one day before 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal, whose U.S. status expired in September 2025, ambushed and fatally shot West Virginia National Guard member Army Specialist Sarah Beckstrom near the White House on Wednesday, critically injuring another guardsman before being subdued; U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services subsequently halted processing of all Afghan immigration applications, while President Trump directed a comprehensive review of Afghan entries under Biden and vowed to deport non-contributing aliens to safeguard national security.
Sources: The Gateway Pundit, The Post Millennial
Watchdog Files Bar Complaint Against Letitia James Over Mortgage Fraud Allegations Post-Dismissal
A conservative watchdog organization, the Center to Advance Security in America, submitted a formal complaint to New York’s Attorney Grievance Committee on November 29th, charging New York Attorney General Letitia James with professional misconduct involving alleged misrepresentations on a mortgage application for a Norfolk, Virginia property, the same issues underlying her federal bank fraud indictment dismissed earlier that week by U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie without prejudice due to the prosecutor’s improper appointment. The complaint, authored by CASA’s Curtis Schube, contends James violated New York Rules of Professional Conduct through dishonest conduct by falsely declaring the Virginia home as her principal residence in 2023 while holding public office in New York, securing a $109,600 loan, and urges an investigation with potential discipline if proven by a preponderance of evidence. James, indicted on October 9th alongside former FBI Director James Comey in separate cases, has maintained the declaration was an honest error promptly corrected with no intent to deceive the lender. Judge Currie, a Clinton appointee, ruled the indictments invalid because interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan, appointed by President Trump after ousting a prior official, lacked legal authority following the expiration of the predecessor’s 120-day term, which required judicial reappointment by Virginia federal judges. The White House announced plans to appeal the dismissal, affirming Halligan’s qualifications and legal standing.
Sources: The Daily Signal, WFIN Newsradio
Mamdani Transition Team Welcomes Activist Tied to Cop Killer Releases
New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani announced the appointment of over 400 individuals to 17 transition committees on November 24, 2025, including Lumumba Bandele, a Malcolm X Grassroots Movement organizer and former NAACP community director, to the newly formed Committee on Community Organizing, which will provide policy and personnel recommendations on social justice and related matters. Bandele, who identifies as a product of the Black liberation movement, led efforts to secure the release of Black Liberation Army figures convicted in police killings, such as Herman Bell, who admitted to the 1971 murders of NYPD officers Waverly Jones and Joseph Piagentini and was paroled in 2018; Sundiata Acoli, accomplice in the 1973 shooting death of New Jersey trooper Werner Foerster and released in 2022; and Mutulu Shakur, involved in the 1981 Brink’s robbery that killed two officers and paroled in 2022. Bandele also advocated for Mumia Abu-Jamal’s release from his 1981 conviction in the killing of Philadelphia officer Daniel Faulkner, visited him in prison, and praised figures like Marilyn Buck, convicted in the Brink’s case and a 1983 U.S. Senate bombing, as a freedom fighter; his activism stemmed from directives by exiled cop killer Assata Shakur during 1990s meetings in Cuba, where he cofounded the Black August Hip Hop Project to support such prisoners through awareness campaigns, and in a 2024 Veterans Day post, he honored them as soldiers defending communities.
Sources: The Washington Free Beacon, FrontPage Magazine
NYC Council Bill Threatens Property Rights with Nonprofit First Refusal Mandate
The New York City Council’s Community Opportunity for Purchase Act, introduced by Councilwoman Sandy Nurse in May 2024 and now backed by 32 sponsors as of late November 2025, mandates that owners of multifamily buildings with three or more units notify the Department of Housing Preservation and Development and qualified nonprofits before listing properties for sale, granting these groups 60 days to signal interest and 120 days to submit offers that sellers must match if superior to private bids, with violations carrying fines up to $30,000; modeled after programs in Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, the measure has advanced amid rising rents and declining homeownership, yet draws sharp rebuke from Republican Minority Leader Joann Ariola as an assault on private real estate ownership fostering a communist dystopia of perpetual rentership, while Small Property Owners of New York President Ann Korchak warns of chaos, devaluation, and the slow demise of small landlords through government interference in free-market deals, and the New York State Association of Realtors highlights delays, lost negotiation power, and over $1 billion in annual city tax revenue shortfalls from stifled transfers.
Sources: The New York Post, AM New York
Hypocrite Tennessee Democrat Wins Primary Over Black Opponent After Urging White Candidates to Step Aside
In the Democrat primary for Tennessee’s Seventh Congressional District special election, state Representative Aftyn Behn emerged as the nominee despite her 2020 social media call for white candidates to forfeit races against progressive people of color, posting that if a white man deemed his voice more important in such a contest, his campaign prioritized self over policy—a message she later deleted. Behn, who did not heed her own guidance, defeated Black state Representative Vincent Dixie by roughly 1,500 votes in a four-way field where Dixie placed last, even as he campaigned on expanding health care, boosting the minimum wage, taxing the wealthy more, and bolstering unions; during a September 2025 forum, Dixie pressed Behn on amplifying Black men’s voices alongside Black women’s in Congress, prompting her to affirm her deference to Black women organizers. The vacancy stems from Republican Congressman Mark Green’s July 2025 resignation for a private-sector role, pitting Behn—known for past statements labeling Tennessee “racist,” supporting police station burnings as justified, and pushing to defund police—against Republican Matt Van Epps, a former state commissioner under Governor Bill Lee, in a district that backed Donald Trump and Senator Marsha Blackburn by 22 points in the prior cycle. Behn, dubbed the “AOC of Tennessee” and endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America along with a recent campaign appearance by former Vice President Kamala Harris, advances to the December 2, 2025, general election.
Sources: Breitbart, The Washington Free Beacon
FCC Warns of Hackers Exploiting Unsecured Radio Gear for Fake Alerts and Obscene Broadcasts
The Federal Communications Commission has issued a public notice detailing a series of recent cyber intrusions targeting radio broadcasters across the United States, where unauthorized actors compromised transmission equipment to insert audio streams featuring the Emergency Alert System’s Attention Signal, simulated alert tones, and obscene or inappropriate language, as reported in incidents affecting stations in Texas and Virginia within the past week. These attacks exploited vulnerabilities in devices manufactured by Swiss company Barix, which were left with default passwords or insufficient network protections, allowing hackers to redirect programming from studios to remote towers and broadcast bigoted or offensive material to the public, including during a live NFL game on ESPN 97.5 in Houston and on NPR affiliate WVTF. The FCC emphasized that such misuse violates federal regulations under 47 C.F.R. §11.45(a), which prohibits unauthorized transmission of EAS signals outside genuine emergencies or approved tests, and urged broadcasters to implement immediate safeguards like changing default credentials, applying software updates, restricting remote access via VPNs, and monitoring audit logs to prevent further disruptions to critical communication infrastructure.
Sources: InfoSecurity Magazine, The Register
Black Friday Spending Breaks Records Amid Resilient American Shoppers
American consumers demonstrated their enduring economic strength by shattering online spending records on Black Friday, pouring a staggering $11.8 billion into e-commerce channels—a robust 9.1 percent surge from the previous year, as tracked by Adobe Analytics across more than one trillion U.S. retail site visits. This impressive tally, released on November 29th, underscores the vitality of free-market dynamics even as shoppers navigate persistent inflationary pressures from prior policy missteps and trade uncertainties, with projections holding steady for $5.5 billion in Saturday spending (up 3.8 percent) and $5.9 billion on Sunday (up 5.4 percent). Salesforce data further bolsters this picture, logging $18 billion in total Black Friday transactions—a 3 percent year-over-year gain—fueled by demand for luxury apparel and accessories, though elevated prices tempered unit volumes at checkout. Brick-and-mortar turnout remained cautious amid labor market softness, yet the digital boom signals a healthy appetite for opportunity, setting the stage for Cyber Monday’s anticipated $14.2 billion haul, a 6.3 percent increase that reinforces the foundational role of consumer choice in sustaining growth.
Trump Administration Secures Settlement Restoring Northwestern Funds Amid Antisemitism Crackdown
The Trump administration has achieved a settlement with Northwestern University, compelling the institution to pay $75 million and enact robust anti-discrimination reforms to reclaim $790 million in frozen federal research grants, a move that underscores the federal government’s unyielding enforcement of civil rights protections on college campuses plagued by antisemitic incidents. Announced by the Justice Department on November 28, 2025, the agreement resolves investigations launched in April over the university’s alleged failure to safeguard Jewish students during Gaza-related protests, which violated Title VI by fostering a hostile environment and tolerating race-based preferences in admissions, scholarships, and hiring. Northwestern, facing over 100 stop-work orders and the abrupt resignation of President Michael Schill in September, commits to mandatory antisemitism training for all students, faculty, and staff; quarterly compliance certifications under penalty of perjury by its leadership; and revised policies ensuring demonstrations do not infringe on free expression or safety, all while adhering strictly to merit-based practices without donor funding for the penalty. This resolution, hailed by Attorney General Pam Bondi as a triumph for prioritizing student safety and legal accountability, aligns with parallel pacts at Columbia and Cornell, signaling a broader recalibration of higher education’s obligations to federal funders and vulnerable communities.
Sources: The Epoch Times, CBS News
Americans Reject Skyrocketing College Costs as Degrees Fail to Deliver Skills or Stability
A recent survey of 1,000 registered voters conducted October 24th-28th, reveals that 63 percent of Americans now view a four-year college degree as not worth the financial burden, citing graduates’ frequent lack of targeted job skills and crushing debt loads, up sharply from 2013 when 53 percent saw value in the investment and from 2017 when opinions split nearly evenly at 49 percent favorable. This dramatic shift spans all demographics, including degree holders, as Democrat pollster Jeff Horwitt of Hart Research Associates observed, “What is really surprising about it is that everybody has moved. It’s not just people who don’t have a college degree.” With average private college costs nearing $58,600 annually for tuition, fees, and room and board in the 2024-2025 school year per CNBC data, the poll underscores a broad awakening to higher education’s diminishing returns amid stagnant wage gains for graduates and rising alternatives like vocational training. Only 33 percent still affirm degrees’ worth for long-term earnings and job access, while 4 percent remain undecided, signaling a fundamental reevaluation of traditional pathways in an economy demanding practical readiness over theoretical credentials.
Sources: The Daily Caller, CBS News
DON’T MISS OUR FEATURED COMMENTARY:
Open Borders: A Color-Revolutionary Marxist Assault on America
“When European-style no-go zones appear in Michigan and Minnesota, when public schools cancel music and art programs to avoid offending Islamic sensibilities, when Christmas celebrations are quietly erased from public life, we are witnessing the slow-motion surrender of the culture that built the freest and most prosperous nation on earth. The Afghan shooter’s ties to US-partnered forces in a Taliban hotspot underscore how even those supposedly “allied” with America carry the corrosive ideologies of their homeland—unvetted and unchecked. This cultural disintegration is not accidental; it is the entire point.…”
Read and listen to more of this article at UndergroundUSA.com
Russia’s Weather Warfare Threatens Global Stability
Russia and China lead investments in geo-engineering technologies that could transform weather manipulation into a potent hybrid warfare instrument, as detailed in a recent Royal United Services Institute analysis, enabling Moscow to unleash droughts or floods on adversaries to cripple agriculture and infrastructure without direct confrontation. Ukrainian agribusiness expert Andrii Sava warns that this capability poses a tangible risk to food security, urging international oversight to prevent such tactics from escalating beyond current conflicts, while diplomat Ruslan Spirin emphasizes environmental attacks as deliberate frontlines demanding coalitions for accountability. Historical precedents underscore the peril, from the U.S. Operation Popeye cloud-seeding in Vietnam to Russia’s 2023 Kakhovka Dam destruction that inflicted $11 billion in damages and threatened farmland desertification, alongside Moscow’s 2013 cloud-seeding aircraft deployments in Crimea. Despite the 1978 Environmental Modification Convention prohibiting such uses—ratified by major powers but skirted by non-signatories like Israel—these advancements signal a need for robust enforcement to safeguard national sovereignty and economic resilience against covert climatic aggression.
Sources: The Washington Times, Global Research
Trump Advises Airlines That Venezuelan Airspace Is Closed to Combat Drug Cartels, Trafficking
President Trump issued a firm directive Saturday morning, instructing all airlines, pilots, drug dealers, and human traffickers to regard the airspace above and surrounding Venezuela as closed in its entirety, amid the administration’s intensified campaign against the socialist regime of Nicolás Maduro and its alleged complicity in narco-terrorism that endangers American lives and national security. This declaration follows the Federal Aviation Administration’s recent advisory warning of heightened risks, including military activity and potential GPS interference in Venezuelan skies, prompting six major international carriers to suspend operations there, while Venezuela retaliated by revoking their landing rights. Trump’s action builds on prior escalations, including the U.S. designation of the Maduro-linked Cartel de los Soles as a foreign terrorist organization and his Thanksgiving address to troops announcing imminent land-based strikes against Venezuelan drug networks, underscoring a resolute strategy to dismantle trafficking routes that have fueled the opioid crisis and border threats without yielding to diplomatic prevarication. No immediate enforcement details were provided, but the post signals a potential disruption to regional commerce as the U.S. asserts its authority to protect citizens from foreign-enabled criminal enterprises.
Sources: Reuters, FOX Business
Antifa Violence Escalates Against AfD Youth Launch in Germany
Far-left Antifa radicals unleashed widespread chaos in Giessen, western Germany, on November 29th, targeting the founding convention of the Alternative for Germany party’s new youth organization, Generation Germany, as thousands of protesters under the slogan “Giessen Must Burn” clashed with police, blocked highways, hurled pyrotechnics, and broke through blockades, transforming parts of the city into a tense confrontation zone requiring up to 6,000 officers and water cannons to restore order; AfD Bundestag member Julian Schmidt was physically attacked by masked extremists, while co-leader Alice Weidel urged non-violence amid the disruptions that delayed the event by over two hours, underscoring the intensifying pattern of Antifa aggression against the rising sovereigntist party, which has faced prior doxxing, firebombings, and security probes in its push to engage young voters ahead of 2026 regional elections.
Sources: ZeroHedge, The Washington Times
Hezbollah Leader Vows Retaliation After Israeli Strike Eliminates Top Commander in Beirut
On November 23rd, the Israel Defense Forces conducted a precision airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburbs, eliminating Hezbollah’s chief of staff Haytham Ali Tabatabai, a key figure in the group’s military operations who had rebuilt its terrorist infrastructure following the November 2024 U.S.-brokered ceasefire with Israel, amid ongoing violations including rocket fire that displaced over 70,000 Israeli civilians since the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks; Tabatabai, appointed after the death of former leader Hassan Nasrallah in a prior Israeli operation, was targeted during a meeting to plan further assaults on Israel, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu describing him as a mass murderer bearing a $5 million U.S. bounty for his role in attacks on Israelis and Americans. In a televised address on November 28, 2025, marking the ceasefire’s first anniversary, Hezbollah’s current chief Naim Qassem— who succeeded Nasrallah—praised Tabatabai’s contributions to drone launches and coordinated strikes while declaring that Israel would pay a heavy price for the provocation, asserting the group’s right to respond at a time of its choosing and urging Lebanon’s government to mobilize its army and populace for potential renewed conflict, as the terrorist organization continues defying disarmament mandates by reconstructing bases south of the Litani River.
Sources: Legal Insurrection, Breitbart
Nearly Half the World’s Nations Impose Bans or Restrictions on the Holy Bible
An Open Doors analysis reveals that the Holy Bible faces bans or restrictions in 88 of the world’s 195 countries, affecting nearly half of all nations and limiting access to the Holy Scriptures for hundreds of millions of believers, as documented in the 2025 Bible Access List developed by the Bible Access Initiative with partners including Bible League International and the Digital Bible Society. Severe persecution persists in top-restricted nations such as North Korea, Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Sudan, Eritrea, Nigeria, Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan, where possession of the Bible can lead to arrests, imprisonment, torture, or execution, often under blasphemy laws or state-controlled religious policies. In China, despite economic progress, government surveillance and intervention enforce state-authorized worship, prompting Cardinal Joseph Zen to call for believers to practice faith freely in hidden settings akin to early catacombs, underscoring the criminalization of Scripture distribution even among recognized minorities. This global pattern highlights how over 300 million Christians in the 50 most hostile countries encounter extreme barriers to obtaining God’s Word, with high taxation, corruption, and enforcement varying by region in larger nations.
Sources: The Christian Post, Heartlander News

