CEOs Joined Trump’s Corruption...

It’s the kind of headline that makes you blink twice.Federal immigration agents swear under oath. A man is shot. Charges are filed. And then — suddenly — the story starts to unravel.This week, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement acknowledged that two of its officers may have given untruthful testimony about a January shooting involving a Venezuelan migrant in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Yes — under oath.Let that settle for a moment.According to officials, video evidence and other investigative

It was one of those moments in Washington when the air seems to tighten, when the choreography of oversight turns suddenly sharp.Under the unforgiving lights of the United States House Judiciary Committee, Attorney General Pam Bondi faced a line of questioning that cut straight to the nerve of the Justice Department’s credibility. The issue was not abstract policy or bureaucratic wrangling. It was a name. A hire. A decision.And a video.On that video, filmed amid the chaos of January 6, 2021, a m
By Ian Kydd MillerStephen Yaxley-Lennon, better known as Tommy Robinson, is the most enduring figure of Britain’s modern far right — not because of the originality of his ideas, but because of his refusal to disappear. Over more than a decade, Robinson has cycled between prominence and imprisonment, street politics and digital agitation, notoriety and reinvention. He has been jailed, bankrupt, de-platformed, and repeatedly discredited. Yet he remains a fixed presence in Britain’s political blood
https://www.iankyddmiller.com/post/britain-s-far-right-persistent-without-power
#Terrorism #CriminalViolence
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#NoOneAboveTheLaw

Britain often reassures itself that it is largely immune to the far right. There is no mass fascist party, no Le Pen or AfD equivalent, no credible threat of authoritarian takeover. Extremism, the thinking goes, belongs elsewhere.That confidence is misplaced.The far right in the UK has never been a unified movement. Instead, it exists as a fragmented ecosystem—parties that flare and collapse, street movements that burn briefly, and online networks that adapt faster than they can be named. Its in

The campaign took a sharper turn after Tommy Robinson, the far-right activist and founder of the English Defence League, publicly endorsed Matt Goodwin, Reform UK’s candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election. The endorsement, made openly on social media, quickly became a focal point of the race, prompting criticism from Labour and others who argue it underscores troubling ideological overlaps. Reform UK has sought to distance itself from Robinson, insisting he has no role within the party, b