Thursday, February 05, 2026

HAVE YOU CHECKED OUT YOUR NEIGHBORS? ... ONE OR MORE OF THEM MIGHT BE ALIEN-HUMAN HYBRIDS

Trump green lights UFO disclosure of secret bases hiding crashed ships and non-human bodies, US congressman claims

 

By Chris Melore 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 5, 2026 

 


US Congressman Eric Burlison (Pictured) has claimed that he has received approval from the White House to visit classified US facilities allegedly tied to evidence of alien life

US Congressman Eric Burlison (Pictured) has claimed that he has received approval from the White House to visit classified US facilities allegedly tied to evidence of alien life

 

The Trump Administration has given the green light to reveal the secret UFO facilities to one of the leading voices in Congress calling for full disclosure of alien life.

US Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri revealed that he has requested and been granted access to secure locations, such as Area 51, which have decades-old ties to UFOs and secret government projects.

Speaking on the ALN Podcast, Burlison added that the request to President Trump and his staff included visiting US military bases and facilities where evidence suggests unidentified craft, materials, bodies, or archives allegedly exist.

Burlison is a member of the congressional oversight committee involved in the ongoing investigation into Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs), commonly known as UFOs.

Although the US government and the Pentagon have officially denied that there has been any physical evidence of UFOs or alien life ever recovered, Congress has heard from multiple whistleblowers claiming secret programs have covered up the truth.

In fact, Burlison has previously claimed President Trump has been 'fully briefed' on the existence of aliens, UFOs recovered by the military since the 1940s, and alien-human hybrids allegedly living on Earth today. 

Now, as Trump insiders have allegedly leaked that the White House is planning to reveal what America knows about extraterrestrials by July, the UAP committee may soon have the physical proof of non-human intelligence in their hands.

The congressman revealed: 'The White House has told the DoD to make it happen. The extent at which they've been involved is literally just saying to the Department of Defense that "we're backing his request. Do what you can to make it happen."'

 

Area 51 (Pictured) has been tied to UFO encounters and advanced military aircraft since the 1950s

Area 51 (Pictured) has been tied to UFO encounters and advanced military aircraft since the 1950s

 

Over the years, multiple US military sites have been linked to non-human craft, including facilities anonymous sources have said were housing crashed spaceships and experimental aircraft constructed using reverse-engineered alien technology.

These include Naval Air Station Patuxent River in Maryland, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, the Atlantic Undersea Testing and Evaluation Center (AUTEC) in the Bahamas, and the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR), home to Area 51.

'There is reportedly an object that is not in this country that is so large it cannot be moved, that they've built an entire building around it,' Burlison said during the January 30 podcast.

The congressman noted that this facility outside the US was classified so he was unable to reveal its exact location, but it was on his list of places he had requested to visit as part of the committee's investigation. 

'It's going to involve a lot to make that happen, but that may be the final destination.'

Burlison said during the interview that he started out as a UFO skeptic but was convinced these phenomena were real after listening to whistleblower David Grusch's public interview shortly after entering Congress in early 2023.

The Missouri Republican reached out to Grusch, connected him to the House Oversight Committee, and helped facilitate the string of public hearings which have revealed shocking evidence of alien encounters from respected military officials.

Most of the current evidence has taken the form of images and videos of alleged non-human craft captured by both civilians and military personnel. Many have been leaked to the public after being classified by the Pentagon for years.

 

President Trump (Pictured) expressed skepticism that reports of UFOs were real during a June 2024 interview but has allegedly granted access to secret bases tied to such claims

President Trump (Pictured) expressed skepticism that reports of UFOs were real during a June 2024 interview but has allegedly granted access to secret bases tied to such claims

The November 2025 documentary 'The Age of Disclosure' alleged that there's been an 80-year cover-up on UFOs and alien technology

The November 2025 documentary 'The Age of Disclosure' alleged that there's been an 80-year cover-up on UFOs and alien technology

 

Burlison himself revealed never-before-seen video of a US military drone striking an orb-shaped UFO with a Hellfire missile during a September 2025 UAP hearing.

The shocking footage from October 30, 2024 revealed that the unidentified craft not only survived the missile strike, but continued to fly away at extreme speed as the 100-pound, air-to-ground precision weapon simply bounced off the UFO's hull.

The congressman added that access to government records on UAP has been intentionally made difficult to obtain and convoluted to research, with some agencies allegedly failing to report their data properly to Congress.

'We created government and it's not the right of any government to withhold from you and I the truth about reality,' Burlison declared.

'No government has the right to withhold from you and I that we might be alone or not alone in the universe. That is not their right. That is not classified. That's a truth that humanity deserves to know.'

Burlison has previously claimed to have 'a lead' on new UFO whistleblowers. However, he said during the new interview that it's been difficult to convince potential witnesses to risk losing their government clearances in retaliation, comparing these individuals to 'guinea pigs' in terms of how the Pentagon would respond. 

THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR: IT AIN'T OVER TILL THE FAT LADY SINGS

Beneath Gaza, Israel's war with Hamas has only begun

Phase Two? A ceasefire? Beneath Gaza's soil, a war with no red or yellow lines is raging: the fight against the tunnels. At the heart of the network, alongside engineering officers, it becomes clear that the threat remains, and could intensify in the future. And also: the city people joke about, saying, "Wherever you drop a drill, you hit a tunnel."

 

by Eyal Levi  

 

Israel Hayom

Feb 5, 2026

 

 

Gaza tunnels
An  IDF officer inside one of the Haas tunnels .

 

After meeting with us, Lt. Col. Y., head of the Subterranean Branch in the IDF Southern Command, waited for representatives of the US military near a Hamas attack tunnel discovered close to Kibbutz Nir Am about a decade ago. 

The Americans wanted to hear an explanation of the phenomenon and exchange information on tunnel warfare. Some believe the danger will fade with slogans like "total victory," while others think this is only the beginning.

"Look at Pakistan and India," Lt. Col. Y. says. "The Pakistanis plant explosives under Indian patrol routes. Between Mexico and the US there are smuggling tunnels that make what we see here look like child's play. In the war between Russia and Ukraine, the subterranean front has taken on major significance. Go back to history. What did the Maccabees do? They dug. You see it in Iran, in Yemen, in Lebanon, and it is only going to intensify. We as a military understand this. Today, at the Kirya in Tel Aviv you sit in a bunker, and at Northern Command you sit in a bunker, which is essentially a fortified underground facility. The world is moving in that direction. Whoever controls the subterranean realm will control many things, because it is a front that has not yet been fully cracked technologically, and in my view not even physically. On land you know if you hit the target, and if you blow up a satellite you see the result with your own eyes. Underground, you have no real sense of whether you accomplished the mission. It is a lot of trial and error, and waiting to see how the enemy responds."

 

A massive tunnel beneath the Philadelphi Route. 
 

Right under our noses

Until October 7, Israel knew that digging was taking place in Gaza, and on a massive scale. But for a long time, warning signs were ignored, and there was a refusal to believe that one day we would discover a dark, brutal world beneath the ground. Today, after more than two years of fighting, tunnel experts who grew out of experience on the ground are warning against falling asleep on watch again.

"Before the war we said, 'It's there, we're here, we'll make sure there are no tunnels crossing the fence.' Basically, we created a separation," says Lt. Col. R., commander of the IDF's 603rd Combat Engineering Battalion, who knows Gaza's shafts and passageways intimately. "At the end of the day we're the tactical level, but I hope the level above us understands there is no other way. If they are digging beyond the border, it's not to get home faster. It's to get here and slaughter Jews. We understand their learning curve is constantly improving, and we are doing the same. I am a million percent certain that at this very moment they are digging."

Are new tunnels still being found at this stage?

"There are surprises all the time. Even right now. We won't go into details because we're dealing with it, but there are surprises in depth and length. Intelligence is not precise down to where a tunnel starts and where it ends. It gives an assessment, and you have to find it. Before the war, locating a subterranean site was considered an achievement. We'd say, 'Wow.' But last Saturday alone, just in my sector, a company commander destroyed a kilometer and a half of tunnel. It's no longer exciting. We're in a different place in understanding the enemy."

In 2024, the New York Times estimated that Gaza's underground network was between 560 and 720 kilometers long. When I try to understand how many tunnels have been found in recent years, Lt. Col. Y. is careful not to cite a number.

"When we began the ground maneuver, the target of the first brigade to cross the fence was Hamas' 'Ashkelon' outpost," he recalls. "Everyone was waiting to see a tunnel explode. We encountered two shafts and said, 'Let's go.' In hindsight, those were agricultural pumping shafts, but we still said we had blown up a tunnel. From that moment, everything flipped. It's not normal, but every meter, every maneuvering force encountered subterranean infrastructure. The terrain produced more information than we ever knew. We set up collection and management systems for every shaft the forces encountered. Today the system is at the level of thousands. I won't say how many, but it's closer to tens of thousands than to a few thousand shafts that were probed and marked by the forces."

The two officers, who have spent years studying hundreds of tunnels, never imagined when they enlisted that a significant portion of their service would take place underground. Today, it is part of their daily routine.

"In tunnels without reinforcement you feel the humidity and you sweat," says Lt. Col. R. "Once we prepared infrastructure inside a tunnel to pump in a certain substance. Two days of work, but days of Sisyphean labor where you spend most of the time inside with no ventilation. Physically, it's hard on the body. When you come out, you get fresh air into your lungs and it feels great."

Lt. Col. Y., who has become an expert on all things subterranean, agrees. "There wasn't a single time I exited a tunnel and wasn't happy," he admits.

 

סא"ל ר', מג"ד 603 , מיכה בריקמן
Lt. Col. R., commander of the IDF's 603rd Combat Engineering Battalion, inside a Hamas 
tunnel. 
 

Fighting insects

Neither officer shows any trace of contempt for the work done by the enemy. Lt. Col. R. is keen to stress this point. Over the two years since the fighting began, the IDF realized it is not dealing with amateurs hauling wheelbarrows underground. This is an organization that works methodically and knows exactly where it wants to go.

"I know the image sometimes is of four laborers with shovels, but that's light years from reality," says Lt. Col. R., 37. "Here, in the tunnel we're standing over now, they dug with pneumatic drills. That's a completely different pace. Since then they've advanced significantly. They have good mapping of where they dug, at what depths and angles. In northern Gaza there is the 'Orchid-like' tunnel, six meters wide, with vehicles driving inside. So it's not just the size that's impressive. You need ventilation systems, engineers who know what they're doing, water drainage, electricity, communications, sleeping quarters. In Gaza City we found a tunnel with an elevator."

Lt. Col. Y., 36, knows the findings well. "They live there in routine times, not just during war," he says. "We saw prayer rooms, offices, production sites. Think about what it means to lower an entire factory deep underground. And I'm not talking about five meters down, but 30 meters. You encounter a place where they mix high explosives, an insanely toxic chemical process. Underground, this is planning at the most advanced level. Hamas invested close to a third of its annual budget in the subterranean program. It understood the relative advantage, and once it understood how we operate, it improved."

To this day, it sounds like a cat-and-mouse chase beneath the surface. Both sides are in an arms race, one refining digging methods, the other improving detection and destruction.

"The most challenging thing is the endless learning competition, even during the war," says Lt. Col. R. "Over these two years we've seen monthly changes in their infrastructure, thinking, and operational methods. Hamas understands how we work and adapts defensively, and we have to reinvent ourselves."

Lt. Col. Y. jumps in. "Unlike the IDF, Hamas can change much faster. It places no real value on human life. From its perspective, if you try something innovative underground and die, it's not a disaster. Another factor is the absence of regulation. A field operative understands something and implements it the next day. He doesn't need to go to a company commander, who needs to go to a brigade commander, who needs approval from Sinwar. I cannot absorb the cost of soldiers' lives just to learn faster. Think of evolution among creatures with an 80-year lifespan versus insects that live four days. The evolution of warfare is faster. And if you ask what parameters allow Hamas to survive, it's the population it relies on and the subterranean realm."

Because of the understanding that underground warfare requires a decisive response to the advantage Hamas has built over the years, the IDF has been developing solutions on the move, drawing on accumulated field experience.

"We discovered connectivity between tunnels," says Lt. Col. D., a company commander in the elite Yahalom engineering unit. "Imagine a corridor you're walking down, sometimes you knock on the wall, feel a hollow space, open it and discover something new. We said the first thing is to cut the Strip north to south, then cut it east to west. That way we prevented reinforcements and movement. We came up with operational ideas that weren't just 'let's blow up a shaft,' but a systemic way of looking at the network and forcing the enemy into closed spaces it can't escape. In a tunnel the space is narrow and low. Operatives sit there eating dates and canned food until supplies run out and they have nowhere to relieve themselves. That's real. They suffocate until they come out and are killed, basically."

 

האמצעים משתכללים, וגם קו המחשבה. סא"ל י', ראש ענף תת"ק בפיקוד דרום , מיכה בריקמן
Lt. Col. Y., head of the Subterranean Branch in the IDF's Southern Command. 
 

Everyone, now                   

One of the biggest challenges underground was not just the fear of direct clashes with terrorists, but the concern that hostages could be harmed during operations, a possibility that hovered for two years of fighting.

"I gathered the guys, brought them into the office, and said, 'No one leaves until there's an operational idea or a ruse that allows us both to protect the hostages inside the tunnels and to destroy the enemy or push it away so it doesn't hurt us,'" says Lt. Col. D., 34. "You're careful with the means you use. During Operation Gideon's Chariots II in August 2025, we developed an idea that in practice meant no hostages were killed in underground operations, largely thanks to it."

What kind of methods?

"A set of actions. Some inside the tunnels, some aerial, and also the pumping of liquids. When you pump liquids into a tunnel, you can choose the flow strength and level, whether it's lethal or not. I'll leave it at that."

Another key to dealing with the subterranean threat was the intelligence treasure trove discovered in command tunnels that were exposed. Today, almost every soldier can distinguish between tunnels used by low-level Hamas operatives, like those found in large numbers in Rafah, which were filthy and neglected, and tunnels of senior leaders uncovered in Gaza City, which were painted and sometimes had synthetic grass and conference rooms.

On one computer hard drive, security camera footage led in May 2024 to the discovery of the bodies of Shani Louk, Itzhak Gelerenter, and Amit Buskila, all murdered on October 7.

"In the footage we saw bodies being taken out of a building, loaded into a vehicle, and lowered into a shaft," says Lt. Col. Y. "We found the shaft and uncovered an explosive charge hidden in the wall, aimed exactly at the entrance. They were waiting for the moment we arrived. Through tactical actions by the force, the charge was neutralized, and we realized something of value was hidden inside. The force located the three bodies in two separate graves. There was a small doubt there might be another body, because we identified a blockage of sacks from floor to ceiling. For 12 hours we cleared an enormous number of sacks, each weighing 20 kilograms. Every piece of fabric was collected with reverence and placed in a Ziploc bag. We essentially set up a forensic lab. We didn't bring back new information, but it showed that everything would be done to bring a hostage home."

The search for the body of Lt. Hadar Goldin, killed and abducted by Hamas during the 2014 Gaza war, was also conducted based on intelligence, painstaking work that stretched over a year and a half.

"We didn't sleep for long nights," says Lt. Col. R. "If someone took a satellite image of the area, they'd see the number of shafts drilled, because every time a new intelligence fragment came in. We carried out several searches a week and turned over every centimeter. Imagine a length of 10 kilometers, and you go concrete slab by concrete slab, opening, searching, and closing. It's thorough work."

Did it frustrate you that you didn't find living hostages?

Lt. Col. R.: "There were areas we avoided searching because you understand that if you corner a kidnapper, the easiest thing for him is to kill the hostage. In the Strip you can see where there are still standing houses, ones that weren't hit because hostages were nearby. We didn't strike there, above ground or below."

In the end, it was Hamas that closed the open wound of the Goldin family, returning the officer's body last November. Lt. Col. Y. is convinced it happened only because the terrorist organization understood the IDF was close to finding the body itself.

"They realized we were right there, and that if they didn't return it, they wouldn't even gain the half gram of legitimacy from returning a fallen soldier who became a symbol," he says. "Hamas did it because it had no choice."

 

Hamas tunnels in Gaza. 
 

Destroying the "how"

When senior officers talk about the tunnel industry, they point to the areas around Rafah in southern Gaza as the capital of digging.

"There's a joke that wherever you drop a drill there, you'll hit a tunnel," says Lt. Col. Y., no longer smiling. "At first we laughed, and in the end we discovered it was true. Historically, Rafah is the mother of tunnels. It started with a unit that led smuggling between Gazan Rafah and Egyptian Rafah, but I have a subterranean archive in command with testimonies from 1967 of tunnels that were basically underground pantries. From the 2000s it became an empire. Every crime family that wanted to set up a business without a headache dug a tunnel."

Lt. Col. R.: "Just along the Philadelphi Corridor, over nine kilometers, we found about 200 tunnels, and I've been in all of them. Sometimes you find one tunnel beneath another. That's what happens when you don't need city permits. In my view, the future hinges on the question of our presence. If there's a presence, we'll have the ability to sample and inspect digging on a daily basis. The moment we leave, their ability to dig freely becomes much easier. We saw digging in Philadelphi just 30 meters from an Egyptian position. There's no confusion. The Egyptian saw them digging."

 

"רק תדמיין: לעבור חתיכת בטון אחרי חתיכת בטון, לאורך 10 ק"מ". כניסה למנהרת חמאס בעזה צילום: מיכה בריקמן
Entrance to a Hamas tunnel in Gaza. 
 

The detection of tunnels in Rafah increased Gazans' use of drones and maritime smuggling. "Carefully and humbly, we understand that the situation in Philadelphi does not allow Hamas to operate freely today," says Lt. Col. Y. "We see other efforts intensifying, which reinforces the understanding that underground operations are complex for them. But we don't trust anyone."

Today, extensive work is underway to destroy a large portion of the tunnels, whether through controlled explosions, sealing with concrete, and other projects requiring massive effort.

"These are major engineering operations," explains Lt. Col. Y. "The largest concrete pour ever done in Israel was around 20,000 cubic meters. We have a tunnel into which 12,000 cubic meters were poured over three days. That's about 1,000 truckloads and shutting down concrete plants across the southern region. But this was a tunnel that demanded treatment because it threatened Israeli communities. We are focused on destroying subterranean infrastructure in the Green Area, territory under Israeli control. That's the mission given to us by the political leadership and the IDF chief of staff. There is no hermetic seal underground, but we want to get as close as possible, to locate tunnels reaching the area and destroy them."

How do you decide which tunnel to destroy?

Lt. Col. Y.: "A substantial amount of underground infrastructure has been handled. If you quantify it in percentages, once you hit 50 percent or more, the damage becomes significant. We have inflicted significant damage. Hamas doesn't function as a single integrated system. It can't enter a shaft in Gaza City and exit in Rafah. It has to move above ground. The issue isn't how many kilometers you destroyed, but what you destroyed. You need to eliminate centers of gravity that destabilize the organization. When we destroyed the attack tunnels, we destabilized it. When we destroyed junctions connecting battalions and brigades, we prevented it from conducting organized fighting. When we hit underground command centers, senior leaders had nowhere to convene and make decisions. When we eliminated production sites, where would they manufacture explosives? We focused on systemic and strategic centers of gravity. Still, in the Green Area I don't want a single meter of a functional tunnel. That's a statement. IDF forces will defend areas only when they are confident in the subterranean space beneath them."

Lt. Col. R.: "It's easy to stand on a rooftop, see standing buildings, and say, 'There's a cluster there that threatens us, let's remove it.' Underground there is no 100 percent certainty. The threat of a raid on an IDF post is very real. These terrorists aren't going to become better people. The distance between the buffer line and the kibbutzim is six to seven kilometers, which is a major digging investment. Digging toward an IDF post is shorter and could yield a bigger operational 'achievement.' They will try to hit us. If there's a raid soon, I won't be surprised."

Just last month, in an area of Rafah under IDF control, six terrorists emerged from an underground shaft and exchanged fire with Israeli forces.

"It was pouring rain," Lt. Col. R. recalls. "They disappeared into the rubble. To avoid endangering soldiers, we used two robotic D9 bulldozers to push the debris until the terrorists popped out. Armed terrorists were moving in our territory and firing during the incident."

Lt. Col. Y.: "Before the war, the average digging rate was six to 11 meters per day. The pace has slowed significantly. Digging has become manual, less massive, but that doesn't matter. In my view, their intention now is not to reach communities. Think about it: if Hamas manages to abduct a soldier, we're back to square one. That's the goal from their perspective. If you think they're digging for defensive purposes, I say they're doing it for offensive ones. They just don't know the timing."

Are there still cross-border attack tunnels?

Lt. Col. Y.: "You have to look at this more deeply. There hasn't been a single raid since October 7 until now from attack tunnels. Hamas understands the superiority that has been developed here in the underground barrier space. There's something strong here, especially in deterrence. They dug dozens of attack tunnels and didn't use them. They didn't attack our maneuvering forces through them because they understood the IDF has superiority there and it's better for them to avoid it."

 

ציר פילדלפי , רויטרס
About 200 tunnels over a 9-kilometer (5.6-mile) stretch of the Philadelphi Corridor. 
 

A bottomless pit

The Gaza Strip is in ruins, and in the IDF there is an assessment that even now Hamas operatives are using remaining tunnels to hide, especially as targeted killings continue. There, underground, the enemy is preparing for the day after.

"You can dig a hole in the ground too," says Lt. Col. Y. "To stop it, you need something more complex, and it's not at the system-wide, IDF level. The destruction caused by the fighting is now fertile ground for digging. How do you distinguish, amid entire neighborhoods lying in rubble, between someone clearing sand to salvage belongings from a destroyed home and someone digging a tunnel? At this stage Hamas isn't fantasizing about strategic tunnels. It's planning moves that can yield a tactical advantage in the next round of fighting. And that's something it knows how to do."

Lt. Col. R., commander of the 603rd Battalion, knows where the challenges will arise soon.

"The tunnel in Gaza City that housed Hamas' intelligence data was 13 meters deep, in a UNRWA compound," he says. "It took time to find it, and while we were searching for the shaft, a deputy battalion commander and a company commander from the IDF's Shaldag unit were killed by a sniper ambush. The electricity we identified underground was connected to UNRWA headquarters. That's the challenge. Identifying a digging workshop in the middle of nowhere and saying, 'These are Hamas operatives,' is easy. Identifying a UNRWA employee building what appears to be a regular structure in his compound is different. No one notices if instead of 10 trucks, 200 trucks of sand leave the site. He builds a tunnel in a place that is hard to strike because of legitimacy and international law."

As we spoke, gunfire could occasionally be heard across the border. With it came the understanding that despite the return of the body of Ran Gvili, the final hostage, and talk of the next phase in Gaza, it will take a long time before the threat to the south of Israel is removed.

"The underground threat we will face in the future won't resemble what we're dealing with today, so we'll have to improve," Lt. Col. Y. is convinced. "Factually, Hamas is deterred. But the question is whether it has a choice. From its perspective, what it went through was successful. To sustain two and a half years of fighting against the strongest army in the Middle East, regardless of how, all within a relatively small territory, that's a significant achievement in its eyes."

CONSPIRACY THEORIES ABOUT EPSTEIN, LIKE THOSE BY TUCKER CARLSON AND MEGYN KELLY, ARE INTENDED TO FUEL ANTISEMITISM

The Epstein files’ toxic mix of true crime and conspiracy theories

The mistaken belief that the sex offender’s vast network of connections explains all that is wrong or evil in the world fits easily into the way antisemitism is spread. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Feb 5, 2026

 

 

Political commentator Megyn Kelly unapologetically and repeatedly mimicked Tucker Carlson's assertion that Epstein was a Mossad agent.
 

The federal government’s release of the latest tranche of files related to the case of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein set off another surge in interest in a case that continues to possess a hold on the imaginations of growing numbers of people. The new batch of Epstein files this week consists of 3 million pages of documents, 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. Going through it is providing work for an army of journalists and a hobby for a horde of amateur sleuths and other obsessives.

Given the sheer volume of material, the files seem to provide something for everyone. But it’s not likely to satisfy most or really any of the people who are taking deep dives into the files and those who are mentioned in them. That’s not because it isn’t filled with juicy tidbits of information about a great many celebrities. It’s due to the fact that the case has become more than just an investigation into the horrible deeds of a wealthy hedonist and his clique. Ever since Epstein’s suicide in a New York City jail (an event which is itself a subject of controversy), it has morphed into something far more than a particularly vile example of true crime or a tale of sexual perversion.

A collection of theories

It’s now a conspiracy theory—or rather, a large collection of them all housed under the title “Epstein files.” And like all conspiracy theories, those who have embraced it are convinced that it will provide answers to all the questions about the world that trouble them and solutions to its problems.

In this way, a sex-trafficking ring isn’t just a shocking story of how lawbreakers sought to exploit and game the system. Instead, it has become the key to understanding what they are sure is an evil cabal running the world. They think it is the key that will enable them to unlock the deep-seated wrong at the heart of the national soul of America and discredit the people they already didn’t like.

As such, it has become something of a funhouse mirror in which those who latch onto it interpret the story through the lens of every other pathology of 21st-century life: paranoia about governments, hyper-partisanship, and inevitably, antisemitism.

Those who think the biggest problem in the world is President Donald Trump and his Republican supporters search the files in hopes of finding the silver bullet that will finish off their bête noire. The same is true for those who think of Democrats in the same way, especially about former President Bill Clinton, the commander-in-chief who was first coined with the phrase “derangement syndrome.” And for those who think that Israel and the Jews are the answer to every question they have about why things are bad, Epstein is, similarly, the entry point for a new round of crackpot blood libels.

No one is likely to be fully satisfied, even after every document, video and image is eventually unearthed and analyzed. And, as with other conspiracy theories, Epstein connoisseurs will claim that the real truth—the proof they’ve been searching for—was covered up or destroyed by the guilty parties, thus ensuring that the lunacy can go on forever.

That’s not to say that there won’t be some examples where the files will prove the undoing of some public figures, including perhaps a few that never met or had anything to do with Epstein.

Political fallout

For example, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, already mired in a political slump, as well as the focus of deep dissatisfaction from both opponents and fellow Labour Party members, could conceivably be toppled from his post because of the files. Starmer isn’t in the files, but he appointed one of Epstein’s many cronies, Peter Mandelson, as Britain’s ambassador to the United States. He claims that Mandelson lied to him about his ties to Epstein. Still, the investigation has led to resignations and a criminal investigation into the ambassador revealing government secrets, which raises the possibility that the entire mess could sink Starmer. The idea that he, as opposed to Trump, could be the main casualty of this scandal is both ironic and infuriating to those on the left who have seized on it as the answer to their prayers.

It’s hard to think of a precedent for the Epstein case. It’s far from the only example of large-scale sex trafficking, in addition to the exploitation of women and girls by powerful men and their enablers. But it is singular in that it was carried out by someone who was not merely wealthy (and Jewish), but who seemed to make it his business to know a vast cross-section of the rich and the famous—powerful persons among the governing classes, in addition to writers and artists.

Epstein was an Olympic-level networker. If you were anyone who was anyone in high society, politics or celebrity-hood during the period when he was flaunting his wealth, the files give the impression that the odds are that you were invited to some kind of function or sought a connection to the man.

Trump and Epstein were clearly friendly for a long time, but eventually, they quarreled. Those who hate Trump are counting on the unsavory, though not criminal, stories associated with that friendship—or some as of yet undiscovered tidbit discrediting the president.

Given the fact that Trump has been elected president twice, despite the public knowing about his decades of public and private indiscretions, anything in the files is unlikely to do him in. Yet his opponents hold onto the hope that it will, waiting with the same dogged determination that their counterparts on the right seek details about the friendship between Epstein and the Clintons. That power couple will be dragged before Congress to talk about Epstein with the same low likelihood that anything found or said will do more than compound the embarrassment the case has already caused them.

Epstein’s Israeli crony

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak is in the same boat as Bill and Hillary Clinton. He had business dealings with Epstein and even sought to involve him in Israeli politics. Some of the email messages in the Epstein files show how he sought to get his help in opposing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the 2019 elections. It also showed that Barak had made a sexist comment amid his usual rants trashing the prime minister, and Israel’s religious and Mizrachi population that support him, as well as revealing a sexist comment made by Barak.

Does that mean that Barak was involved in Epstein’s sexual crimes? No. And there’s no proof to hint at that. But that isn’t stopping Likud supporters, including his longtime foe Netanyahu, from exploiting it to his detriment and forcing Barak to make the sort of public denials that do more harm than good to those who have to utter them.

That’s the problem with the publicity given to the files. For example, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is under fire for two documented meetings with Epstein, though in both instances, he had his wife with him, and, again, there’s not even a suggestion of wrongdoing about them. But partisans are still saying with a straight face that anyone who had lunch with the financier, as Lutnick did, is “shamefully complicit” in his crimes.

It isn’t really fair. Then again, no one needs to mourn for the trouble Epstein is causing Trump, the Clintons, Barak or Lutnick, all of whom knew what they were getting into when they entered political life. Being in the spotlight and profiting from it in one way or another brings with it the possibility that someone you know is going to do things you will have to answer for, whether you are actually complicit in them or not.

The connection to Jew-hatred

What is of far greater concern is the conviction that what we know about Epstein’s crimes is just the tip of the iceberg, which plays into the grandfather of all conspiracy theories: antisemitism. 

The willingness of a prominent Jew-hater like former Fox News host and current podcaster Tucker Carlson to use the Epstein case as fodder for his obsession with discrediting Israel and the Jews is bad enough. But that inspired fellow political commentator Megyn Kelly to unapologetically and repeatedly mimic the assertion that Epstein was a Mossad agent. Another conservative in the media, Ben Shapiro, who has clashed with Carlson for his antisemitism and Kelly for her stance of neutrality on that subject matter, pointed out that there is just as much evidence for a claim that Epstein was working for aliens from outer space. But that doesn’t stop people who should know better from associating Israel and the entire Jewish people with all things evil in the world.

The way the case is being used by antisemitic conspiracy mongers ought to be a warning to everyone else speculating on it and hoping that it will somehow further some political or policy agenda of their own. The crimes Epstein committed warrant scrutiny, and those about whom there is reasonable suspicion and even some proof that they were involved in his sexual misdeeds, such as Britain’s Prince Andrew, need to be held accountable. But the enthusiasm for the story ought to be tempered by a sober admission that the obsession with the case is primarily a sign of the declining health of our society.

Conspiracy theories have already taken over so much of national and even international discourse. As the coverage of Israel’s two-year war against Hamas in Gaza revealed, the belief that Jews are either running the world or committing “genocide,” even when they are the ones under attack from genocidal Islamist terrorists, is rooted in myths that date back to the Tsarist forgery,  Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

Along with a bifurcated partisan press and the impact of social media, these theories turn every discussion toxic. They send people down rabbit holes with no exit ramp, rather than engaging in serious debate about the many issues that divide the country right now.

The Epstein scandal is a terrible story, but it is not the great puzzle at the heart of America’s national existence.

Each end of the political spectrum—first, the right wing, and now the left, since Trump returned to the White House—has seized on it as the secret formula by which they can unravel all that is wrong and vindicate their pre-existing prejudices and opinions about everything. That is itself a symptom of rot in contemporary culture. And those who fan these conspiratorial flames with smears based on guilt by association aren’t brave voices speaking up for truth. They are, like those who exploit it to point fingers against the Jews, regardless of where they sit on the political spectrum, irresponsible demagogues doing real harm.

FOR THE AYATOLLAHS, WHO SEE THEMSELVES AS DIVINELY APPOINTED, REFORM WOULD AMOUNT TO BETRAYAL OF A SACRED MISSION

Iran’s nuclear project leaves no room for illusion

The nuclear talks in Oman may revive, but the truth remains unchanged. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein 

 

JNS

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

 New roofs appear on buildings at Iran's Natanz facility, January 2026.

New roofs appear on buildings at Iran's Natanz facility, January 2026.
 

We are approaching the moment of truth.

After a dramatic cancellation, U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to revive the farcical nuclear meeting with Iran—manipulated, postponed and even relocated to Oman to appease Tehran—only after pressure from nine Arab states to resume the process.

Predictably, Iran now promises to discuss its nuclear program, even as it drags out preparations to reposition missiles, troops and Revolutionary Guards at its convenience.

Trump has warned Tehran to “be very careful.” His apparent oscillation—between threats of imminent attack and calls for a deal—may not be hesitation at all, but a calculated strategy allowing Washington to define its objectives as realities on the ground evolve.

This was the backdrop to the lengthy meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Steve Witkoff, Trump’s envoy for the most serious diplomatic missions. For more than three hours, Netanyahu laid out why neither of the West’s standard expectations—abandoning nuclear ambitions or reforming the regime—can ever succeed.

Iran’s nuclear project is not a policy choice. It is the soul of the regime. Rooted in Shiite messianism, it embodies the belief in the Mahdi’s final arrival and represents the pinnacle of global Islamic power. To abandon it would mean to renounce the regime’s very identity. For leaders who see themselves as divinely appointed, reform would amount to betrayal of a sacred mission.

The same logic applies to Iran’s armed proxies, including Hamas and Hezbollah. These groups sustain a permanent state of conflict that underwrites Tehran’s regional and global influence—an influence reinforced by Iran’s mutually beneficial relationships with China and Russia, both of which profit from Iran’s capacity to keep the Middle East, and the West, in perpetual turmoil.

Even now, with Iran’s economy in collapse and its population in revolt, the regime does not operate according to pragmatism or concern for its people’s welfare. Israel, more than any other nation, understands the cost of pacifist illusions.

There is also the personal dimension of Trump himself. Witkoff may be a pacifist and a businessman, but Trump seeks a peace that aligns with his principles and defines the legacy he intends to leave behind. He promised Iran’s street protesters—and the Western world—that an American “armada” would come to the defense of innocent civilians. He urged resistance against a violent, fascist regime even as young Iranians paid with their lives.

Those promises cannot simply be erased. After the dead filled morgues, abandoning that commitment—as Barack Obama did—would leave an indelible stain. Now that the “armada” has arrived, the question is no longer whether force exists, but whether illusion still does.

As long as Iran envisions a nuclear-armed Middle East and openly seeks Israel’s destruction, no peace plan can hold. There will be no Nobel Prize, no meaningful expansion of the Abraham Accords, and no genuine intercontinental partnership with Europe or India.

Iran has managed to restore the canceled nuclear talks. But after decades of deception, delay and ideological rigidity, the question remains unavoidable: Who can still believe them?

QATAR, AN ISLAMIST MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD STATE, WORKS TO DESTABILIZE AND ULTIMATELY CONQUER THE WEST FOR ISLAM. OVER THE DECADES, QATAR HAS INSINUATED ITSELF INTO AMERICA AND BRITAIN, TURNING THEIR UNIVERSITIES INTO ISLAMIC PROPAGANDA FACTORIES AND BUYING UP COUNTLESS INDIVIDUALS IN POLITICS AND THE MEDIA

The West’s pragmatic fallacy

Qatar represents the Jeffrey Epstein of world politics. 

 

By Melanie Phillips 

 

JNS

Feb 5, 2026

 

 

President Trump and Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani at the start of a state dinner at the Lusail Palace in Doha on May 14, 2025.

President Trump and Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani at the start of a state dinner at the Lusail Palace in Doha on May 14, 2025.

 

When people are called pragmatic, it’s meant to imply reasonableness, the ability to compromise, occupying the sensible middle ground.

That compliment may often be justified. However, as the obverse of principle, pragmatism has also been the West’s progressive undoing.

U.S. President Donald Trump is an arch pragmatist. His “art of the deal” is based on beating down the other side through negotiations in which he plays a superior hand.

This approach characterizes his foreign policy. Over both Iran and Gaza, however, it’s currently threatening to derail his intention to restore respect for American power—not to mention his much-desired legacy as the world’s principal peacemaker.

At the time of writing, a negotiation process still seems to be underway between the United States and the Iranian regime as an alternative to war. Trump’s terms include the regime giving up its nuclear program, ballistic missiles and sponsorship of terrorism—a demand for nothing less than surrender, to which the regime will never agree.

If Trump attacks Iran, we’ll finally know that he realizes that deal-making among nations has its limits. The fact that he keeps being persuaded to continue with these talks, however reluctantly, has created fears that he’s being played by the world’s supreme masters of tactical concessions, delay and manipulation.

In Gaza, where Trump prevented Israel from finishing off Hamas and forced the Israelis into a negotiated ceasefire, Hamas has regrouped and strengthened, daily breaking the ceasefire by attacking Israeli troops.

Although Hamas refuses to demilitarize, Trump is moving ahead with the second stage of his Gaza peace plan, which he originally said was dependent on total demilitarization. The concession is another example of choosing pragmatism over principle.

This reveals a fallacy that Trump shares with his liberal universalist foes, who form the majority of mainstream diplomats and for whom “conflict resolution” rather than war is an article of faith.

This is based on the iron belief in the efficacy of negotiation and compromise, which relies in turn on the fallacy that everyone in the world, like the West, is governed by short-termism and self-interest.

To such pragmatists, the idea that Islamists believe they are doing divine work in murdering and conquering unbelievers is too absurd to be taken seriously.

They therefore fail disastrously to realize that Tehran’s agenda is totally and irrevocably non-negotiable. They also fail to grasp that Hamas similarly views negotiated concessions as a sign of weakness, which galvanizes them to redouble their infernal efforts.

Last week, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, told the president that Hamas will demilitarize “because they have no choice.” “They’re going to give it up. They’re going to give up the AK-47s,” he said. Why? What incentive do they have?

Moreover, Britain’s Telegraph reported last month that Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, had been “hammering the phone” with Witkoff and other officials pushing for Hamas to be allowed to retain AK-47s and other personal weapons.

To break the deadlock, Powell was suggesting, just abandon the demand for demilitarization. Simple!

The sinuous Powell, who is highly influential in Washington, D.C., has a long record of pragmatic engagement with terrorists. His connections with IRA leaders during Northern Ireland’s sectarian violence in the 1980s and 1990s led to the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and 28 years of peace in the province.

The British are constantly thrusting this agreement down the throats of the Americans as a genius strategy to end world conflicts.

Last year, Robert Ford, a former U.S. ambassador to Syria, revealed that in 2023, Powell’s NGO Inter Mediate, which provides a bridge between diplomats and terrorists, had introduced Ford to the Al-Qaeda terrorist Mohammed al-Jolani, now known as Ahmed al-Sharaa and, since last January, Syria’s president.

Powell was thus instrumental in prompting Ford to help transform al-Jolani into a “moderate” statesman who said he had renounced his earlier extremism. Yet last month, after having slaughtered Alawites, Druze and Christians, al-Sharaa’s army smashed the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces and captured swathes of Kurdish territory, inflicting atrocities in Rojava.

A ceasefire deal brokered by the Americans delivered the Kurds into al-Sharaa’s control. This has caused the Kurds to feel bitterly betrayed by the West, having previously acted as its invaluable allies against Islamic State, the terrorist group to which al-Sharaa once belonged.

Using the Good Friday Agreement as a global “conflict resolution” template is a category error. The IRA merely wanted a united Ireland, a reasonable if contested aspiration.

Islamists, however—with their fanatical, absolute and non-negotiable agendas to destroy Israel, the Jews and the West—don’t suddenly become convinced of the benefits of pragmatism. Instead, they become convinced of the endless gullibility or amoral cynicism of Western diplomats bent upon making concessions which these implacable foes rightly perceive as weakness.

Pragmatism involves dismissing or even denying the importance of virtue and its opposite, evil. This is the hallmark of today’s Western world.

That’s why Jeffrey Epstein, the pedophile financier whose copious files were dumped into the public arena this past week—revealing the staggering scale and depth of his depraved influence—was not an aberration but the monstrous apotheosis of the culture.

He was a spider spinning an enormous global web of financial, sexual and political corruption. People were drawn into it in huge numbers because he was a passport to money, sexual license and political influence. That was because all the West’s normative moral rules had broken down.

Hyper-individualism had made licentiousness the order of the day. Absolutes such as truth or objectivity were abolished in favor of subjective opinions and the primacy of feelings and emotion.

The nuclear family was smashed. Sexual morality gave way to a lifestyle free-for-all. Non-judgmentalism was mandatory. Young people now learn codes of sexual behavior from pornography.

For the West’s elites to be clutching their pearls over Epstein piles hypocrisy upon moral collapse.

In Britain, the Epstein scandal is threatening to bring down Starmer, who in 2024 appointed Lord Mandelson as ambassador to the United States. It’s now been revealed that Mandelson appears to have received money from Epstein while sending him market-sensitive, secret information about the government’s responses to the financial crash in 2008.

Starmer has been forced to admit that when he sent Mandelson to Washington, he was aware that his new ambassador had continued his friendship with Epstein after the financier’s conviction in 2008 for soliciting prostitution from a minor.

Starmer appears to have taken the pragmatic view that Mandelson’s stellar political abilities made it worth the gamble. With the gamble now blowing up in Starmer’s face, it turns out that pragmatism was a losing bet.

Pragmatism is fine within the guardrails of normative morality. But if it tears out those guardrails and throws them into the trash, then it goes belly-up.

Pragmatism has corrupted the West and exposed it to grave danger in one particularly graphic example. Qatar, an Islamist Muslim Brotherhood state, works to destabilize and ultimately conquer the West for Islam.

Accordingly, over the decades, it has insinuated itself into America and Britain, turning their universities into Islamic propaganda factories and buying up countless individuals in politics and the media.

 

No photo description available.

Qatar 'gifted' President Trump with a $400 milliom Boeing 747-8 luxury jetliner.


As a result, instead of viewing Qatar as an enemy, America has treated it as a valuable ally. It used Qatar—the sponsor of Hamas—as an honest broker in the Israeli hostage negotiations, which is why they dragged on at the cost of countless hostages’ and Israeli soldiers’ lives.

And now, Qatar has pride of place on Trump’s Board of Peace—and is using all its influence to stop Trump from destroying the Iranian regime.

You might say that Qatar is the Jeffrey Epstein of world politics.

Dealing with the devil never ends well. Abandon principle for pragmatism, and everything goes smash. It’s a lesson the West clearly has yet to learn.

A SUPERPOWER FOR SURE, BUT THE SOLE SUPERPOWER? ..... THAT'S A FOX NEWS CROCK OF SHIT

America is the sole superpower again. Here's how Trump surprised the world

Being the dominant power on the planet is a great way to start America’s next 250 years

 

By Arthur Herman  

 

Fox News

Feb 5, 2025

 

 

Trump magazine and newspaper covers on a news stand in London. 

 

There’s one superpower that dominates the planet again, and it’s the United States.

In just one year in office, President Donald Trump has catapulted the U.S. from a country that seemed on the brink of inevitable decline, into the American colossus that’s put the other great powers — especially China and Russia — in the shade, and now determines the tempo and direction of world events.

What happened in Davos should set aside any doubts. In 24 hours, President Trump turned worldwide panic about possible U.S. military intervention in Greenland into worldwide relief with a framework for peacefully securing the giant island for generations to come.

We were the world’s "sole superpower" twice in the 20th century, right after World War II and again after the Cold War. Now, thanks to Donald Trump and his administration, it’s happening again in the 21st century. It’s important to understand why and how, and what it means for the future.

There are three components that make a dominant world power: military strength, economic strength and bold leadership.

Military power: By taking out the Iranian nuclear program and by snatching the Venezuelan dictator in the middle of the night — both without losing a single American — Donald Trump demonstrated that we have a military with an unparalleled global reach and effectiveness. Meanwhile, Russia is bogged down in a World War I-style stalemate in Ukraine, while the last time China’s army fought a real war was in 1979 against Vietnam — a war China lost.

Economic strength: This year will mark the start of an economic boom triggered by the Trump tax cuts and deregulation, that may see the U.S. economy grow by 5% or more (China will be lucky to hit above 4.5%). Trillions of direct foreign investment dollars and a revived American industrial landscape means we will have an economy geared toward making things again, not just spending money. At the same time, Trump’s use of tariffs has redirected the flow of world trade to America’s advantage and China’s disadvantage, as we leverage our power as the world’s biggest and best customer to get other nations to play fair in the trade game.

The global management company Teneo’s annual CEO and Investor Outlook Survey shows that 73% of global CEOs expect the global economy to improve in 2026, in large part because of the coming U.S. boom. 

Bold leadership: Just a year ago, America was still feeling the disastrous effects of an enfeebled president who surrendered world leadership to China, Russia and Iran. Joe Biden and his team had all but crippled the American economy with rampant inflation and declining productivity, while their obsession with "climate change" came at the expense of one of the country’s most important economic assets, our oil and natural gas industry.

Along comes Donald Trump, and suddenly what seemed like problematic areas of the U.S. economy — AI, cryptocurrency, oil and natural gas production, manufacturing — leap into the forefront of administration policy for making America great again. Instead of weakness and impotence on the world stage, the United States has retaken the lead, from ending the fighting in Gaza and reshaping the future of the Middle East, to starting to push interlopers like China, Russia and Iran out of the Western Hemisphere — whether it’s Venezuela or Greenland or the Panama Canal.

Most importantly, for the first time in a very long time — perhaps not since Ronald Reagan was president, — we have a president who is unapologetic about flexing American power and influence around the globe, and who sees world leadership not as a temporary transition phase, but as America’s birthright on its 250th anniversary.

Leadership doesn’t mean being globocop. It does mean acknowledging moments like the one last month, when Venezuela’s Maria Machado handed over her Nobel Peace Prize to Donald Trump, in gratitude for supporting the democratic resistance in her country.

The moment tells us that, under President Trump, America has re-assumed the moral leadership, as well as military, economic and technological leadership, of the planet.

These "sole superpower" moments can speed by. The first after World War II faded with the rise of the Soviet Union, and died in the jungles of Vietnam. The second, after the Cold War, was dissipated in military spending cuts and an orgy of "peace dividend" spending, which facilitated the advance of Communist China. Russia and especially China remain formidable adversaries — and nuclear-armed ones. Trump and his administration need to take full advantage of America’s current sole superpower status before some unforeseen event, or failure of judgment or nerve, triggers its demise.

In the meantime, enjoy being the dominant power on the planet. It’s a great way to start America’s next 250 years.

WAR ON DRUGS IN SAN ANTONIO

Federal agents find 550+ kilos of meth in shipment of lettuce heads, arrest 2 San Antonio men

Suspects charged with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 500 grams or more

 

By Ivan Herrera

 

KSAT.com

Feb 4, 2026

 

 


SAN ANTONIO – Federal agents arrested two San Antonio men on Tuesday in connection with the discovery of more than 550 kilograms of methamphetamines hidden in a shipment of lettuce heads, according to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas.

Gerardo Pineda-Gallegos and Jose Lopez-Ruiz were identified as meth distributors, according to court documents, accused of participating in the transportation, packaging and distribution of narcotics.

Pineda-Gallegos and Lopez-Ruiz were placed at a wholesale produce distribution warehouse on Dec. 15, 2025, where they received large shipments of meth concealed within the produce, according to the United States Attorney’s Office.

A criminal complaint said the two suspects were seen walking in and out of the warehouse multiple times before entering a cargo van and driving to an office space where the meth was stored and later prepared for distribution.

Drug Enforcement Administration and FBI agents, along with the San Antonio Police Department’s High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) unit, executed a warrant and searched the office space.

They found 100 boxes containing fresh heads of lettuce and 998 ball-shaped packages of meth that weighed 555 kilograms on Tuesday, federal officials said.

Pineda-Gallegos and Lopez-Ruiz were charged with one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine.

If convicted, they face 10 years to life in prison and a fine of up to $10 million.

WAR ON DRUGS IN GEORGIA

55 People Arrested in Glynn County Operation

 

FBI Atlanta 

Feb 4, 2026

 


625927708-775623782247851-1817133393943601243-n.jpg

FBI Atlanta special agents, working with law enforcement partners from across Georgia and in other states, captured 55 of 56 people indicted in a large drug trafficking case based in Glynn County and St. Simons Island.

All suspects are charged with variations of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. Some also face firearms charges.

More than 150 special agents, deputies, and police officers from multiple agencies combined to make the early morning arrests. Multiple SWAT teams from FBI Atlanta, plus additional SWAT teams from FBI Jacksonville, Glynn County Police Department, and Brunswick Police, combined to make some of the most dangerous arrests.

The FBI Atlanta investigation, led by the agents in the Brunswick Resident Agency, found that members of the group were traveling to Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta, and Jacksonville to source the drugs. One indicted suspect communicated with a supplier in China and had multiple kilos of drugs shipped to Brunswick from overseas.

The drug trafficking organization was responsible for distributing large quantities of methamphetamine, MDMA, fentanyl, cocaine, crack cocaine and marijuana throughout the area.

Agencies involved in the operation included the DEA, GBI, Glynn County Police Department, Glynn County Sheriff’s Office, and Brunswick Police.

FBI Dallas, FBI Columbia, and FBI Buffalo also assisted in arrests in Texas, South Carolina, and New York.

FBI Atlanta expects the final person indicted in this case to turn herself in in the coming days.

All indicted defendants are considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.

The case will be prosecuted by the United States Attorneys Office-South Georgia.

TEACHERS INFLUENCED BY THEIR MARXIST PROFESSORS

Texas Education Agency warns districts of potential state takeovers for “encouraging” student protests

The state education agency issued guidance to districts after Gov. Greg Abbott directed its commissioner to investigate the student protests of killings by federal agents.