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The head of Trump’s antisemitism task force just re-posted two antisemitic X accounts

Leo Terrell, the Department of Justice lawyer who heads the Federal Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, has made multiple appearances on the network and other conservative outlets to unapologetically press the Trump administration’s case for deporting Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil and for yanking federal funding from the university.

A media-savvy former Fox News contributor, Terrell also uses his X account, which has 2.5 million followers, to help promote Trump’s agenda. But while showcasing his media appearances and sharing other pro-Trump viewpoints on X, Terrell also re-posted two accounts with a history of promoting antisemitism earlier this week.

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‘I miss lynch mobs’: The secretary of retribution's followers are getting impatient

A recent X post by Ivan Raiklin, a retired Army lieutenant general who bills calls the “secretary of retribution,” prompted a flurry of comments endorsing violence and vigilantism directed at four mayors who testified before Congress on Wednesday.

Raiklin, who last year circulated a so-called “Deep State Target List” against President Trump’s enemies while calling for “livestreamed swatting raids,” re-posted a video of Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.), a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, delivering a fiery lecture to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, all Democrats.

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'The Hard Reset': Here's how the U.S. is exporting terrorism around the world

A U.S. leader of the neo-Nazi accelerationist network known as the Terrorgram Collective directly communicated with a 16-year-old who killed four people in a school shooting spree that took place in Brazil in 2022.

The link was disclosed for the first time in a filing last month by federal prosecutors opposing bail review for Matthew Robert Allison, one of two Terrorgram leaders who are charged with soliciting the murder of federal officials and conspiracy to provide material support for terrorists, among other alleged offenses.

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Why was MTG allowed to break House rules during Trump’s speech?

WASHINGTON — Last night, there was a lawless feeling in the U.S. Capitol.

Democrats were wondering why Rep. Al Green (D-TX) was booted from the House chamber during President Donald Trump’s address, even as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) was allowed to openly flout House rules yet went unpunished.

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The new guy in charge of USAID doesn't believe in foreign aid

The new deputy director of foreign aid at the U.S. State Department who is effectively overseeing what’s left of the USAID is a staunch supporter of restrictionist immigration policy who also takes a dim view of foreign aid.

The appointment of John A. Zadrozny to lead the State Department office responsible for supervising and setting the strategic direction of foreign assistance program has attracted little notice, with no formal announcement or White House press release heralding his arrival.

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'A boon to far-right extremists': Concern grows over Trump's new FBI Deputy Director

Dan Bongino, the right-wing podcast host tapped by FBI Director Kash Patel to serve as deputy director of the agency, has a history of downplaying white supremacist extremism, the violence committed by Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and threats against school board members.

Bongino suggested during a podcast recorded in September 2022 that the FBI under former Director Christopher Wray pursued investigations of “white supremacists who are terrorists” because of political pressure from President Joe Biden and Attorney General Merrick Garland. He did not mention the deadly Buffalo mass shooting carried out four months earlier that year or dozens of neo-Nazi accelerationist terror plots foiled by the FBI that would warrant such a focus.

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Plea in teen sex murder plot suggests how Trump's DOJ plans to fight extremism groups

A 25-year-old Arkansas man has pleaded guilty to racketeering conspiracy for plotting to murder a teenage girl whom he met online and subjected to escalating demands for sexually explicit images, which progressed to threats of rape and cutting.

Jairo Jaime Tinajero admitted in his plea to membership in 764, an online extremist network that engages in the sexual exploitation of children as part of an occultist-driven effort to bring about the collapse of society through accelerationism. Tinajero’s plea on Tuesday to racketeering conspiracy and his agreement to a terrorism sentencing enhancement marks a new step in an increasingly robust effort by the U.S. Department of Justice under former President Joe Biden and now under President Donald Trump to counter the threat.

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'Judgement by lead’: Nazi sympathizer investigated for threat against Wash. governor

The Washington State Patrol is investigating a Nazi sympathizer who posted a social media reply that appears to threaten the state’s governor with gunfire.

Greyson Arnold wrote in reply to an X post by Gov. Bob Ferguson last month that “the federal government must act quickly to arrest you or it will be the 2nd amendment and judgment by lead.”

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Republican suggests that Trump’s lying about N.J. drone invasion: 'Are you kidding me?'

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump promised unparalleled transparency to allay fears over the New Jersey ‘drone invasion.’ Instead, his administration’s response has only sparked confusion across the Garden State, along with eye-rolls and frustration on Capitol Hill.

In spite of attempts to blame his predecessor and gloss over the persistent incursions that have threatened sensitive U.S. military and nuclear sites for years now, Trump’s promise just may be coming true.

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'Hero': Latest school shooter celebrated as followers float copycat plans

When 17-year-old Solomon Henderson fatally shot a fellow student and then took his own life at Antioch High School in Nashville, Tennessee, last month, he left behind a diary full of provocative poses as a kind of press kit.

Henderson's associates in an online subculture organized around inceldom, neo-Nazi accelerationism, and edgy memes immediately set to work incorporating images of him spliced together with white supremacist symbols and set to music for tribute videos.

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'Daddy’s home:' Conspiracies abound as MAGA storms DC bars for Trump's inauguration

WASHINGTON — It’s not that cold in the nation’s capital. So why’s Donald Trump’s inauguration indoors? There’s only one obvious conclusion: Deep State. Duh.

Trump hasn’t been back in Washington long, but he’s already made conspiracy theories great again—well, normalized, at the very least. And we ain’t seen nothing yet if his supporters — whether congressional Republicans or his MAGA base — are to be believed.

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Revealed: A bitter feud is about to erupt in the GOP as Trump tries to sell party unity

WASHINGTON — Don’t let celebratory rallies, fawning tweets on X or glitzy inaugural balls fool you. Today’s Republicans are warring with their fellow Republicans. That GOP civil war’s about to be on full display in the nation’s capital.

Senior Republicans on Capitol Hill are prepared to follow Donald Trump’s lead on most anything, but that’s not good enough for newly empowered MAGA mavericks. They say their mandate is to upend business as usual in Washington, including the Republican Party itself.

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Trump intel advisor Devin Nunes still dismisses Russian election meddling as a 'hoax'

Devin Nunes, the former congressman and MAGA loyalist picked by Donald Trump to chair the Intelligence Advisory Board, has a long history of downplaying Russian interference in U.S. elections.

As recently as last February, Nunes testified in a deposition for a defamation lawsuit that a package he received from someone subsequently deemed by the U.S. Treasury Department as a Russian agent acting under the “purview” of President Vladimir Putin to influence U.S. elections was “just a continued operation of smearing people, trying to tie people to Russia.”

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