Author: J.P. Knowles

  • January 6 Committee Pushing To Set Perilous Precedent Regarding Digital Data

    January 6 Committee Pushing To Set Perilous Precedent Regarding Digital Data

    The House of Representatives’ Jan. 6th Select Committee investigating the breach of the U.S. Capitol, is participating in practices that could set a perilous precedent when it comes to protecting individuals’ privacy and civil liberties, according to legal experts.

    As part of its investigation, the committee has already asked 35 tech and communications companies to keep the digital data gathered from hundreds of people who may have been involved in or have information pertaining to what happened on the day Congress met to certify the results of the 2020 election.

    While it is not uncommon for prosecutors to subpoena social media companies to hand over information related to a case, these requests typically come with warrants that show some type of probable cause that justifies gaining access to the data in question.

    In this case, New York-based attorney John Tolley noted the committee has sent out “letters of preservation and not subpoenas.” The requests supposedly covered people who were peacefully protesting at the Capitol and did not take part in altercations outside the building or try to enter it.

    “Many times, in cases, prosecutors send out letters to potential defendants called letters of preservation, so they are on notice to retain all documents relevant to a certain issue. If they fail to comply with this request then, in some states, a presumption exists where that party had incriminating evidence,” he said. “However, in this case, you’re talking about a third party you’re attempting to get evidence from.”

    Federal criminal investigations typically require a warrant to obtain a person’s social media posts or communication records, a request which Tolley notes is standard and “not too hard to overcome.”

    In this case, however, the House select committee is the entity making the request— and a select committee does not have the same legal standing as would a federal prosecutor.

    “So the question will be, If they obtain these documents without using the proper legal channels, will that be a violation of an individual’s 4th Amendment right to privacy?” Tolley asked.

    Even though the social media firms have not been asked to turn over the information as of yet, the request has given some Republicans pause.

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., issued a scorching statement warning that the committee’s “attempts to strong-arm private companies to turn over individuals’ private data would put every American with a phone or computer in the crosshairs of a surveillance state run by Democrat politicians.”

    Tolley said that if the Jan. 6 committee can “obtain information from a social media company — that the user did not make public — without a warrant, it would be a terrible precedent and would essentially go against the foundation of American principles.”

    He cautioned that this “small step could open the door to much larger and more dangerous invasions of our constitutional rights and privacy.”

    Paul Engel — founder of The Constitution Study, a tool that helps Americans read and understand the Constitution — said the Jan. 6 committee is continuing the “political grandstanding” that committees have participated in for decades, however it’s taking it a step further by setting dangerous standards regarding digital data.

    Engel reminded that as the legislative branch of government, Congress’ power and focus should be “to create law, not investigate crimes, or collect data for future prosecutions.”

    “There is no power delegated to Congress by the Constitution to demand records or to order companies to retain records for possible future investigations or prosecutions,” he said. “This stunt by congressional leaders is usurping the powers of both the executive and legislative branches of government.”

    He said that, when comparing the “actual actions of those who entered the Capitol” with the “complete disregard of more violent attacks on federal property” orchestrated by social justice activists nationwide last year, “this can only be described as a political witch hunt.”

    Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., described the Jan. 6 committee and its investigation as a “sham,” on Twitter, adding that its members were “engaged in an UNCONSTITUTIONAL political investigation.”

    While many politicians and media outlets have called the breach an insurrection, a term that helps establish a reason for committees, investigators, and prosecutors to circumvent precedent, no one involved in the incident has been charged with anything even close to an insurrection.

    Nicholas Creel, a business law professor at Georgia College and State University, likened the select committee to the commissions that operated during the McCarthy era in the 1950s, when Republican Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin conducted investigations and hearings in a bid to expose prominent communists and socialists.

    “The McCarthy era saw people blacklisted, totally denied employment in any capacity, for their political beliefs alone,” he said. “The Jan. 6th commission, on the other hand, is aimed at investigating actual illegal behavior.”

    Creel said private citizens do have a constitutional right to be “free from warrantless government searches in all instances where they enjoy a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

    “However, when you share information with a third party, it often becomes the case that any 4th Amendment protections you might have enjoyed are now waived,” he said. “Many of these entities Congress is requesting information from are likely to fit into this exception.”

    Privacy expert Rob Shavell, co-founder and CEO of DeleteMe, said that, “today Big Tech has become a one-stop shop for every detail about people’s lives, which allows them to request complete data dumps for entire groups of ‘persons of interest’ without those people ever needing to be informed that their information is an open book.”

    Shavell said most people “don’t realize the degree to which lives increasingly led online leave a permanent record of everything they do” and that America’s privacy laws “have not kept up with changes to technology and human behavior.”

  • Cruz SNAPS On AG Garland For Giving Parents Such A Harsh Label

    Cruz SNAPS On AG Garland For Giving Parents Such A Harsh Label

    Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) grilled Attorney General Merrick Garland repeatedly Wednesday at a Judiciary Committee hearing on charges that the Biden Justice Department was weaponized to pursue political opponents.

    Cruz pushed Garland on a document he submitted to the FBI in response to a letter from the National School Boards Association implying that certain parents’ actions in protest of particular school policies may amount to domestic terrorism. Cruz also grilled Garland on whether he sought an opinion from an ethics expert over a potential conflict of interest involving his son-in-law.

    Watch below:

  • Extremely Disturbing And Confusing Candy Commercial Rattles Social Media

    Extremely Disturbing And Confusing Candy Commercial Rattles Social Media

    This week, social media was all a buzz over a new Halloween-themed commercial for Twix candy bars that featured a cross-dressing child and witchcraft.

    The advertisement depicts a little boy dressed as a princess opening his front door to discover a mysterious new nanny – a gothic-looking witch — on his doorstep. The nanny notices as several neighborhood girls inquire why the boy is dressed up when it is “not yet Halloween,” then ask if the nanny is “a good witch or a bad witch.” To which she replies, “Do you wanna find out?”

    Following that, the pair is visiting a park when a larger kid begins accosting first the boy for wearing a dress then the nanny for her dark sense of style.

    The young boy says, “wearing this way makes me feel happy,” but the bully is now yelling about how weird they both are.

    At that moment, in a scenario that implies that violence towards kids is an appropriate response to holding a contrary opinion to transgender ideology, the nanny appears to summon a wind storm that snatches the older boy out of thin air and he disappears leaving behind only a costume cape.

    At the end a Twix logo flashes on the screen and that is the extent of anything candybar related in the commercial.

    Watch The full AD below:

    The popular social media account Libs of Tiktok shared the ad, immediately drawing outraged responses.

    Chris Buskirk, the editor of the conservative journal American Greatness, warned, “They want your children and they will stop at nothing to get them.”

    Conservative pundit and blogger Samuel Sey alleged, “This ad supports two separate kinds of child abuse.”

    Best-selling author J.D. Vance, who is currently running for a Senate seat in Ohio, retweeted the video, saying, “These people ruin everything.”

    Finally, Southern Baptist pastor and professor Denny Burk tweeted, “So the message is this. 1. Lie to children about how God made them. 2. Anyone who opposes this lie is by definition a villain. 3. It’s funny to destroy the people who oppose the lies. I don’t do boycotts, but this one is actually making me reconsider.”

    In recent years, transgender propaganda has been increasingly pervasive in corporate marketing forcing some consumers to draw a hard line in the sand for many popular businesses.

  • Watch President Biden Shake Hands After Disgusting Act

    Watch President Biden Shake Hands After Disgusting Act

    President Joe Biden coughed into his hand following a Monday speech in New Jersey then continued to use it to shake hands with members of the public, furthermore, he was not wearing a mask. The incident comes less than a week after Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas tested positive for COVID-19 just days following an event where he had been with Biden.

    Last Tuesday, a fully vaccinated Mayorkas tested positive for COVID-19 as part of routine pre-travel protocols.

    Three days earlier, Mayorkas attended the 40th Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service at the U.S. Capitol, where he was photographed just feet away from Biden and neither of the men were wearing a mask.

    https://youtu.be/2zhpVz5a_6I

    “Secretary Mayorkas is experiencing only mild congestion; he is fully vaccinated and will isolate and work at home per CDC protocols and medical advice,” DHS spokesperson Marsha Espinosa said at the time.

    Earlier this month, the president and first lady sparked controversy when they were seen walking maskless through an upscale Italian seafood restaurant in Washington, D.C., which mandates all individuals over 2 years of age to wear a mask indoors, regardless of vaccination status

    While flanked by masked Secret Service agents, the maskless Bidens walked through Fiola Mare in Georgetown.

    White House press secretary Jen Psaki dodged a question about the incident, saying people should pay attention to the president’s policies and “not overly focus on moments in time.”

  • Deadly ISKP Terror Group Target Religious Minorities In Afghanistan

    Deadly ISKP Terror Group Target Religious Minorities In Afghanistan

    The Islamic State of Khorasan Province(ISKP), an ISIS affiliate group, has ramped up attacks on religious minorities in Afghanistan. The ISKP is responsible for violent attacks and bombings targeting the Shia religious minority. The group is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people in Afghanistan.

    Following a deadly ISKP suicide bombing, ISIS threatened Shia Muslims in their homes and places of worship across the country.

    “The ISKP armed group has repeatedly carried out devastating attacks that appear designed to spread terror and inflict maximum suffering particularly on Afghanistan’s Hazara community,” HRW Associate Asia Director Patricia Gossman said in a statement. “The numerous attacks targeting Hazaras amount to crimes against humanity, and those responsible should be brought to justice.”

    No less than 135 people were killed in two separate suicide bombings that were both claimed by ISKP targeting mosques on Oct. 15 and Oct. 8. The group claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing at the Kabul airport where 170 Afghans died on Aug. 29.

    ISKP killed 10 humanitarian workers on June 9 and bombed a mosque during a Muslim celebration, killing at least10 people on May 14. The United Nations implemented sanctions against ISKP in 2019 including travel bans, arms embargoes, and asset freezes for the group’s members.

    ISKP became a serious threat in 2015 when the group began attacking civilian institutions including schools, hospitals and places of worship. At least 1,500 civilians died and thousands more were injured in the attacks. The group was less active in 2019 due to military presnce but picked back up in 2020. The ISKP attacks have targeted journalists, activists, health workers and religious minorities including Hazaras, Sikhs and Hindus.

    “ISKP’s horrific attacks on civilians have not abated since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan and appear to be increasing,” Gossman said in a statement. “The Taliban authorities need to urgently adopt measures to protect religious minority communities from attack.”

    The Taliban government has promised increased security for religious minorities, however, they have committed large-scale murders of the Hazaras in the late 90s and more recently targeted Hazara journalists and communities. They also seized the Afghan government in mid-August and have struggled to run the country since. A vast majority of Afghan citizens are falling below the poverty line and facing starvation as the economy continues to decline.

  • What Is Biden Trying To Hide From Americans In His Build Back Better Plan?

    What Is Biden Trying To Hide From Americans In His Build Back Better Plan?

    The $3.5 trillion Build Back Better Act that President Joe Biden wants to make law will change how the U.S. handles several social services, however, most Americans are not aware of what exactly is in the bill.

    According to a CBS News/YouGov poll released Oct. 10, only 10% of Americans said they know “a lot of the specifics” of the bill, while an alarming 60% said they didn’t know any specifics at all.

    “The average American only has so much time to devote to politics,” David Ditch, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation said. “The spending package is so unbelievably large … I think it’s impossible for the typical American to know a substantial amount of the details of what’s in it.”

    Some Democrats admit that the size of the bill may be a roadblock to understanding what’s in it. “We gave them too much to swallow, too many elements in that package,” Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the Democratic whip, said.

    Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont said the fault lies with the media.

    “The mainstream media has done an exceptionally poor job in covering what actually is in the legislation.” Sanders said there was “very limited coverage as to what the provisions of the bill are and the crises for working people that they address.

    The poll also showed that some parts of the Build Back Better Act are acceptable to Americans people, at least in theory. The use of federal funds being used to lower prescription drug costs got 88% support, and using funds for paid medical and family leave got 73% support among respondents.

    However, the poll also reported that only 54% of Americans approved of the overall spending package, while an I&I/TIPP poll released on Oct. 4 showed 51% of Independents opposed the plan.

    Sasha Mackler, executive director of the Energy Project at the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC), said that he would like to see more focus put on climate change, as they go beyond the traditional wind and solar solutions.

    “It has very strong incentives for hydrogen production, for energy storage, like advanced batteries, for advanced nuclear, for carbon capture and storage, and direct air capture,” Mackler said. “So there’s additional pieces of the energy technology equation that will be given very significant support … which I think maybe doesn’t get as much attention.”

  • Documents Show The Real Number Of Illegal Migrants Biden Let Into The U.S.

    Documents Show The Real Number Of Illegal Migrants Biden Let Into The U.S.

    At least 160,000 illegal immigrants have been released by the Biden administration since March – along with a broad use of limited parole authorities to allow 30,000 to be eligible for work permits since August, Border Patrol documents show.

    The documents give a glimpse into how the Biden administration has been releasing massive numbers of migrants into the U.S., often with little to no oversight, supervision, or imminent threat of deportation.

    Since March 20, no less than 94,570 illegal immigrants have been released into the U.S. with Notices to Report. Individuals who receive a Notice to Report are instructed to check in with an ICE office when they arrive at their final destination – which could be anywhere in the country. Individuals who check-in are not deported or detained as their immigration proceedings move forward.

    Since Aug 6th, the administration has released an estimated 32,000 immigrants into the U.S. by parole – which grants migrants a degree of legal status and the ability to apply for work permits.

    Federal law says parole authority is meant to be used on a case-by-case basis for “urgent humanitarian purposes” and “significant public benefit.” Generally, only a few parole cases are granted by officials, however, the Biden administration has been using it liberally, for example, its parole of tens of thousands of Afghans into the United States as part of Operation Allies Welcome.

    Former Border Patrol Chief Rodney Scott, who served under President Biden, examined the documents and said that he believes the administration is abusing its parole authority, according to Fox News.

    “By law and regulation, a parole shall only be granted on a case by case basis and only for significant humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit. Neither of these appear to apply to the current situation,” he said, adding that the number of paroles brings into question the review and approval process.

    “As a field chief, I don’t believe I ever approved more than 5 or 10 paroles in a year,” he said. “When I did, I ensured that the alien was monitored continuously and was detained or removed as soon as the circumstances allowed.”

    The documents reveal that since Aug 6, the administration released an additional 40,000 illegal immigrants on their own recognizance. The documents also show that on one single day in the Del Rio sector, 128 single adult illegal immigrants were released into the U.S. without ATD – which usually entails tracking by an ankle monitor or phone.

    A Customs and Border Protection (CBP) official said that mechanisms like paroling, the use of NTRs, and enrolling migrants in Alternatives to Detention (ATD) “provides mechanisms to require family units released from CBP custody to report to ICE within a specified time.”

    The official also cited data that shows that between 2014 and 2020, 81% of migrants released into the U.S. did report for their immigration proceedings.

    The agency has not yet released the number of migrant encounters in September, however, in both July and August there were more than 200,000 migrant encounters, some of the highest numbers in twenty years. Since then, migrants have continued to come in droves. According to the documents, Rio Grande Valley encountered 5,900 migrants in one week, while Del Rio encountered more than 2,900 in that same week.

    DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who maintained that the border is not open, allegedly warned officials of up to 400,000 encounters if Title 42 public health protections were ended.

    Republicans have blamed the Biden administration’s rapid reversal of Trump-era border protections for the ongoing crisis at the border. The administration however has focused on blaming “root causes” like poverty, corruption, and violence in Central America.

    “The downturn in economies, the attendant rise in violence, the downturn in economies made more acute by reason of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the suppression of any humanitarian relief over the past number of years, and the pent-up thirst for relief among many different populations,” Mayorkas told Yahoo News this week. “I think an accumulation of factors contributes to the rise in migration that we’ve seen.”

  • The Left Is Beginning To Wake Up From Their “Wokeness”

    The Left Is Beginning To Wake Up From Their “Wokeness”

    Liberals may finally have to admit that “woke” doesn’t work.

    The left’s embrace of cancel-culture and push toward progressive ideologies that they promote as having “diversity and inclusivity” have crept into almost every aspect of society, including sports and entertainment and even history lessons in the classroom and consumer brands on store shelves.

    Recent pushback against so-called “political correctness,” which has forced sports teams, businesses, and films to change their names or censor content, is no longer coming from just the conservatives anymore.

    Some of the more liberal voices — such as “Real-Time” host comedian Bill Maher, former New York Times columnist Bari Weiss, and even a self-described socialist Buffalo mayoral candidate — have been fighting against being “woke,” indicating a shift that outside forces may be ready to combat the “woke” agenda.

    “We are beginning to see signs of change,” said Atlanta-based marketing and branding expert David Johnson. “The absurdity of cancel culture is becoming more apparent every day and you see signs of it beginning to crack. The backlash is growing and it continues to grow.”

    Commentator Jason Whitlock frequently slams the NFL or NBA for being too “woke.” Ben Shapiro blasted the CDC’s plea for “pregnant people” to get vaccinated, in the government agencies bid to be more inclusive of transgender people — despite the fact that only women can be pregnant.

    Johnson pointed out, however, that “more traditional liberals,” like Maher, are starting to become “a voice of reason.”

    Houston-based GOP political analyst Vlad Davidiuk said the left is starting to realize that it’s “not getting the return on their investment” into “wokeness.”

    For instance, India Walton, socialist campaigning to become Buffalo, New York’s next mayor, boasted about not being “that woke” and admitted that slogans like “defund the police” just don’t sit well with “average working-class folks.”

  • Sen. Rand Paul Backs The #FireFauci Movement

    Sen. Rand Paul Backs The #FireFauci Movement

    Rand Paul, R-Ky., said in an interview Sunday night that Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Cheif Medical advisor to President Joe Biden, should be fired following last week’s revelation that the NIAID funded gain-of-function research on the coronavirus.

    Paul claimed a letter from the NIAID to Ranking Member Rep. James Comer, R-Ky admitted that “limited experiment” had been conducted to test whether “spike proteins from naturally occurring bat coronaviruses circulating in China were capable of binding to the human ACE2 receptor in a mouse model,” which critics say contradicts Fauci’s long-held claim.

    “He [Fauci] should be fired,” said Paul adding, “just for lack of judgment if nothing else.”

    Paul said that it is unlikely that Fauci will admit that he lied.

    “He’s going to continue to disassemble and try to work around the truth and massage the truth,” he said.

    Paul said that he would be satisfied with an investigation into the gain-of-function research which he had already been calling for.

    Meanwhile, Twitter is blowing up with “Fire Fauci” posts following reports of testing on dogs.

  • Meghan McCain Plays With The Idea Of Running For Public Office

    Meghan McCain Plays With The Idea Of Running For Public Office

    Meghan McCain says she is not ruling out the possibility of running for public office weeks after leaving “The View,” adding that she would rather give it another shot on the campaign trail than anchor a cable news show.

    “At some point, maybe,” McCain, the 37-year-old daughter of late Sen. John McCain, told People magazine when asked if she is planning a political campaign. “My tone keeps shifting because, quite frankly, the bench in Arizona is not great, but it’s very Trump-y. The woman running for governor right now, Kari Lake, was endorsed by President Trump and is more than likely going to win.”

    Arizona is an “interesting state filled with really interesting people,” she added. “[Sen.] Kyrsten Sinema [D-Ariz.], obviously, is totally independent in so many different ways.”

    McCain made a name for herself on “The View” as the show’s fiery conservative, frequently engaging in heated debates with the show’s other presenters.

    However, now she feels as though she has maxed out her career in talk show politics.

    “What else can I do? I don’t want to be Tucker Carlson,” she said about a potential run for office. “I’m not running for office … but I’m just saying if there was a metric of placing bets: Yes. If someone has a gun to your head [and says,] ‘Pick one or the other …’”

    McCain said that she is aware that people “detest politicians’ children,” and hence would very certainly lose a political campaign. However, she has shown a desire to return to politics, and so may be interested in a behind-the-scenes job.

    “I have a friend who does political consulting for pretty high-level politicians, and I was thinking maybe doing something like that in the future,” she said. “I feel very at home among political people. I feel very understood. We’re all interested in the same things. And I feel really respected in a way that I don’t necessarily feel in TV media, for whatever that’s worth.”

    McCain noted that while she enjoyed “debating politics” on “The View,” which she co-hosted alongside Sunny Hostin, Joy Behar, Sara Haines, and moderator Whoopi Goldberg, she felt her voice was not welcomed on the show.

    “I think they liked not having someone who would fight with them or give an unpopular opinion,” McCain told People. “I was very insecure about not being missed on maternity leave. I felt it. I felt like they didn’t miss me.”