Saturday, July 12, 2025

Greece passes North Africa asylum ban amid rights groups' opposition

Greek lawmakers voted on Friday to temporarily stop processing asylum requests from migrants arriving from North Africa by sea in a bid to reduce arrivals into Europe's southernmost tip, a move rights groups and opposition parties have called illegal.

Issued on: 12/07/2025 -  RFI

Migrants inside a refugee camp in the port of Vathy on the eastern Aegean island of Samos, Greece. June 7, 2021. AP - Michael Svarnias

The ban comes amid a surge in migrants reaching the island of Crete and after talks with Libya's Benghazi-based government to stem the flow were this week.

It marks a further hardening of Greece's stance towards migrants under Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' centre-right government, which has built a fence at its northern land borders and boosted sea patrols since it came to power in 2019.

Human rights groups accuse Greece of forcefully turning back asylum-seekers on its sea and land borders. This year, the European Union border agency said it was reviewing 12 cases of potential human rights violations by Greece.

The government denies wrongdoing.

The law, which received 177 votes in favour and 74 against, halts asylum processing for at least three months and allows authorities to quickly repatriate migrants without any prior identification process.

UN demands urgent action after Greece migrant boat tragedy

"Faced with the sharp increase in irregular arrivals by sea from North Africa, particularly from Libya to Crete, we have taken the difficult but absolutely necessary decision to temporarily suspend the examination of asylum applications," Mitsotakis was quoted by his office as telling the German newspaper Bild on Friday.

"Greece is not a gateway to Europe open to everyone."

Greece was on the front line of a migration crisis in 2015-16 when hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Middle East, Asia and Africa passed through its islands and mainland.


"Illegal and inhumane"

Since then, flows have dropped off dramatically. While there has been a rise in arrivals to the outlying islands of Crete and Gavdos - those numbers have quadrupled to over 7,000 so far this year - sea arrivals to Greece as a whole dropped by 5.5 percent to 17,000 in the first half of this year, U.N. data show.

Rights groups and opposition parties said the ban approved by parliament violates human rights.

"Seeking refuge is a human right; preventing people from doing so is both illegal and inhumane," said Martha Roussou, a senior advocacy adviser for aid group International Rescue Committee (IRC.)


Asylum seekers in Greece live in overcrowded and unhygienic camps AFP

Thousands of irregular migrants have been rescued by the Greek coastguard off Crete in recent days, the Athens government said. Hundreds of them, including children, were temporarily housed at an exhibition centre in Agyia, near the city of Chania in western Crete, amid sweltering summer temperatures.

Footage by the Reuters news agency on Friday showed a migrant who had fainted being taken out of the shelter on a stretcher.

Crete lacks an organised reception facility. The government said it would build a migrant camp there but the local tourist industry is worried the plan could harm the island's image.

“The weight is too great, the load is too big, and solutions now have to be found ... at a central level,” said George Tsapakos, a deputy governor for Crete.

(With newswires)


Greek parliament approves controversial amendment to curb migrant influx from Libya

UN refugee agency expresses concern about decision to suspend asylum applications

Ahmet Gencturk |12.07.2025 - TRT/AA



​​​​​​​ATHENS

Greek parliament approved a controversial amendment Friday to curb migrant influx from Libya.

The amendment, proposed by the migration ministry, passed with the support of 177 lawmakers from the ruling central-right New Democracy party, the right-wing Greek Solution, as well as some independent lawmakers.

Of the 293 lawmakers who were present during the vote in parliament, social-democratic PASOK and far-right NIKI parties abstained, while left-wing opposition parties of SYRIZA, the Greek Communist Party (KKE), the Course of Freedom, and the New Left voted against the amendment.

The amendment mandates that, for three months, those arriving by sea from North African countries without official permission will be barred from submitting asylum requests. The individuals may be sent back to their countries of origin or departure without formal registration.

The government justifies the move as an exercise of sovereign authority and constitutional obligation to protect national integrity.

But the amendment sparked serious domestic and international concerns.

The UN refugee agency (UNCHR) said it recognizes the pressure created by migrant influx arriving from Libya to Crete and states’ right to control their borders, but measures in this direction of the amendment should be in line with EU and international law.

Underlining that to seek asylum is a fundamental human right, even at times of migratory pressure, it said, “States must ensure that people seeking asylum have access to asylum procedures. Returning people to a place where they would face threats to their life or freedom would breach the principle of non-refoulement. “

Likewise, on Wednesday, former Foreign Minister Evangelos Venizelos drew attention to the potential unconstitutionality of the amendment, criticizing the government administration for invoking Article 15 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to pass the extraordinary measure.

Should the government insist on invoking the ECHR, it could entail applying Article 48 of the Greek Constitution, he warned. Article 48 outlines when the president can declare a state of seize and related emergency powers.

Today, during the debate of the amendment, KKE denounced the “shameful amendment.”

Moreover, the leader of the Course of Freedom party, Zoi Konstantopoulou, likened it to the authoritarian approaches of Hungarian Premier Viktor Orban and US President Donald Trump.


US Transforms Greek Bay into Strategic Military Stronghold



| July 6, 2025, Sunday // 



The United States is reinforcing its military footprint in the Eastern Mediterranean by heavily fortifying the naval base at Souda Bay, located on the Greek island of Crete. The upgrade involves the deployment of advanced weaponry and defense systems aimed at shielding crucial assets positioned in this geopolitically sensitive area. The move, reported by Greek daily Kathimerini, signals the growing importance of the base not only to NATO but to broader US strategic operations in the region.

The base already serves as a key hub for both the Greek Navy and NATO forces. In recent months, however, it has seen a rapid transformation into a more robust defensive node. Alongside Greek-operated Patriot missile systems, the United States has positioned M-LIDS (Mobile-Low, Slow, Small Unmanned Aircraft System Integrated Defeat System) units designed to counter drone threats. These are paired with short-range air defense systems intended to intercept a range of aerial targets.

Souda Bay now hosts a mix of highly sensitive military assets, including Arleigh Burke-class destroyers that have been used in missile interception missions - most notably in response to Iranian attacks on Israeli territory. Smaller naval vessels, submarines, and large transport aircraft such as the C-17 and C-130 are also based there, used to facilitate the rapid movement of personnel and supplies.

Despite the assessment that a regional escalation remains unlikely for now, US military planners consider it essential to take precautionary steps. The risk - though low - of a wider confrontation extending from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf has led to the placement of additional layers of protection around assets stationed at Souda Bay.


The defense infrastructure being installed includes not only systems brought in directly from the United States, but also units repositioned from existing bases in Europe. Among them, the M-LIDS system stands out for its hybrid approach - it combines electronic jamming to disable enemy drone communications with a 30mm cannon for direct kinetic engagement.

Another key addition is the AN/TWQ-1 Avenger, a mobile short-range air defense system known for its versatility. Mounted on a Humvee platform, the Avenger is capable of engaging drones, low-flying aircraft, helicopters, and even cruise missiles. These platforms belong to the US Army’s 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment and are frequently deployed in support of American forces across different global theaters.

While current reports indicate these systems are based in Souda Bay, the US retains the logistical flexibility to redeploy them to other locations within 48 to 72 hours, should the situation demand it. This capacity for rapid movement underscores the base’s utility in responding to evolving threats.

The growing strategic relevance of Souda Bay was further underscored when Air Force General Dan Caine - Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff - paid a visit to the Maratha military facilities within the bay. Accompanied by senior commanders from the Sixth Fleet and US Naval Forces Europe and Africa, General Caine’s inspection coincided with the docking of the USS Thomas Hudner. The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer was among five US naval vessels deployed near Israel during recent tensions, where they played a direct role in assisting the Israeli military in neutralizing missile threats from Iran, Kathimerini noted.
US Tariff on Brazilian Imports Sparks Surge in Coffee Prices


| July 12, 2025, Saturday // 


The impending 50% tariff imposed by the United States on Brazilian imports is already pushing up the price of coffee, particularly the Arabica variety, which is known for its premium quality. Following the announcement, Arabica futures surged by more than 3.5% in a single day during trading in New York.

The tariff, set to take effect on August 1, 2025, was detailed in a letter from US President Donald Trump to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, shared on the social platform The Truth Social. The letter cites concerns over Brazil's alleged "dangerous attacks" on free elections and Americans’ fundamental rights to free speech as a justification for the new duties.


Giuseppe Lavazza, CEO of the Lavazza Grocer, commented on the broader implications, explaining that tariffs on European goods won’t significantly affect the coffee market in the US. Instead, the issue lies with tariffs targeting major coffee exporters such as Brazil and Vietnam. Lavazza warned that these trade barriers are likely to result in increased coffee prices for American consumers.

In sum, while tariffs between the US and Europe pose less of a challenge, the heightened duties on coffee-exporting nations threaten to drive up the cost of coffee in the US market.
KILLER GESTAPO

Farmworker Dies After Fall From Greenhouse During California ICE Raid

"ICE is out of control," said one Democratic congresswoman. "This is not law enforcement. It is state violence."


U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers make an arrest after pulling a person out of their vehicle during a raid on Glass House Farms in Camarillo, California, on July 10, 2025.
(Photo/Blake Fagan/AFP via Getty Images)

Brett Wilkins
Jul 11, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

A Mexican farmworker who reportedly fell from a greenhouse while trying to hide during a Trump administration raid on a Southern California farm has died from his injuries, the United Farm Workers union announced Friday.

Federal authorities including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, many clad in military-style gear, stormed farms in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties on Thursday to execute search warrants for undocumented people. At Glass House Farms in Camarillo—which grows state-legal cannabis as well as tomatoes and cucumbers—the invading agents were met with spirited resistance from hundreds of community members who rushed to the site in support of targeted workers. Federal officers responded by firing tear gas and less-lethal projectiles at crowds of protesters who were blocking area roadways in a bid to prevent arrests.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said that officers "arrested approximately 200 illegal aliens" from Glass House Farms and another farm in Carpinteria, Santa Barbara County, where protesters also descended, and were met with tear gas and pepper balls, according to local news outlets. DHS also said they found at least 10 immigrant children on the farm.

The Associated Press reported that a farmworker, identified as Jaime Alanís, phoned his wife in Mexico and told her about the raid in progress, saying he was hiding with other workers. Alanís fell from his hiding place and suffered broken neck, fractured skull, and a rupture in an artery that pumps blood to the brain, his niece Yesenia—who did not want to give her full name—told the AP.

"They told us he won't make it and to say goodbye," she said.



United Farm Workers (UFW) said Friday that "other workers, including U.S. citizens, remain unaccounted for."

"Our staff is on the ground supporting families," UFW said in a statement. "Many workers, including U.S. citizens, were held by federal authorities at the farm for eight hours or more. U.S. citizen workers report only being released after they were forced to delete photos and videos of the raid from their phones."

"UFW is also aware of reports of child labor on site," the union continued. "The UFW demands the immediate facilitation of independent legal representation for the minor workers, to protect them from further harm. Farmworkers are excluded from basic child labor laws."

"These violent and cruel federal actions terrorize American communities, disrupt the American food supply chain, threaten lives, and separate families," UFW added. "There is no city, state, or federal district where it is legal to terrorize and detain people for being brown and working in agriculture. These raids must stop immediately."

The raids appear to be ramping up, even before ICE receives an historic $46 billion funding infusion via the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed by President Donald Trump last week. Video footage posted on social media in recent days showed ICE officers and other federal agents arresting people in courthouses, a hospital, and marching through a suburban Utah neighborhood.



Democratic U.S. lawmakers were among those condemning the Trump administration's crackdown and mourning Alanís' death.

"A farmworker has died following a federal raid in Southern California. This is a heartbreaking and deeply troubling development," Congresswoman Norma Torres (D-Calif.) said on social media. "Immigrant communities deserve safety and dignity. I'm calling for a full investigation and accountability."

"Congresswoman Delia Ramirez (D-Ill.) said that "ICE is out of control."

"This is not law enforcement," she added. "It is state violence."

Some observers called on Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom—who has overseen several legal challenges to the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants and protesters who defend them—to do more to help people targeted by ICE.

"If Newsom really cared about defending our state and our communities, he'd be on the line with other farmers by last night," Murshed Zaheed, a former U.S. Senate Democratic leadership staffer, said on the social media site Bluesky.

One California worker dead, hundreds arrested after cannabis farm raid

The raid is the newest escalation in President Donald Trump's campaign for mass deportations of immigrants in the US illegally.

A vehicle with the message "ICE, ICE Baby!" written in the dust on the rear windscreen stands near U.S. federal agents blocking a road leading to an agricultural facility where U.S. federal agents and immigration officers carried out an operation, in Camarillo, California, U.S., July 10, 2025.
(photo credit: Daniel Cole/Reuters)

By REUTERS
JULY 12, 2025 

A California farm worker died on Friday from injuries sustained a day earlier when US immigration agents raided a cannabis operation and arrested hundreds of workers, according to a farm worker advocacy group.

Separately, a federal judge in California ordered the Trump administration to temporarily halt some of its most aggressive tactics in rounding up undocumented immigrants.

Dozens of migrant-rights activists faced off with federal agents in rural Southern California on Thursday. It was the latest escalation of President Donald Trump's campaign for mass deportations of immigrants in the US illegally.

His administration has made conflicting statements about whether immigration agents will target the farm labor workforce, about half of which is unauthorized to work in the US, according to government estimates.

The Department of Homeland Security said approximately 200 people in the country illegally were arrested in the raid, which targeted two locations of the cannabis operation Glass House Farms

.
An ICE agent in Los Angeles, June 2025; illustrative. 
(credit: US HOMELAND SECURITY/HANDOUT/ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES)

ICE raids a California cannabis farm Agents also found 10 migrant minors at the farm, the department said in an emailed statement. The facility is under investigation for child labor violations, Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott posted on X.

The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The scene at the farm on Thursday was chaotic, with federal agents in helmets and face masks using tear gas and smoke canisters on angry protesters, according to photos and videos of the scene.

Several farm workers were injured and one died on Friday from injuries sustained after a 30-foot fall from a building during the raid, said Elizabeth Strater, national vice president of the United Farm Workers.

The worker who died was identified as Jaime Alanis on a verified GoFundMe page created by his family, who said they were raising money to help his family and for his burial in Mexico.

"He was his family's provider. They took one of our family members. We need justice," Alanis' family wrote on the GoFundMe page.

US citizens were detained during the raid, and some are still unaccounted for, Strater said.

DHS said its agents were not responsible for the man's death, saying that "although he was not being pursued by law enforcement, this individual climbed up to the roof of a green house and fell 30 feet." Agents immediately called for a medical evacuation, DHS said.

California Rural Legal Assistance, which provides legal services and other support to farm workers, is working on picking up checks for detained Glass House workers, said directing attorney Angelica Preciado.

Some Glass House workers detained during the raid were only able to call family members after they signed voluntary deportation orders, and were told they could be jailed for life because they worked at a cannabis facility, Preciado said.

DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin rejected those allegations, saying in an emailed statement that "allegations that ICE or CBP agents denied detainees from calling legal assistance are unequivocally false."

Some citizen workers who were detained reported only being released from custody after deleting photos and videos of the raid from their phones, UFW President Teresa Romero said in a statement.

"These violent and cruel federal actions terrorize American communities, disrupt the American food supply chain, threaten lives and separate families," Romero said.

Farm groups have warned that mass deportation of farm workers would cripple the country's food supply chain.

In her most recent comments, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said there would be "no amnesty" for farm workers from deportation. Trump, though, has said migrant workers should be permitted to stay on farms.

US District Court Judge Maame Frimpong granted two temporary restraining orders blocking the administration from detaining immigrants suspected of being in the country illegally based on racial profiling and from denying detained people the right to speak with a lawyer.

The ruling, made in response to a lawsuit from immigration advocacy groups, says the administration is violating the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution by conducting "roving patrols" to sweep up suspected undocumented immigrants based on their being Latinos, and then denying them access to lawyers.

Donald Trump grants ICE “total authority” to arrest “slimeball” protesters in response to violence

The US President responded to clashes between his “law enforcement officers” and demonstrators by authorising aggressive federal crackdown

Updated: July 12, 2025

In a strongly worded public post on Truth Social, POTUS Donald Trump has given US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents “total authorisation” to arrest demonstrators protesting against the widespread repression of immigrants in the country. The announcement claimed he had witnessed instances of violent clashes between the two groups on his way back from visiting flood-ravaged Texas.

“I am on my way back from Texas, and watched in disbelief as THUGS were violently throwing rocks and bricks at ICE Officers while they were moving down a roadway in their car and/or official vehicle,” he said, further expressing his indignation at the “tremendous damage” to “brand-new” government vehicles and the “disrespect” towards the law and order of the land.

In the post, he directed the Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, and Border Czar, Tom Homan, to instruct all law enforcement officers faced with assault or violence to arrest the “slimeballs” responsible for the attack, adding that he was providing authority to use “whatever means to do so”, announcing that he was giving ICE “Total Authorisation to protect itself”.


Federal agents reportedly arrived at the legal cannabis cultivating Glass House Farms in Camarillo, California, on Thursday and were met by a crowd of protestors who attempted to block the way to the farm, throwing rocks and bricks at the government officials.

The ICE officers responded with rounds of what is thought to be less-than-lethal tear gas, detaining approximately 200 workers who are claimed to be undocumented. One farm worker sustained injuries that later led to his death during the raids. One protester is alleged to have fired a gun in the direction of ICE agents. No injuries related to gun violence have been reported.



‘Undermines our defense’: 
State  Dept. anti-extremism office shuts amid Trump layoffs
 RAW STORY

More than 1,350 employees are due to be laid off by the Department of State. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

The U.S. Department of State is eliminating its Office of Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) as part of a sweeping round of layoffs affecting more than 1,350 employees that began on Friday, Raw Story has learned.

Raw Story revealed the threat to CVE in May, as the Trump administration pressed for mass layoffs in the federal government. The layoffs were paused by court challenges but this week the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Trump’s favor.

The six CVE employees, who led the department’s international efforts to prevent violent extremists from radicalizing and inspiring acts of violence, are all being terminated, William Braniff, executive director of the Polarization and Extremism Research & Innovation Lab at American University, told Raw Story.

“Eliminating the CVE office from the Department of State undermines our layered defense, allowing threats to get much closer to home before we have a chance to minimize them,” Braniff said.

“It decreases our ability to support upstream terrorism prevention programs overseas, making international terrorist recruitment easier. It decreases our ability to support rehabilitation programs, including for children born to the ISIS movement, making international terrorist ‘retention’ easier.”

Braniff was previously director of the Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships at the Department of Homeland Security, considered a “sister office” of CVE. He resigned in March, after the Trump administration began to dismantle the office.

Shuttering CVE flies in the face of Trump administration priorities, Braniff added.

“Overall, and in direct contrast to the stated goals of the administration, it increases the likelihood that terrorists will actually cross the U.S. border,” he said.

Ian Moss, who oversaw the CVE as deputy coordinator for counterterrorism during the Biden administration, previously told Raw Story CVE historically served as “the principal driver” in the U.S. government for “addressing racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism, including white identity terrorism.”

Alongside the U.S. Department of Justice, the CVE office helped organize three Counterterrorism Law Enforcement Forums in Europe, convening law enforcement, financial regulators and policymakers to address racially and motivated violent extremism.

In Europe, the State Department is focused on countering the influence of Nordic Resistance Front and Russian Imperial Movement, two groups that were named as specially designated global terrorism entities during the Biden and first Trump administrations, respectively.

Just before President Joe Biden left office, the State Department also designated the Terrorgram Collective as a terrorist group. Terrorgram, whose two U.S. leaders were federally indicted last year, has been linked to attacks in Brazil, Slovakia and Turkey.

CVE also played a significant role in the U.S. government’s efforts to counter Islamic extremism, principally ISIS.

Moss told Raw Story CVE “worked hand-in-glove” to repatriate hundreds of women and children from Al Hol, a camp in northeast Syria for people displaced by ISIS, to their home countries in central Asia.

The office worked with the returnees’ home countries to ensure they received rehabilitative services so they could reintegrate into their communities.

“If there are not programs to de-risk these individuals, and if these individuals don’t have empowering opportunities elsewhere, they will find empowering opportunities with extremist groups again,” Braniff said.


Jordan Green is a North Carolina-based investigative reporter at Raw Story, covering domestic extremism, efforts to undermine U.S. elections and democracy, hate crimes and terrorism. Prior to joining the staff of Raw Story in March 2021, Green spent 16 years covering housing, policing, nonprofits and music as a reporter and editor at Triad City Beat in North Carolina and Yes Weekly. He can be reached at jordan@rawstory.com. More about Jordan Green.
'Superman is an illegal immigrant!' 
MAGA buried in mockery over latest meltdown

HE TOO IS A REFUGEE

Matthew Chapman
July 11, 2025 
RAW STORY 


Cast members Nicholas Hoult, Rachel Brosnahan and David Corenswet attend a premiere for the film "Superman" at the TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, U.S., July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Daniel Cole

With the release of the new Superman film, a fresh round of controversy has erupted from Trump supporters over the character's origins and message, with fans and media observers responding with mockery at their apparent ignorance of the source material.

The flareup began earlier this month when director James Gunn characterized the movie as about an "immigrant that came from other places" and said the franchise has a clear political message, lamenting that people have "lost" the value of "basic human kindness."

That didn't sit right with many in the MAGA universe.

"Superman is an illegal immigrant who was sent by his parents to outbreed humans and eventually take over Earth," wrote right-wing webcaster Tim Pool. "What was James Gunn trying to tell us?"

Dean Cain, the lead actor in a much earlier Superman film, was similarly enraged.

“How woke is Hollywood going to make this character?” said Cain. “How much is Disney going to change their Snow White? Why are they going to change these characters to exist for the times? For Superman, it was ‘truth, justice in the American way.’ Well, they dropped that … I don’t think is a great idea.”

But many others ridiculed this meltdown, with some noting that not only has Superman always been considered an immigrant in the original comics, he very frequently pushed messages about inclusion, diversity, and treating people different from yourself with kindness.

"Superman, a fictional character, is an alien from the planet Krypton who seeks refuge in America," wrote podcaster Wajahat Ali. "He is literally an undocumented immigrant."

"I just want to get this straight. The conservative controversy around Superman is that… he’s the good guy in the movie, has a comic-accurate origin as an immigrant, and he’s nice to people?" wrote comedian Mike Drucker. "So they just hate the character Superman? It’s like being mad at Batman for making plans."

"I got news for you MAGA snowflakes: Superman is, and has always been, WOKE," wrote Really American PAC's Majid "Brooklyn Dad Defiant" Padellan. "He is also an undocumented immigrant. If he were real, he'd slap the s--- out of ICE. He fights for the little people. And he fights monsters, corrupt politicians, and even Nazis. His main enemy: A billionaire. The movie is hella fun, full of humor, hope, and great action scenes. If you boycott it, it will probably make 3x more money. And we will laugh at you. I can't wait to see it again."

Trump’s budget chief pushes luxury jet reno while slashing CDC and schools

David Badash, 


U.S. President Donald Trump walks to board Air Force One as he departs for Iowa, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S., July 3, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard

Russell Vought, President Donald Trump’s Director of the Office of Management and Budget, is defending plans to spend an estimated $1 billion retrofitting an aging luxury 747 jetliner for use as Air Force One—even though it will be in service for only about a year—while also backing deep cuts to discretionary programs, including at the CDC, and in public health, education, housing, and science.

Vought, a self-avowed Christian nationalist, is the architect of The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 and the founder of the religious right group Center for Renewing America. He has been described as President Trump’s “holy warrior” who “wants to crush the ‘deep state.'”

On Friday, Vought spoke to reporters, defending billions in cuts to “discretionary spending” while insisting the administration will continue to spend taxpayer funds on its “priorities.”

“We have a lot of administration priorities,” Vought said (video below), when asked specifically about the luxury Air Force One retrofit and Trump’s Rose Garden renovations. “We need ships. We need aircraft, we need a new presidential plane that’s been in the works and been delayed for a long time because contractors are behind.”

When again asked about the billion-dollar Air Force One that will be in service for about a year and then be given to the Trump Library, Vought continued to defend the decision.

“We need additional assets to be able to run this government, including fly the president, keep the president safe, and we’re way behind in that program,” he said, failing to explain if the two current Air Force One jets are no longer capable of keeping the President safe.

“And so that doesn’t mean we don’t spend where we need to spend, but we’ve always offered up a fiscal picture that gets to balance, that reduces the deficit, that deals with our debt, and we’re doing it on a host of ways in this term, and so that won’t change,” he vowed. “So we will continue to, you know, we set up a budget that was $163 billion in cuts to non-defense discretionary spending.”

He insisted the administration needs “to spend in certain areas to secure the country, to perform the functions of the government, and to make sure that, you know, we are investing where we need to invest.”

Calling Trump’s spending “lavish,” The Independent on Friday noted that last week Trump “signed his federal budget bill into law, which extends 2017 tax cuts from Trump’s first term and slashes Medicaid spending by about $1 trillion.”

During his confirmation hearings in January, Vought referred to social safety net programs like Medicaid as a “benefit hammock.”

“You can get sizable levels of savings and reforms,” he said, through so-called welfare reform, The Washington Post reported at the time.

In a 2022 paper produced through Vought’s Center for Renewing America, the “term ‘woke’ appeared 77 times in Mr. Vought’s document,” The New York Times reported in March.

“The proposal looked to slash the ‘woke agenda’ at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for example, targeting money meant for ‘niche and small population groups.’ It proposed jettisoning billions of dollars in ‘woke foreign aid spending’; eliminating entire programs for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities; and striking the ‘secular, woke religion’ of climate change from the federal ledger.”

“That is the central and immediate threat facing the country — the one that all our statesmen must rise tall to vanquish,” Vought wrote. “The battle cannot wait.”

 Watch the video below or at this link.

Friday, July 11, 2025

'Absolute bloodbath for Trump': Experts flag 'stunning numbers' in new poll


Jennifer Bowers Bahney
July 11, 2025 
RAW STORY


Donald Trump (Shutterstock)

President Donald Trump has repeatedly declared that he has a mandate from the American people to stem immigration, but a new Gallup Poll reveals attitudes have shifted since he took office.

Gallup posted Friday, "When asked if immigration is generally a good thing or bad thing for the country, a record-high 79% of U.S. adults call it a good thing; a record-low 17% see it as a bad thing."

Other highlights of the poll showed "30% of Americans want immigration decreased, down from 55% a year ago." It also showed waning support for Trump's border wall and mass deportation policy.

Gallup based the findings on a June 2-26 sample of 1,402 U.S. adults, "including oversamples of Hispanic and Black Americans, weighted to match national demographics."

CNN's Aaron Blake called the numbers "stunning" when summing up the poll: "About 7 in 10 independents disapprove of Trump's handling of immigration -- despite a historic drop in border crossings. And a 21st Century-high 79% of Americans said immigration is a 'good thing' -- up from 64% last year."

Blake offered a caveat, however: "Worth noting that other pollsters haven't shown independents souring quite so much on Trump's immigration policies. A Marist poll from last month showed indies disapproved 59-36. But that's still lopsided."

Prem Thacker with Zateo News exclaimed, "Wow....It’s almost like Americans were never fundamentally, inevitably 'anti-immigration' and Democrats never had to just put their hands up and meekly chase Republicans (and lose), and affirm all their anti-immigrant positions that helped get us here at all!"

Global Refuge's Tim Young declared, "the pendulum has swung drastically since last year" on the issue of immigration, while The Cato Institute's David J. Bier called it an "absolute bloodbath for Trump."

Sahil Kapur with NBC News called the poll the result of "backlash politics taking effect," and Journalist Doug Henwood declared, "Support for immigration hits a record; Trump deep underwater on the issue."

View the Gallup Poll on immigration here.
TEXAS FLOODISASTER 

'Horrific': Thousands of flood survivors called for aid — but FEMA didn’t answer


Daniel Hampton
July 11, 2025 
RAW STORY


FILE PHOTO: U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem speaks about the Federal Emergency Management Agency next to U.S. President Donald Trump, in the Oval Office at the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 10, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard/File Photo

Thousands of calls to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, just two days after deadly floods tore through central Texas, went unanswered because hundreds of call center contractors were let go the previous day, according to a new report in The New York Times.

Catastrophic flooding struck the Hill Country and Kerr County, beginning in the early hours of July 4. Torrential rains caused the Guadalupe River to rise 26 feet in just 45 minutes, creating a historic flash flood emergency.

At least 121 people died, many of them children, and more than 170 people remain missing.

As floodwaters receded on July 5, FEMA answered over 99% of the 3,027 calls from disaster survivors, according to documents obtained by the Times. But that evening, Kristi Noem, the secretary of Homeland Security, didn't renew contracts with four companies, resulting in hundreds of contractors being fired, the Times reported, citing the documents and one person briefed on the matter.

The following day, FEMA answered just 36 percent of the 2,363 calls it received, according to the report.

The calls often come from disaster survivors seeking to apply for financial assistance. People who've lost their homes can obtain an immediate payment of $750 to cover food and other needs.

FEMA's failure to take about two-thirds of calls so soon after a disaster left experts taken aback.

“Responding to less than half of the inquiries is pretty horrific,” Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, told the Times.

“Put yourself in the shoes of a survivor: You’ve lost everything, you’re trying to find out what’s insured and what’s not, and you’re navigating multiple aid programs,” he added. “One of the most important services in disaster recovery is being able to call someone and walk through these processes and paperwork.”

The report comes amid revelations that Noem waited three days to send FEMA rescuers to the area, insisting she had to personally authorize expenses topping $100,000.

David Richardson, the acting administrator of FEMA, has also drawn criticism for being noticeably absent.


'There was plenty of time!' Forecaster aghast to learn his flood warning ignored

Jennifer Berry Hawes, 
Propublica
July 11, 2025 


Campists' belongings lie on the ground following flooding on the Guadalupe River, at Camp Mystic, Hunt, Texas, U.S. July 7, 2025. REUTERS/Marco Bello TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY


Nine months ago, Hurricane Helene barreled up from the Gulf of Mexico and slammed into the rugged mountains of western North Carolina, dumping a foot of rain onto an already saturated landscape. More than 100 people died, most by drowning in floodwaters or being crushed by water-fueled landslides.

“We had no idea it was going to do what it did,” said Jeff Howell, the now-retired emergency manager in Yancey County, North Carolina, a rural expanse that suffered the most deaths per capita.

A week ago, the remnants of Tropical Storm Barry slipped up from the coast of Mexico, drawing moisture from the Gulf, then collided with another system and inundated rivers and creeks in hilly south central Texas. More than 100 people are confirmed dead, many of them children, with more missing.

“We had no reason to believe that this was going to be anything like what’s happened here — none whatsoever,” said County Judge Rob Kelly, the top elected official in Kerr County, Texas, where most of the deaths occurred.

The similarities between North Carolina and Texas extend beyond the words of these two officials. In both disasters, there was a disconnect between accurate weather alerts and on-the-ground action that could have saved lives.

Officials in each of those places were warned. The National Weather Service sent urgent alerts about potentially life-threatening danger hours in advance of the flash floods, leaving time to notify and try to evacuate people in harm’s way.

In Texas, some local officials did just that. But others did not.

Similarly, a ProPublica investigation found that when Helene hit on Sept. 27, some local officials in North Carolina issued evacuation orders. At least five counties in Helene’s path, including Yancey, did not. Howell said the enormity of the storm was far worse than anyone alive had ever seen and that he notified residents as best he could.

The National Weather Service described Helene’s approach for days. It sent out increasingly dire alerts warning of dangerous flash flooding and landslides. Its staff spoke directly with local emergency managers and held webinar updates. A Facebook message the regional office posted around 1 p.m. the day before Helene hit warned of “significant to catastrophic, life-threatening flooding” in the mountains. “This will be one of the most significant weather events to happen in the western portions of the area in the modern era.”

Similarly, in Texas, the weather service warned of potential for flash flooding the day before. Also that day, the state emergency management agency’s regional director had “personally contacted” county judges, mayors and others “in that area and notified them all of potential flooding,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick later said at a press conference.

AccuWeather, a commercial weather forecasting service, issued the first flash flood warnings for the area at 12:44 a.m. on July 4, roughly three hours before the catastrophic flooding. A half-hour later, at 1:14 a.m., the National Weather Service sent a similar warning to two specific areas, including central Kerr County, where the Guadalupe River’s banks and hills are dotted with vacation homes, summer camps and campgrounds — many filled with July 4 vacationers slumbering in cabins and RVs.

“Flash flooding is ongoing or expected to begin shortly,” the weather service alert said. Impacts could include “life threatening flash flooding of creeks and streams.”

A severity descriptor on that alert sent it to weather radios and the nation’s Wireless Emergency Alerts system, which blasts weather warnings to cellphones to blare an alarm.

AccuWeather’s chief meteorologist, Jonathan Porter, was dismayed to hear news later that all the children attending youth camps in Kerr County had not been ushered to higher ground despite those warnings.

At Camp Mystic, a beloved century-old Christian summer camp for girls, at least 27 campers and counselors were killed. Six still haven’t been found. Its director also died, while trying to rescue children. (People at the camp said they received little to no help from the authorities, according to The New York Times.)

“I was very concerned to see that campers were awoken not by someone coming to tell them to evacuate based on timely warnings issued but rather by rapidly rising water that was going up to the second level of their bunkbeds,” Porter said.

In the area, known as Flash Flood Alley, Porter called this “a tragedy of the worst sort” because it appeared camps and local officials could have mobilized sooner in response to the alerts.

“There was plenty of time to evacuate people to higher ground,” Porter said. “The question is, Why did that not happen?”

But Dalton Rice, city manager of Kerrville, the county seat, said at a press conference the next day that “there wasn’t a lot of time” to communicate the risk to camps because the floodwaters rose so rapidly.

Rice said that at 3:30 a.m. — more than two hours after the flash flood warnings began — he went jogging near the Guadalupe River to check it out but didn’t see anything concerning.

But 13 miles upriver from the park where he was jogging, the river began — at 3:10 a.m. — to rise 25 feet in just two hours.

At 4:03 a.m., the weather service upgraded the warning to an “emergency”— its most severe flash flood alert — with a tag of “catastrophic.” It singled out the Guadalupe River at Hunt in Kerr County: “This is a PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION. SEEK HIGHER GROUND NOW!”

The local sheriff said he wasn’t made aware of the flooding until 4 to 5 a.m. He has declined to say whether the local emergency manager, who is responsible for alerting the public to approaching storms, was awake when the flash flood warnings went out starting at 1 a.m. The Texas Tribune reported that Kerrville’s mayor said he wasn’t aware of the flooding until around 5:30 a.m., when the city manager called and woke him up.

Local officials have refused to provide more details, saying they are focused on finding the more than 100 people still missing and notifying loved ones of deaths.

One challenge as disasters approach is that weather alerts often don’t reach the people in harm’s way.

In rural areas across Texas and North Carolina alike, cellphone service can be spotty on the best of days, and some people turn off alert notifications. In North Carolina’s remote mountains, many people live at least somewhat off the grid. The cell service isn’t great everywhere, and many aren’t glued to phones or social media. In Texas, Kerr County residents posted on Facebook complaints that they didn’t receive the weather service’s alerts while others said their phones blared all night with warnings.

Many counties also use apps to send their own alerts, often tailored to their specific rivers and roads. But residents must opt in to receive them. Kerr County uses CodeRed, but it isn’t clear what alerts it sent out overnight.

Pete Jensen has spent a long career in emergency management, including responding to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack. He served as an official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency during Hurricane Katrina and often ponders why more people don’t receive – and heed – weather alerts.

“There’s an awful lot of denial,” Jensen said. “Disasters happen to someone else. They don’t happen to me.” That can include local officials who “don’t always understand what their responsibilities are. They very often react like most humans do – in denial.”

There is one big difference between the disasters in Texas and North Carolina. In Texas, residents, journalists and others have demanded accountability from local officials. Gov. Greg Abbott has called the Legislature into special session starting July 21 to discuss flood warning systems, flood emergency communications and natural disaster preparation.

But that hasn’t happened in North Carolina. The state legislature has yet to discuss possible changes, such as expanding its Know Your Zone evacuation plan beyond the coast, or boost funding for local emergency managers. (Instead, lawmakers went home in late June without passing a full budget.) Many emergency managers, including in Yancey County, operate in rural areas with small tax bases and skeleton staffs.

“There still has not been an outcry here for, How do we do things differently?” said state Sen. Julie Mayfield, a Democrat from Asheville. “It still feels like we’re very much in recovery mode.”

North Carolina’s emergency management agency commissioned a review of its handling of the disaster. The report found the state agency severely understaffed, but it didn’t examine issues such as evacuations or local emergency managers’ actions before Helene hit.

Erika Andresen also lives in Asheville, a mountain city in the heart of Helene’s destruction, where she helps businesses prepare for disasters. A lawyer and former Army judge advocate, she also teaches emergency management. After Helene, she was among the few voices in North Carolina criticizing the lack of evacuations and other inactions ahead of the storm.

“I knew right away, both from my instinct and from my experience, that a lot of things went terribly wrong,” Andresen said. When she got pushback against criticizing local authorities in a time of crisis, she countered, “We need accountability.”


'Evil person': Trump lashes out as reporter asks about flood alert failure


Sarah K. Burris
July 11, 2025 4:53PM 
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump and Texas Governor Greg Abbott participate in a roundtable with first responders and local officials, at Hill Country Youth Center, in Kerrville, Texas, U.S., July 11, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

A Texas CBS News reporter asked President Donald Trump about recent revelations that FEMA documents showed emergency alerts about devastating floods were not sent to cell phones as previously indicated.

While the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration sent out alerts that would have triggered those with weather radios, key cell phone alerts did not go out until it was too late.

The National Weather Service also sent out its flood warning from the system, known as IPAWS, as early as 1:14 a.m.

"However, weather service forecasters cannot issue instructions on whether to evacuate or wait for rescue; those messages are up to county or city officials," reported NBC 5 News. "The FEMA archive showed that Kerr County did not send any wireless alerts through IPAWS on July 4, when the flooding began."

"Several families we've heard from are obviously upset because they say that those warnings, those alerts, didn't go out in time. And they also say that people could have been saved. What do you say to those families?" the reporter asked.

Trump pivoted to say that "everyone did an incredible job," refusing to address the suggestion of failures.

"This was, I guess, Kristi [Noem] said, a 1 in 500, 1 in 1,000 years" event, Trump claimed. "And I just have admiration for the job that everybody did. There was just admiration.

"Only a bad person would ask a question like that, to be honest with you. I don't know who you are, but only a very evil person would ask a question like that. I think this has been heroism. This has been incredible, really, the job you've all done, it's easy to sit back and say, oh, what could have happened here? There? You know, maybe we could have done something differently. This was a thing that has never happened before, and nobody's ever seen anything — I've never seen anything like this."

The area of Texas where the flood occurred is known as Flash Flood Ally. It has experienced huge floods previously, including one in 1987. It prompted mayors in the past to beg for alert sirens, though it was later decided not to install them.

"I've never seen anything like this," Trump complained. "So, I admire you, and I consider you heroes and heroines. And I think you've done an amazing job."


See the clip below or at the link here.






‘Bad talent!’ Jasmine Crockett and ‘left-wing ghouls’ bashed at flood presser

Alexander Willis
July 11, 2025 
RAW STORY


U.S. President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump and Texas Governor Greg Abbott participate in a roundtable with first responders and local officials after catastrophic floods, at Hill Country Youth Center, in Kerrville, Texas, U.S., July 11, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

A Texas reporter lashed out Friday at what he called “ghouls on the left” and the “left-wing media” during a news conference on the Texas flood disaster, singling out Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) in particular.

The conference was headed by President Donald Trump, Gov. Gregg Abbott (R-TX), and a number of other federal and Texas officials and first responders. Phil McGraw, better known as Dr. Phil, also participated in the presser.

“What's been so disheartening recently are these ghouls on the left like Jasmine Crockett and the left-wing media who want to point fingers, play partisan games and fundraise off of this crisis,” the reporter said when selected by Trump for a question.

“What I love about Texas is we come together in a crisis across party lines, ideological lines, so what is your message to these folks on the left who are using this to gain partisan points in viral videos?”

With at least 120 dead and 173 missing from the flood that ravaged central Texas on July 4, a significant number of them children, critics have pressed local and federal officials on what some have described as inadequate warnings for the disaster. Some have blamed the Trump administration’s cuts to federal weather and emergency agencies, while others have labeled it a failure of local officials.

Among those critics has been Crockett, who on Friday signed off on a letter to the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration demanding information on the agencies’ preparedness and response to the flood.

“The tragic loss of life suffered underscores the urgent need to understand what contributed to this disaster.

“While (the National Weather Service) did issue several flood warning alerts, including one indicating ‘a large and deadly flood wave’ at 5:34 am Friday that urged residents and campers in Kerr County to seek higher ground, there are concerns about the effectiveness of those warnings,” the letter reads.


“Reports suggest that some residents may not have received these messages and others did not fully grasp the seriousness of the flood.”


In response to the reporter’s question, Trump simply argued that it was a matter of “lost confidence” as to why “ghouls on the left” and the “left-wing media” continue to pose tough questions on the flood response.

“They've lost their confidence, they've had a tremendous run of bad talent – I don't say bad luck, I say bad talent – and all they want to do is criticize,” Trump said.

Watch the video below or use this link.

US Militia attacks on weather radars are fueled by the right's assault on reality

Thom Hartmann
July 11, 2025 
COMMON DREAMS


The National Weather Service logo is displayed at the National Hurricane Center. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo

In Oklahoma, a domestic militia calling itself “Veterans on Patrol” is systematically targeting weather radars. Their leader, Michael Lewis Arthur Meyer, claims the military is controlling the weather through Doppler radar systems and that these machines are part of a divine affront — a “weather weapon” — that is “mocking God Himself.”

He’s encouraging his followers to sabotage these radars under an operation he calls “Leaning Tower.” This isn’t just fringe paranoia: it’s part of a growing anti-reality insurgency that threatens our democracy itself.

Let’s be blunt: this is insanity. Not just in its content, but in its consequences. And yet, it’s not isolated. It’s one of many conspiracy-fueled campaigns that now animate parts of American life, often backed by violence or intimidation. From QAnon to flat-earth nonsense to vaccine “skeptics” now within the Food and Drug Administration, we’re watching a dangerous erosion of truth, a collapse of shared facts, and an outright assault on the institutions that protect life and liberty.

What’s happening here isn’t just about weather radars: it’s about reality itself.

When people are told not to believe their own eyes, not to trust scientists, doctors, journalists, or even the National Weather Service, society begins to crack. And the people exploiting those cracks — including some of the Trump administration’s most senior officials (see: Bob Kennedy and Stephen Miller, among others) — know exactly what they’re doing.

Veterans on Patrol isn’t just anti-science or anti-government; it’s anti-democracy. It joins a growing list of extremist groups peddling lies and hatred: anti-immigrant, anti-Indigenous, antisemitic, misogynist, anti-Catholic, anti-Muslim. It wraps its destruction in the flag and cloaks its violence in religion. And when Meyer boasts about being responsible for “a lot more than” taking down a radar, we’d be fools not to take him seriously. Oklahoma, after all, remembers Timothy McVeigh.

This latest attack rendered a critical radar system “instantly obsolete,” according to meteorologist David Payne. That radar was designed to save lives, particularly in tornado-prone Oklahoma. When it’s destroyed, people will die. Period. This is not free speech: this is domestic terrorism.

But here’s the deeper issue: this attack is only a symptom, not the disease. The disease is the deliberate poisoning of the American mind with fantasy and fear by a network and system of media and social media owned by anti-democracy rightwing billionaires and filled with Russian trolls. And when truth dies, democracy soon follows.

Because democracy — as Thomas Jefferson so accurately pointed out (“Whenever the people are well informed, they may be trusted with their own government”) — depends on an educated public operating on the basis of shared truths and actual facts.

You can’t have a functioning republic if half the country believes extreme weather is a “liberal weapon” and the other half knows it’s the result of an atmosphere warmed by fossil fuel emissions. You can’t govern when reality itself is disputed. And you certainly can’t maintain civil peace when people are being radicalized into acts of violence based on complete and utter delusion.

The fossil-fuel-billionaire-funded radical right’s war on truth isn’t new, but it’s accelerating. When lies are repeated often enough, they become gospel to those who want to believe them.

Right-wing media outlets, extremist influencers, and opportunistic Republicans have learned — as Josef Goebbels famously preached — that a lie can be more powerful than the truth when it aligns with grievance, fear, and identity and is repeated often enough.


The problem isn’t just gullibility. It’s that these lies are weaponized. And when they take hold, facts become negotiable, science becomes suspect, and even saving people from storms becomes controversial.

Just look at how the “mainstream media” consistently omits from their reporting on Trump’s tariffs that they’re a clear violation of the Constitution and was explicitly called that in an unanimous decision by the US Trade Court, as Robert Hubbell points out so eloquently.

Or when the media ignores the 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 14th amendment violations of ICE’s random, masked, warrantless arrests and incarceration of brown-skinned people, including those with Green Cards at the “Alligator Alcatraz” concentration camp, along with those with full, court-ordered permission to be here in America.


What does this mean for democracy?A shattered consensus on truth makes informed voting impossible. If voters can’t agree on basic facts — like whether the atmosphere is heating up or whether a vaccine works — how can they make rational decisions at the ballot box?
The weaponization of delusion breeds violence. Just like the January 6th attack on our Capitol, these radar attacks are fueled by conspiracy and rage. They don’t just damage property, they destabilize the rule of law.
When truth is optional, tyranny becomes inevitable. Autocrats thrive in the fog of misinformation. The more confused and divided a people are, the easier they are to control, thus the daily Trump Reality Show.
Public trust collapses. Scientists, educators, journalists, and public servants all become suspect. That vacuum gets filled by cult leaders, armed militias, and political demagogues.
Democracy becomes unrecognizable. Without a shared sense of reality, debate becomes pointless, compromise becomes impossible, and elections become battlegrounds instead of ways to determine a rational direction for our shared future.

So what do we do?



We fight back with truth. Unapologetically. Loudly. Persistently.

We stand up for science. For journalism. For civic education. For basic decency.

We hold platforms accountable that spread lies, tweak their algorithms secretly to promote anti-democracy messages, and reject the persistent “mainstream media” cowardice of both-sidesism. There aren’t “two sides” to facts. There is reality and there are lies.


We support platforms, networks, media, newsletters, programs, writers, speakers, politicians, and movements that promote the truth and push back against the creeping fascism that is rapidly overtaking our nation.

So we must loudly and persistently call this out for what it is: an attempt — which has so far been successful at destroying democracy in nations like Russia, Hungary, and Turkey — to engage in social and political sabotage. It’s radicalism, a form of domestic terrorism whose target is democracy itself.

And it’s time to say: enough.

Because without truth, we don’t just lose the weather forecast.


We lose our nation.


Militia fueled by bizarre conspiracy theory brings down weather radars

Sarah K. Burris
July 9, 2025 
RAW STORY


Courtesy Tucson Police Department

A militia known as the "Veterans on Patrol" aims to dismantle weather radars, and KWTV News 9 has discovered that it's part of a larger conspiracy theory surrounding weather manipulation.

Amid false conspiracies about the floods in Texas being part of a kind of cloud seeding attack, organization founder Michael Lewis Arthur Meyer confirmed to News 9 that they were "absolutely" working to target Oklahoma radars.

The comments come "days after an individual vandalized News 9’s weather radar," the report said.

A sign they found posted near one Oklahoma weather radar claims that Doppler radars are being targeted "by victims of U.S. military weather experimentation." The militia calls it "Operation Leaning Tower."

The Southern Poverty Law Center classified VoP as an “anti-government militia,” which also promotes "anti-immigrant ideas," as well as "anti-Indigenous, antisemitic, anti-Catholic and anti-Mormon falsehoods."

"They can embed their technology and civilian infrastructure in every home and every household utilizing the phones and their network towers to not only control the weather, modify the weather, but they can [target] individuals,” Meyer, a Christian Nationalist, told News9.

Last year, Meyer was part of an effort in North Carolina after Hurricane Helene for posing as an aid worker to encourage locals to tear down cell towers and attack the military.

"When the military plays God with the weather, they're mocking our Heavenly Father by calling one of his most favorite instruments a 'weather weapon,'" Meyer added.

When asked whether VoP is responsible for bringing down the News 9 weather radar, Meyer responded, "Veterans On Patrol is responsible for a lot more than that."

News 9’s Chief Meteorologist David Payne fact-checked the claims, explaining that weather radars have no weaponry.

“We have one of the most powerful live radars in Oklahoma, and one of the most powerful live radars in the country, but we cannot do any weather modification at all,” he said.

When those radars are damaged, “We cannot track severe weather. We cannot track tornadoes, and it basically becomes instantly obsolete," he added.

Payne said he wished that he could use radars like that to help save lives.

“I wish we could turn it on and say, 'oh, let's make that tornado go away,' but our weather radar and all of the weather radars in the U.S. are built strictly to inform and warn the public, and to keep the public safe -- and that's exactly why we have our live radar," Payne said.

Oklahoma is no stranger to domestic terrorism. In 1995, anti-government terrorist Timothy McVeigh bombed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. It killed 168 people and injured 680 others.

Read the full report here.


Meteorologists rush to social media to stop far-right conspiracies about floods

Sarah K. Burris
July 9, 2025 
RAW STORY



People stand near debris following flash flooding, in Kerrville, Texas, U.S. July 5, 2025. REUTERS/Marco Bello

Far-right conspiracy theories are percolating through social media after the floods in Texas on July 4, and now as flooding also plagues New Mexico. It prompted several local meteorologists to issue their own fact-checks and explain some of the myths around cloud seeding.

The Guardian reported on Wednesday that rumors about the "deep state" are spreading amid the weather disasters.

"Some people, emerging from the same vectors associated with the longstanding QAnon conspiracy theory, which essentially holds that a shadowy 'deep state' is acting against President Donald Trump, spread on X that the devastating weather was being controlled by the government," the report said.

The report cited Pete Chambers, a former special forces commander and frequent poster in the far-right manosphere. On July 5, he posted several screen captures of documents, demanding, “I NEED SOMEONE TO LOOK INTO WHO WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS. WHEN WAS THE LAST CLOUD SEEDING?”

One document was about a “precipitation enhancement” company, Rainmaker, that he thinks caused the flood. The post has had over three million views.

That same claim spread among other like-minded people across X, reaching MAGA world leaders like retired Lt. Gen. Mike Flynn, who formerly served as President Donald Trump's national security advisor. He asked, "Anyone able to answer this?"

Self-described content creator Randy Sevy tied it to former President Bill Clinton with a photo of him and Augustus Doricko, the young tech CEO and founder of Rainmaker, a cloud seeding company, "backed by Peter Thiel-linked investors."

YouTuber with 347,000 subscribers posted his own video boasting to know "the truth about weather manipulation." It has had over 202,000 views.

Meanwhile, meteorologist Matt Jones of KSLA News 12 posted his own lesson addressing "the ridiculous comments I've been seeing on social media lately."

"Is cloud seeding responsible for the recent flash floods? NO. The process of cloud seeding is not capable of producing the type of intense rainfall that would lead to flash flooding," he wrote with an explainer about cloud seeding.

WTVT FOX 13's chief meteorologist, Paul Dellegatto, posted several screen captures of reports on cloud seeding, saying, "Apparently, CLOUD SEEDING is the now the cause of all major weather events! Texas floods? Cloud seeding! Hurricane Milton? Cloud seeding! Snow in the Florida panhandle? Cloud seeding!"

ABC13’s chief meteorologist Travis Herzog, out of Houston, has posted two explainers addressing the "viral videos" claiming cloud seeding was the culprit of the floods.

"Were cloud seeding operations conducted on the storms that produced the Texas floods? No," he wrote. "In fact, Texas regulations prohibit cloud seeding on storms that could produce severe weather, tornadoes, or flash floods. One of the companies singled out on social media for cloud seeding conducted its last operation on Wednesday, July 2nd."

He explained that "only an existing cloud can be seeded, and once that cloud has been seeded, it rains itself out. Furthermore, the cloud seeding took place southeast of San Antonio, roughly 150 miles away from Kerr County."

In another post, he noted that "Tropical Storm Barry is primarily responsible for this flood event, with an assist from upper level moisture peeled off from what was once Hurricane Flossie in the Pacific..."

As for New Mexico, the National Weather Service "monsoon awareness" page from 2018 explains that the state is affected by the North American Monsoon System (NAMS) each summer between June 15 and Sept. 30th.

Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. has reiterated during several press conferences over the past few days that a relief fund has been established through the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country for those seeking ways to help.
'DeSantis lied’: Key claim behind 'Alligator Alcatraz' just collapsed


Matthew Chapman
July 11, 2025 
RAW STORY

When Florida Republicans unveiled a makeshift detention camp site for migrants in the Everglades known as "Alligator Alcatraz," they characterized it as a facility for hardened criminals who needed to be deported in the interest of public safety.

But a new Washington Post report reveals quite the opposite — that Florida officials are relying in large part on minor traffic stops to find immigrants to throw in the facility.

"We spent 6 hours with Florida Highway Patrol and got an inside look at how they're encountering illegal immigrants at traffic stops and turning them over to Border Patrol and ICE, where they're sent to ‘Alligator Alcatraz,' under DeSantis," wrote Washington Post DHS reporter Anna Giaritelli in a lengthy thread posted to X. What they found, she said, is that "Since March, FL Highway Patrol has turned over 3,300 illegal immigrants found at traffic stops to the feds" — and many were stopped for very low-level reasons.

This is a new practice, as in the past, Florida state troopers couldn't hand over people from traffic stops to federal agents.

Among those who were rounded up in such arrests were "2 illegal immigrants and a 15 y/o who said he had come over the southern border and his family was in Guatemala. Cause of traffic stop was cutting across 3 lanes of traffic, no seat belt," she wrote. Others were stopped for texting and driving, or for not wearing a seat belt, and found to be operating without a license.

And in another case, she wrote, "A large truck delivering plants was pulled over for what the officer suspected was too dark a tint. That showed not to be the case, but while stopped, the 3 men in the backseat disobeyed orders to stay inside so the officer detained them, then asked for ID. That's when their lack of immigration status came out."

"This thread makes clear how much Gov. Desantis lied about about 'Alligator Alcatraz' being for 'the worst of the worst,'" wrote American Immigration Council fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick. "Florida Highway Patrol is doing clearly pretextual arrests (window tints, seat belts) and sending every undocumented immigrant they stop to the camp. For example, the claim that Florida Highway Patrol is stopping landscaping trucks for alleged traffic violations is classic Driving While Black/Driving While Brown pretext."

"Alligator Alcatraz" has come under fire for brutal conditions, including inconsistent air conditioning, infestations of "bugs the size of hands," and flooding during storms, even though state officials have insisted the facility is "hurricane-proof."