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WEDNESDAY 7-[08]-26



SPIRITUAL:

 VERSE-for-TODAY

New International Version

 

I will bow down toward your holy temple and will praise your name for your unfailing love and your faithfulness, for you have so exalted your solemn decree that it surpasses your fame.

Read all of Psalm 138 ►

 

 

 

Intelligence REPORT


Baghdad barred every Iran contact. Washington hit 80+ targets in Hormuz. Treasury killed Iran's oil license after 15 days.

By David E Atterton • 8 Jul 2026


Wednesday July 8. Baghdad. Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi spent yesterday closing 3 doors on Tehran at once. He sent a classified order barring every Iraqi official, party boss and militia commander from any contact with Iran without his government's sign-off. As that order moved, US Central Command hit more than 80 targets along Iran's coast, and Scott Bessent's Treasury tore up the license that let Iran sell its oil. All 3 landed on the same Tuesday, the day Iran's president Masoud Pezeshkian walked behind Ali Khamenei's coffin through Najaf, the holiest city in Shia Islam.


Yesterday, in From the Cradle to the Grave, we said the story was never the funeral, but what Baghdad was building underneath it. Here is the answer. In a single day it bolted every door Tehran used to reach into Iraqi politics, and it moved while the cortege gave the cameras somewhere else to point. That is what matters most for your money this week, and it is where we begin.


The Order Under the Funeral

Start with the order no one was meant to see. While the cortege moved through Najaf, Iraq's prime minister Ali al-Zaidi sent classified instructions to his senior political, security, and military leaders. The rule is blunt. No contact with the Iranian side, at any level, without the government's prior approval. No party boss or militia commander flies to Iran through an Iraqi airport without written permission. A warning sits at the bottom: if your convoy takes an unofficial route and an American or Israeli strike finds it, Baghdad will not answer for you.


This surfaced through Iraqi political figures relayed by a UAE outlet, with no official readout yet, so carry it as reported. It does not stand alone. It belongs to the same campaign as the September 30 deadline for the militias to disarm, the Green Zone arrests from The Immunity Trap, and the understanding al-Zaidi signed with Washington's envoy. The order finishes the pattern.


Here is what it means for you. For 20 years, Iran's reach into Iraq ran through people, not paper. A phone call, a visit, a commander who slipped across the border and came back with instructions. Al-Zaidi just put the Iraqi state in the middle of EVERY one of those lines. Nothing moves toward Tehran now without Baghdad knowing.


There is a precedent, and Tehran will not enjoy it. In 1948, Josip Broz Tito refused to take his orders from Moscow, broke Yugoslavia out of Stalin's bloc, and purged the pro-Soviet men inside his own party. The Soviet bloc did not crack that day. It simply lost a country it assumed it owned. Baghdad just made that move on paper. The hold that steered Iraqi politics for a generation is not coming apart under fire. It is being cut off, line by line, by the host himself.


Washington Signs While the Coffin Moves

Now set the funeral against what the United States did while it ran. That afternoon, US Central Command opened what it called a series of powerful strikes on Iran. More than 80 targets in a single run: air defense sites, radar, command posts, anti-ship missile batteries, and better than 60 Revolutionary Guard speedboats in and around the Strait of Hormuz. The trigger was Iran's own hand. Hours earlier its forces had fired on 3 commercial ships crossing the strait, among them a Qatari gas carrier, the Al-Rekayat, and the Saudi supertanker Wedyan. Washington called it a gross violation of the ceasefire signed only last month.


Watch where Trump stood when he gave the order. Not the Situation Room. Ankara. A NATO summit on Iran's northern doorstep. He was not gentle with the allies around him. His words: "We weren't treated well because we did something in Iran." Read that plainly. The President ran a strike on Iran from a summit of the alliance, then told that alliance to its face it had not carried its share.


Here is the part that ties back to Najaf. As CENTCOM worked the coast, Pezeshkian was in Iraq burying the man who built the network now being dismantled. Iran spent the day mourning its founder while its Navy lost 60 boats and its coast lost its radar. A government cannot bury its dead and defend its water on the same day. What Najaf put on display was not strength. It was a regime stretched past what it can hold. The timing is not coincidence. It is choreography, and Tehran drew the worse part.

 

The 60-Day License, Killed in 15

July 7. Scott Bessent's Treasury revoked General License X, the late-June authorization that let Iran sell its crude oil legally, openly, after years in the shadows. That license was written to run until August 21. It lasted 15 days. New sales are barred NOW. Buyers get a 10-day window to close out what is already moving, and every dollar has to settle into a blocked, interest-bearing account inside the United States, where Iran cannot reach it.

Understand what was taken back. The point of that license was to let Iran's oil money flow straight into its own central bank, in dollars, cleanly. For a regime whose crude sales are the biggest single source of the cash that pays its proxies, that was OXYGEN. 15 days of it, then the mask came off.


The escape route is narrower than it looks. The obvious buyer is China, the way it has been for years. But Beijing spent 2025 stockpiling cheap crude and is in no rush for more, and the discount that made Iranian oil worth the sanctions risk shrinks the moment the oil is legal. So Iran gets pushed back to the shadow trade it wanted to leave, at worse prices, its own currency parked on the floor near 1,375,000 Rials to the dollar. There is a precedent for a cut this clean. In 2012, the West unplugged Iran's banks from the SWIFT settlement system, the first time a state had ever been shut out of the plumbing of global money. Iranian oil revenue fell by half inside a year. Bessent ran the sharper version in an afternoon. The money door shut between lunch and dinner.


The Compliant Half

So far the story is subtraction, Baghdad closing Iran's doors. Now watch the other hand, because it builds just as fast. The governor of Iraq's central bank spent July 6 with Turkey's ambassador in Baghdad, smoothing the banking rails between Baghdad and Ankara, the paperwork that lets honest trade clear without a smuggler in the middle. Set that beside a date on the near horizon. The 1973 treaty that governs how Iraqi oil crosses Turkey to the Mediterranean expires on July 27. As we flagged in No Shield Left in Baghdad, that deadline is 19 days out, and it forces both capitals to write a fresh deal in the open, on the books, exactly when Iraq wants to prove it can run clean money.

This is the thread under everything this week.


In The CBI Joins the Hunt it was the license pulls and the joint corruption teams. Yesterday it was the customs net that switches on at every crossing on July 10. Today it is a banking understanding with a NATO neighbor and a treaty deadline 19 days out. Each move shuts a smuggler's door and opens a LEGAL one in the same stroke.

And you already know the room this is staged for. Within the week, al-Zaidi flies to Washington with a delegation of business owners at his back, his first White House trip as prime minister. Everything this week, the order under the funeral, the customs net, the banking rails, is a country rehearsing the part it wants in that room. You do not audition for Washington by accident. You audition by showing your work, and Baghdad has spent the week showing it.


What the Dinar Stands On

Here is the fact almost no one reported this month. For the first time since 1996, gold has passed US Treasuries as the largest reserve asset on earth. The newest reserve accounting counts about $4.5 trillion of gold in the world's vaults against roughly $3.5 trillion of American government bonds. Central banks keep buying the metal by the hundreds of tonnes a year. The measuring stick the whole planet saves in just slipped to second place, decided quietly by the people who manage the reserves.

Now bring it home to Baghdad.


We walked you through Iraq's quiet bond buying in The $40.8 Billion Tell, the war chest a serious currency needs before it can hold a stronger price. Set that against a world rotating into gold, and a run of severances that strikes Tehran off the register of claims on Iraq's economy, and the shape of the wait comes clear. Baghdad is not watching the reset from the sidelines. When the dinar finally moves, and $16 trillion of proven resources under Iraqi soil starts pricing closer to its worth, the country lands on a HARDER floor than the dollar it prices against. No date from us. No promised peg. Just a direction that has not turned since the licenses started falling.


The Read

Everyone is reading yesterday as a war story. Missiles. Tankers. A funeral on foreign soil. That is the version on every screen this morning, and it is the wrong one. Yesterday was a currency story wearing a war story's clothes.


Here is what the cameras missed while they pointed at the coffin. For 20 years, Iran held a claim on Iraq. Not a flag, not a base, a lien, the kind that sits quietly on a balance sheet and takes its cut. It collected through ACCESS: a friendly face in a ministry, a courier who ran orders across the border, a bank that moved the money and asked nothing. That was the real OCCUPATION. It never needed TANKS.


In a single day, 3 hands reached in and cut that claim out. Baghdad sent a quiet order that drops the state into the middle of every private line to Tehran. Washington worked Iran's coastline until its navy and its radar were gone. And the US Treasury cancelled the lone license that let Iran turn its oil into clean dollars, 15 days into a deal built to run 60. 3 cuts in a day, and Iran was too busy burying a founder it had kept above ground since February to defend a single one.


Now, why does a family man in Idaho or a single mother in Sydney care what came off Iraq's books yesterday? Because it is the reason the dinar is still frozen at a program rate, priced far below what the country behind it is worth. That rate is a decision, held in place by every outside hand still taking a piece of the country it belongs to. Take those hands off, one by one, and the wealth underneath, $16 trillion of oil and gas and metal buried in Iraqi ground, is finally free to price at what it is worth. Yesterday the biggest hand of all, the one that ran the whole skim, was cut off.


So, while the news argues about whether this means a wider war, you get to watch what everyone else is missing: a balance sheet clearing. The dates that matter are not the airstrikes. They are July 10, when Iraq's new customs system makes the old paper invoice worthless, and the flight a week from now, when al-Zaidi walks into the White House representing a country that just took itself back.




They watched a funeral.

You watched a country stop paying rent.





=============

 

CANADIAN:

Canadians could be sued by Liberal gov’t for posting ‘misinformation’ on social media: report


An internal government memo that has alarmed Conservatives shows plans to not only identify but track and go after individuals whose online content is deemed 'misinformation.'

OTTAWA (LifeSiteNews) — A Canadian federal minister has devised plans and a strategy to monitor the public’s social media use while at the same time coming up with possible actions that can be taken against people for posting “misleading information” online.

The plan comes from Industry Minister Mélanie Joly, whose departmental strategy has alarmed Conservative MPs.


As first reported by Blacklock’s Reporter, a 35-page internal memo with the title Misinformation and Disinformation Strategy was made public via an Access to Information request. The memo shows plans to not only identify but track and go after those whose online content is deemed “misinformation.”


“This strategy seeks to uphold the integrity of and public trust in government information,” noted an excerpt from the memo dated March 31.

While no specific penalties are mentioned in the memo, its goal is to create a framework to “prevent, detect and respond to false or misleading information.”

According to Canada’s Industry Department, its staff is already monitoring social media sites and general Canadian media for people’s comments.

The strategy is to expand what the department does from a “reactive stance to one that is focused on prevention and early detection.”


According to officials, doing so would “proactively address false and misleading information” on social media sites such as X, Facebook, and others to build momentum.

The memo stated that the department would be in charge of deciding if any online content from social media was “factually incorrect, misleading or out of context.”

Action taken against those who have “factually incorrect” content would need senior approval and would be a “proportionate” response.


Conservative MP Leslyn Lewis blasted the federal government’s plan monitor citizens’ social media, saying it looks like the government wants to become the “arbiter of truth.”

“Who defines what is ‘misinformation’?” she said in an X post, noting, “Will government become the arbiter of truth?

“That is a dangerous path for a free society.”


Conservative MP Roman Baber said that the government “should fear citizens at the free press and the ballot box.”

“But the reverse, citizens fearing government gives rise to authoritarianism!,” he noted in an X post.


“Conservatives will not tolerate any Liberal assault to Canadians’ Civil Liberties.”

The memo indicated that there are serious risks in going after social media users, warning that any response could trigger online backlash “lending legitimacy to fringe sources.”


The current government under Prime Minister Mark Carney has continued the legacy of former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in going after Canadians’ online freedoms.

The Liberal government’s “dystopian” internet censorship Bill C-22, which would demand that people’s data be kept for potential police review, was rammed through the House of Commons with unvetted amendments.

Also, Bill C-9 was recently passed by the Senate and will repeal religious protections and effectively criminalize quoting parts of the Bible, including on homosexuality. It was amended at the last minute to ban images of a noose because a senator said it’s a symbol of “White supremacy.”

Another law, Bill C-34, looks to ban social media use for minors. However, constitutional groups have warned the social media ban could lead to surrendering “freedoms.”

Carney has globalist ties and was called the World Economic Forum’s “golden boy” by Canadian Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre. The prime minister has also admitted that he is an “elitist” and a “globalist.”

The LIFE Site News

 

Carney’s Senate Appointments

The latest: In his first Senate appointments, Prime Minister Mark Carney named a Quebec Conservative, a veteran Liberal strategist and two others to fill vacancies. He also announced that Ottawa would be officially eliminating “non-partisanship” as one of the criteria for selecting candidates.

The appointees: 

1.   Quebec Conservative MP Richard Martel is quitting his caucus and will be appointed to the Senate to sit as an independent.

2.   Carney also appointed Tom Pitfield, a Liberal operative who served as Carney’s principal secretary;

3.   New Brunswick physician Rodney Ouellette;

4.   and Manitoba’s Geeta Tucker, a corporate executive.


Martel’s departure from the Tory caucus puts more pressure on Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who has lost five MPs in the past year.

The Globe and Mail 

 



TRUMP: 

When will IRAN finally ‘Get It’?

AI-Summary...

The article reports a major escalation in the conflict between the United States and Iran despite an interim agreement intended to reduce hostilities.

  • The U.S. military launched new airstrikes on Iranian military targets, including air defense systems, missile sites, drone launch locations, coastal surveillance systems, and some port facilities. The strikes were described as retaliation for attacks on commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

  • Earlier, three merchant ships were attacked in the strait. One liquefied natural gas tanker caught fire, while two other vessels were damaged but continued sailing. No injuries were reported.

  • The U.S. also revoked a temporary license allowing Iranian oil sales, arguing that Iran's actions violated the interim agreement. Iran condemned both the military strikes and the license revocation as breaches of the deal.

  • The attacks threaten shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global trade route that normally carries about 20% of the world's traded oil and natural gas, raising concerns about energy supplies and the global economy.

  • Diplomatic efforts to negotiate a permanent peace and address Iran's nuclear program have stalled, with talks reportedly paused until after the funeral of Iran's Supreme Leader.

  • The article also describes the funeral ceremonies for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was reportedly killed at the start of the war. Large public processions are taking place in Iran and Iraq, while his son and successor, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, has not appeared publicly and is reportedly in hiding after being wounded.

 

 

US Revoking License That Authorized Iranian Oil Sales, Official Says

The United States is revoking a ‌general license that authorized the sale of Iranian oil, a U.S. official said on Tuesday, warning that Iran's actions in the Strait of Hormuz were "wholly unacceptable" and would be met with consequences after attacks on tankers in the strategic waterway.


The move came after ‌three tankers reported being struck by unknown projectiles in and ​near the Strait of Hormuz in recent days, the British navy-affiliated agency UKMTO said in a report. There was no immediate ⁠comment from Tehran, or any claim of responsibility.

A U.S. official said negotiators ​continued to work in good faith toward a final agreement with Iran ⁠despite the latest escalation.


The attacks and the U.S. response threaten to put a fragile diplomatic understanding between Washington and Tehran on shaky ground, raising the risk that further retaliation could derail negotiations ‌over a broader agreement.

The potential escalation comes as both sides ​had been working toward ‌a deal that included limits on Iran's nuclear program and relief from some sanctions, including restrictions on ‌oil exports.


The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, is one of the world's most important energy chokepoints, with roughly a fifth ⁠of global oil consumption and ‌large volumes of liquefied natural ⁠gas shipments passing through each day.

Any prolonged disruption could push up energy prices and increase ⁠pressure on ⁠consumers and governments already facing higher fuel costs.

Oil exports remain a critical source of revenue for Iran, providing ‌billions of dollars in hard currency that help fund government spending and support an economy weakened by years of U.S. sanctions.


Despite restrictions, Tehran has managed to ‌expand shipments in ​recent years, largely to ‌China, making oil sales one of the country's most important economic lifelines.

Any renewed effort to curb those exports could put additional pressure ​on Iran's finances and its ability to sustain domestic programs and regional activities.

The News MAX

 

 

GLOBAL:

Scott Jennings says he spoke with hospitalized McConnell for 20 minutes, offering rare window into senator's condition


By


Kentucky political commentator Scott Jennings said he spoke by phone with Sen. Mitch McConnell on July 7, offering the most detailed public account yet of the hospitalized senator's condition amid weeks of silence from McConnell's office and growing questions about his health.


Jennings, a longtime McConnell ally who ran the senator's 2002 reelection campaign, posted on X that the two talked for "just shy of 20 minutes" that morning. The conversation ranged across Iran, Ukraine, events in Maine, Senate history, and Jennings' visit to the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library.


The call matters because McConnell's own office has disclosed almost nothing about the senator's hospitalization, not the cause, not the hospital, not a timeline for his return. What the public has received instead is a trickle of staff-issued updates confirming what everyone already knew: the senior senator from Kentucky remains in the hospital.


What Jennings said, and what McConnell's office hasn't

Jennings, a former McConnell Scholar at the University of Louisville and a familiar face on cable news, shared his account publicly on X:

"I spoke to my old friend Mitch McConnell this morning, the senior Senator from Kentucky. He's still recovering in the hospital. We talked for just shy of 20 minutes... about Iran, Ukraine, the unfolding situation in Maine, my visit to the TR Presidential Library, and even a little bit of Senate history. I told him we want to see him back at work as soon as possible."


A 20-minute phone conversation covering foreign policy and current events is not nothing. It suggests McConnell is alert, engaged, and tracking the news, a far more informative snapshot than anything his staff has offered.

McConnell's office confirmed last week only that the senator is "continuing his recovery." Staff also said McConnell spoke with Senators Thune and Barrasso on Monday, though no details about those calls were released. No direct public statement from McConnell himself has surfaced.


That gap, between a friend's reassuring social media post and the official wall of silence from McConnell's team, is the story. And it is a story that has been building for weeks.


A pattern of secrecy around McConnell's health

McConnell's initial hospitalization came with no explanation from his office, a move that immediately invited speculation. The senator's staff offered no diagnosis, no prognosis, and no meaningful update for days.

The vacuum only deepened public concern. Voters and colleagues alike were left guessing about the condition of one of the most consequential Republican leaders in modern Senate history.


Subsequent reporting revealed more alarming details. EMS dispatch records indicated McConnell was found unconscious and may have suffered cardiac arrest, information that did not come from his office but from emergency records.

That disclosure raised the stakes considerably. A senator found unconscious is one thing. A senator whose staff declines to acknowledge publicly available EMS records is another.


Weeks passed. McConnell remained hospitalized with no clear timeline for discharge or return to the Senate. His office continued issuing the same thin reassurances.


Jennings' account: reassurance or more questions?

Jennings' post is the closest thing the public has gotten to a firsthand report on McConnell's mental sharpness. The topics he listed, Iran, Ukraine, Maine, presidential history, suggest a senator still thinking about policy and world events, not someone disconnected from public life.


But Jennings is a friend and former campaign operative, not a physician. His account is a data point, not a medical assessment. And the fact that it took a political commentator's social media post to provide the most substantive public update on a sitting senator's condition tells you everything about how McConnell's office has handled this episode.

Elected officials are not obligated to disclose every medical detail. But McConnell holds one of the most powerful seats in the United States Senate. Kentucky voters and his Republican colleagues have a legitimate interest in knowing whether he can fulfill his duties, and when he might return.


The drip of information has followed a pattern: staff confirms the senator is recovering, names a few people he has spoken with, and offers nothing else. The Jennings call fits that mold, except Jennings chose to share more than the office ever has.


Political stakes in Kentucky and Washington

McConnell's prolonged absence carries real consequences. The Senate operates on razor-thin margins. Every missing vote changes the math on confirmations, legislation, and procedural fights. Republican leadership needs its members present, not hospitalized with no return date.


Back home, the political ground is already shifting. Andy Barr won the Kentucky GOP Senate primary, setting up a November contest for McConnell's seat. The senator's health crisis has become inseparable from the question of succession, not just in Kentucky, but within the Republican conference itself.


McConnell's staff confirmed he spoke with Senators Thune and Barrasso on Monday. Both are senior members of Republican leadership. Whether those calls were social check-ins or something more substantive, the office did not say.

That silence is a choice. And it is a choice that invites exactly the kind of speculation McConnell's team says it wants to avoid.


The transparency problem

There is a reasonable argument for medical privacy. No one is entitled to a senator's full chart. But there is a wide space between full disclosure and what McConnell's office has provided, which amounts to little more than confirmation that the senator is alive and talking to people.


Compare this to how other offices have handled serious health events. Detailed statements from attending physicians. Press conferences. Timelines. McConnell's team has offered none of that.


Jennings' post may have been intended to calm nerves. In some ways, it did. A man who can discuss Iran and Ukraine for 20 minutes is not incapacitated. But the post also underscored how little official information has come from the people actually responsible for keeping the public informed, McConnell's own staff.


Health concerns around McConnell have mounted over an extended period, and each new episode has followed the same playbook: minimal disclosure, staff-issued platitudes, and a reliance on outside voices to fill the information gap.


What remains unanswered

The most basic questions remain open. What caused McConnell's hospitalization? Which hospital is treating him? When does his medical team expect him to be discharged? Can he return to the Senate floor this session? Has his office consulted with Senate leadership about contingency plans?


None of these questions have been answered publicly. And until they are, every reassuring phone call from a friend, however welcome, only highlights how much McConnell's office has chosen to withhold.


Voters deserve better than a social media post from a political commentator as their best source of information about a sitting senator's fitness to serve. If McConnell is sharp enough to discuss foreign policy for 20 minutes, his office ought to be sharp enough to say so itself.

The AMERICAN Almanac



Patrick Bestall’s INPUT:


Be AWARE:

URGENT: Uhuru/HAMnet || We will NOT be at Preppers Meet this weekend

Hello Folks,

Please note that Uhuru/HAMnet will NOT be participating at Preppers Meet this weekend.You are all welcome to attend the event if you are so inclined but we will not be conducting a presentation. (long story).

Consideration is being given to conducting our own 'field day' type event in the weeks ahead. Stay tuned for details.

See y’all soon.

73

Tony Bolla6

47-850-7085

==================

Heatwave

.PB

 

 

Misc. Weather Abnormalities (18 min)

This got way-out-of-HAND!

A State of Emergency was declared from a Large warehouse Fire, in Parkersburg, West Virginia, as BLACK RAIN was falling from the sky ! 

.PB

 

 

Family witnesses describe brutal assault on former Belgian league champion


A former professional footballer who helped secure a Belgian league title is in critical condition after a vicious assault in Turnhout, Belgium, where he was punched, choked, and repeatedly stomped on the head in front of his wife and pregnant daughter.


The attack on 53-year-old Karel Snoeckx unfolded on Saturday while he was driving with his family. A verbal dispute erupted with two pedestrians after he honked at them for crossing the street unsafely. They accused him of racism, and the situation escalated into extreme violence.


Snoeckx’s wife Lindsy told local media: “We are heartbroken. Karel is gentleness personified. It was supposed to be a beautiful day with our daughter and son-in-law, but it turned into hell.”


.PB

 

 

Red Sea Crossing & more

Cool video!  Could the Saudi's develop this into a major tourist area?  

.pb w tx to Ted Gryn

.PB

 

 

Zello: a Simple Radio for communications

I zoomed into UHURU's Tuesday evening chat so I could ask about the Echo radio.  No one had any experience with it.  But they told me about Zello, which is the choice of freedom lovers when they have rallies.  It's a free app you can download to your smart phone, so there's no range limitation.  Of course, it's dependent on cell phone towers and internet, so in a real disaster it may not work.  

 

 

Here are 3 video explanations:

 

1 min.

 

1 min.

 

1 min.

Turn any device into the best radio on the planet.

Push a button. Talk instantly. Audio plays in real time no matter what’s on the screen, so work never slows down.

.PB

 

 

 

 

RUMOUR:

 

RUMOURS Circulating out there...:

Disclaimer: All articles, videos, and images posted on Operation Disclosure were submitted by readers and/or handpicked by the site itself for informational and/or entertainment purposes. All statements, claims, views, and opinions that appear on this site are always presented as unverified and should be discerned by the reader. We do not endorse any opinions expressed on this website, and we do not support, represent or guarantee the completeness, truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any content posted on this website.

 

I may not agree with everything from the content-producers that I share.

Apply critical thinking and use discernment to

Come to your own conclusions regarding the content!

 

You need to MAKE UP Your own MIND!

 

What we think that we now know...

 

REPORT Today

 

The world keeps spinning, and now you’re caught up.

 

NOTE:

For a deeper dive into these topics, you can watch the full episodes on Rumble.


Oil Companies Are Now Cutting Prices, Why? Is Trump Forcing The World To Gold?

Streamed on: Jul 7, 6:00 pm EDT

The climate agenda has failed, people can see going back in time it was all a lie. Those who said that seas would rise bought mansions on the ocean. Trump has trapped the D’s into rejecting the $1000 offered to newborns. Oil prices are coming down because there is a glut of oil and now oil companies are cutting prices. [CB] are now ramping up on gold and the US is working to establish a bitcoin reserve.

Trump Is Rearranging The Deep State World, Countries Are Now Shifting Away From The [DS]

Streamed on: Jul 7, 6:30 pm EDT

Trump is now rearranging the world. The world the [DS] created to support their system is now be removed and Trump is now setting up the world to support the people control world. Countries are shifting away from the [DS] and are now siding with Trump. The [DS] is panicking, they are on the side of communism, woke, and criminals. The people of this country can see this very clearly. Patriots are winning every step of the way.


=========

 

The HEAD-of-the-SNAKE

HEAD OF THE SNAKE

The Hidden Architecture of Iran, Wealth Extraction, and Global Control

The war on Iran. The cartels falling.Corruption networks dismantled across 4 continents.These are not separate events.One operation. Well planned. Years in the making.The book documents the history behind it.And the wealth event that follows.

Discover the 100+ year architecture behind the current war on Iran, the gold reset, and the dollar exit. Every claim sourced from DOJ filings, Treasury sanctions, and central bank records. No speculation. Just the paper trail.


What OTHERS are saying about this BOOK

★★★★★

"This is an incredible book! The historical facts are impeccable and the receipts are astonishing. It provided the missing puzzle pieces I needed to link up my intuitive understanding of the way the world has been shaped by the central bankers."

- Willow Rockwell, Amazon Review

★★★★★

"If this book doesn't spell out exactly what is occurring in the financial economy, with currencies, geopolitical chess and technology infrastructure to support a new modern safe and sustainable financial world, then nothing will convince naysayers. Having worked with everyone of these global banks on their 'identifier layer' during a career in the software industry, the time is now to remove their global shadow controls. Excellent read, David Atterton!"

- Catherine Estep, Amazon Review

★★★★★

"Excellent book, short, concise, clear. You'll zoom out to see the really big historical picture and it will leave you stunned and thankful you can see it so easily. I'm a big BIG reader, this is one of the most important books I've read and certainly THE MOST TIMELY BOOK YOU CAN READ RIGHT NOW!"

- Misty Young, Amazon Review

★★★★★

"A meticulously researched eye-opener exposing Iran's hidden financial architecture, wealth extraction, and global influence operations over a shocking 118 years. This read connected so much information together and answered so many unanswered questions I had. Backed by DOJ filings, Treasury actions, and primary sources, it delivers a clear, compelling analysis of sanctions evasion and the head of the snake reality. Sharp, accessible writing turns complex geopolitics into essential reading for anyone seeking deeper truth beyond the headlines. Highly recommended."

- Peter C., Amazon Review

================

The END


 
 
 

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