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Censorship Industrial Complex

Tucker Carlson: Longtime source says porn sites controlled by intelligence agencies for blackmail

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By Emily Mangiaracina

Journalist Glenn Greenwald replied with a story about how U.S. Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson changed his tune on a dime about the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows the government to spy on American communications without a warrant. The journalist made the caveat that he is not assuming blackmail was responsible for Johnsonā€™s behavior.

Tucker Carlson shared during an interview released Wednesday that aĀ ā€œlongtime intel officialā€ told him that intelligence agencies control the ā€œbig pornography sitesā€ for blackmail purposes.

Carlson added that he thinks dating websites are controlled as well, presumably referring at least to casual ā€œhook-upā€ sites like Tinder, where conversations are often explicitly sexual.

ā€œOnce you realize that, once you realize that the most embarrassing details of your personal life are known by people who want to control you, then youā€™re controlled,ā€ Carlson said.

He went on to suggest that this type of blackmail may explain some of the strange, inconsistent behavior of well-known figures, ā€œparticularlyā€ members of Congress.

ā€œWe all imagine that itā€™s just donorsā€ influencing their behavior, Carlson said. ā€œI think itā€™s more than donors. Iā€™ve seen politicians turn down donors before.ā€

Journalist Glenn Greenwald replied with a story about how U.S. Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson changed his tune on a dime about the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which allows the government to spy on American communications without a warrant. The journalist made the caveat that he is not assuming blackmail was responsible for Johnsonā€™s behavior.

Greenwald told how he had seen Johnson grill FBI Director Christopher Wray about his agencyā€™s spying and ā€œcould just tell that he felt passionately about (this),ā€ prompting Greenwald to invite Johnson on his show, before anyone had any idea he might become Speaker of the House.

ā€œOne of the things we spent the most time on was (the need for) FISA reform,ā€ Greenwald told Carlson, noting that the expiration of the current iteration of the FISA law was soon approaching. He added that Johnson was ā€œdeterminedā€ to help reform FISA and that it was in fact ā€œhis big issue,ā€ the very reason he was on Greenwaldā€™s show to begin with.

Johnson became House Speaker about two months to three months later, and Greenwald was excited about the FISA reform he thought Johnson would surely help bring about.

ā€œNot only did Mike Johnson say, ā€˜Iā€™m going to allow the FISA renewal to come to the floor with no reforms.ā€™ He himself said, ā€˜It is urgent that we renew FISA without reforms. This is a crucial tool for our intelligence agencies,ā€™ā€ Greenwald reounted.

He noted that Johnson was already getting access to classified information while in Congress, wondering at Johnsonā€™s explanation for his behavior at the time, which was that he was made aware of highly classified information that illuminated the importance of renewing FISA and the spying capabilities it grants, as is.

Greenwald doesnā€™t believe one meeting is enough to change the mind of someone who is as invested in a position as Johnson was on FISA reform.

ā€œI can see someone really dumb being affected by that ā€¦ heā€™s a very smart guy. I donā€™t believe he changed his mind. So the question is, why did he?ā€ Greenwald asked.

ā€œI donā€™t know. I really donā€™t. But I know that the person that was on my show two months ago no longer exists.ā€

Theoretically, there are many ways an intelligence agency could coerce a politician or other person of influence into certain behaviors, including personal threats, threats to family, and committing outright acts of aggression against a person.

A former CIA agent hasĀ testifiedĀ during an interview with Candace Owens that his former employer used the latter tactic against him and his family, indirectly through chemicals that made them sick, when he blew the whistle on certain unethical actions the CIA had committed.

ā€œThis is why you never hear about CIA whistleblowers. They have a perfected system of career destruction if you talk about anything you see that is criminal or illegal,ā€ former CIA officer Kevin Shipp said.

As a form of coercion, sexual blackmail in particular is nothing new, although porn sites make the possibility much easier. In herĀ bookĀ ā€œOne Nation Under Blackmail: The Sordid Union Between Intelligence and Crime That Gave Rise to Jeffrey Epstein,ā€ investigative journalist Whitney Webb discusses not only how the intelligence community uses sexual blackmail through people like Jeffrey Epstein but how it was used by organized crime before U.S. intelligence even existed.

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Censorship Industrial Complex

Welcome to Britain, Where Critical WhatsApp Messages Are a Police Matter

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ā€œIt was just unfathomable to me that things had escalated to this degree,ā€

ā€œWeā€™d never used abusive or threatening language, even in private.ā€

Youā€™d think that in Britain, the worst thing that could happen to you after sending a few critical WhatsApp messages would be a passive-aggressive reply or, at most, a snooty whisper campaign. What you probably wouldnā€™t expect is to have six police officers show up on your doorstep like theyā€™re hunting down a cartel. But thatā€™s precisely what happened to Maxie Allen and Rosalind Levine ā€” two parents whose great offense was asking some mildly inconvenient questions about how their daughterā€™s school planned to replace its retiring principal.
This is not an episode of Black Mirror. This is Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, 2025. And the parents in questionā€”Maxie Allen, a Times Radio producer, and Rosalind Levine, 46, a mother of twoā€”had the gall to inquire, via WhatsApp no less, whether Cowley Hill Primary School was being entirely above board in appointing a new principal.
What happened next should make everyone in Britain pause and consider just how overreaching their government has become. Because in the time it takes to send a meme about the schoolā€™s bake sale, you too could be staring down the barrel of a ā€œmalicious communicationsā€ charge.
The trouble started in May, shortly after the school’s principal retired. Instead of the usual round of polite emails, clumsy PowerPoints, and dreary Q&A sessions, there was… silence. Maxie Allen, who had once served as a school governorā€”so presumably knows his way around a budget meetingā€”asked the unthinkable: when was the recruitment process going to be opened up?
A fair question, right? Not in Borehamwood, apparently. The school responded not with answers, but with a sort of preemptive nuclear strike.
Jackie Spriggs, the chair of governors, issued a public warning about ā€œinflammatory and defamatoryā€ social media posts and hinted at disciplinary action for those who dared to cause ā€œdisharmony.ā€ One imagines this word being uttered in the tone of a Bond villain stroking a white cat.
Parents Allen and Levine were questioned by police over their WhatsApp messages.
For the crime of ā€œcasting aspersions,ā€ Allen and Levine were promptly banned from the school premises. That meant no parentsā€™ evening, no Christmas concert, no chance to speak face-to-face about the specific needs of their daughter Sascha, whoā€”just to add to the bleakness of it allā€”has epilepsy and is registered disabled.
So what do you do when the school shuts its doors in your face? You send emails. Lots of them. You try to get answers. And if that fails, you mightā€”just mightā€”vent a little on WhatsApp.
But apparently, that was enough to earn the label of harassers. Not in the figurative, overly sensitive, ā€œKarenā€™s upset againā€ sense. No, this was the actual, legal, possibly-prison kind of harassment.
Then came January 29. Rosalind was at home sorting toys for charityā€”presumably a heinous act in todayā€™s climateā€”when she opened the door to what can only be described as a low-budget reboot of Line of Duty. Six officers. Two cars. A van. All to arrest two middle-aged parents whose biggest vice appears to be stubborn curiosity.
ā€œI saw six police officers standing there,ā€ she said. ā€œMy first thought was that Sascha was dead.ā€
Instead, it was the prelude to an 11-hour ordeal in a police cell. Eleven hours. Thatā€™s enough time to commit actual crimes, be tried, be sentenced, and still get home in time for MasterChef.
Allen called the experience ā€œdystopian,ā€ and, for once, the word isnā€™t hyperbole. ā€œIt was just unfathomable to me that things had escalated to this degree,ā€ he said. ā€œWe’d never used abusive or threatening language, even in private.ā€
Worse still, they were never even told which communications were being investigated. Itā€™s like being detained by police for ā€œvibes.ā€
One of the many delightful ironies here is that the school accused them of causing a ā€œnuisance on school property,ā€ despite the fact that neither of them had set foot on said property in six months.
Now, in the schoolā€™s defenseā€”such as it isā€”they claim they went to the police because the sheer volume of correspondence and social media posts had become ā€œupsetting.ā€ Which raises an important question: when did being ā€œupsettingā€ become a police matter?
What weā€™re witnessing is not a breakdown in communication, but a full-blown bureaucratic tantrum. Instead of engaging with concerned parents, Cowley Hillā€™s leadership took the nuclear option: drag them out in cuffs and let the police deal with it.
Hertfordshire Constabulary, apparently mistaking Borehamwood for Basra, decided this was a perfectly normal use of resources. ā€œThe number of officers was necessary,ā€ said a spokesman, ā€œto secure electronic devices and care for children at the address.ā€
Right. Nothing says ā€œchildcareā€ like watching your mom get led away in handcuffs while your toddler hides in the corner, traumatized.
After five weeksā€”five weeks of real police time, in a country where burglaries are basically a form of inheritance transferā€”the whole thing was quietly dropped. Insufficient evidence. No charges. Not even a slap on the wrist.
So here we are. A story about a couple who dared to question how a public school was run, and ended up locked in a cell, banned from the school play, and smeared with criminal accusations for trying to advocate for their disabled child.
This is Britain in 2025. A place where public institutions behave like paranoid cults and the police are deployed like private security firms for anyone with a bruised ego. All while the rest of the population is left wondering how many other WhatsApp groups are one message away from a dawn raid.
Because if this is what happens when you ask a few inconvenient questions, whatā€™s next? Fingerprinting people for liking the wrong Facebook post? Tactical units sent in for sarcastic TripAdvisor reviews?
Itā€™s a warning. Ask the wrong question, speak out of turn, and you too may get a visit from half the local police force.
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Censorship Industrial Complex

They knew it was a lab leak all along

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Newly Revealed Documents Confirm Lab Leak Coverup

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The global debate over COVID-19ā€™s origins has taken a dramatic turn after newly uncovered reports indicate that intelligence agencies in Germany had determined with near certainty that the virus originated in a Chinese lab as early as 2020. Despite this revelation, German Chancellor Angela Merkel reportedly chose to suppress the findings, aligning with a broader pattern of obfuscation by Western governments and media outlets.

Key Details:

  • German newspapers Zeit and SĆ¼ddeutsche Zeitung reported that Germanyā€™s intelligence agency, the BND, concluded in early 2020 with 80% to 95% certainty that COVID-19 leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China.

  • The intelligence was based on a combination of public-domain research and classified investigations under the code name “Saaremaa.”

  • Merkelā€™s administration allegedly buried the findings, with her successor Olaf Scholz continuing the suppression, ensuring the information remained hidden from the public until now.

Diving Deeper:

Journalist Alex Berenson detailed the shocking revelations in hisĀ Substack op-ed, underscoring how “the American media is doing its best to ignore the biggest news this week.” Berenson criticized legacy media outlets for fixating on the five-year anniversary of COVID-19 while sidestepping the implications of newly surfaced intelligence.

According to Berenson, German intelligence reached its high-confidence conclusion after analyzing public materials and conducting covert operations. “The materialā€¦ indicated that there had been some risky research methods used there [at the Wuhan Institute of Virology], compounded by breaches of laboratory safety rulesā€¦ [and] so-called gain-of-function experiments, in which viruses occurring in nature are manipulated [to become more dangerous or transmissible],” he wrote.

Rather than alert the world to the evidence, Merkel chose to suppress it. Berenson sarcastically noted, “Who immediately told the world of the findings and demanded a full investigation into what Chinaā€™s totalitarian government knew and when it knew it? Nah, Iā€™m funning you. Angela stuffed that report in a drawer and got back to doing what she did best, destroying Germanyā€™s industrial base to make Greta Thunberg happy.”

The refusal to disclose this intelligence aligns with a broader pattern of deception from both governmental and media institutions, which spent years dismissing the lab leak hypothesis as a conspiracy theory. Berenson noted that during early 2020, “Dr. Anthony S. Fauci and Peter Daszakā€¦ were gently steering their fellow scientists towards a conclusion that COVIDā€™s origins were 100 billion zillion percent natural.”

Even after Merkel left office in 2021, Scholzā€™s government continued to keep the intelligence under wraps. “The BND told her replacement, Olaf Scholz, ā€˜without the results finding their way to the publicā€™ ā€” as the British newspaper The Telegraph delicately put it,” Berenson wrote. Now that the findings have emerged, the German government has not denied the reports, leaving Berenson to conclude, “Thereā€™s about a 100 to 100 percent chance theyā€™re true.”

The final takeaway? “We all sorta knew this already, right? Both the lab leak and the coverup,” Berenson observed. “But thereā€™s knowing and thereā€™s knowing. And it looks like the same American news outlets that spent 2020 and 2021 lying (or, at best, being hopelessly credulous) about China and COVID still arenā€™t ready to come clean.”

As new evidence continues to surface, the question remains: Will legacy media and world leaders finally acknowledge the lab leak theory as fact, or will they continue to deflect responsibility and protect their preferred narratives?

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