Green Energy Reels From Major Defeats, but the Battle Continues
The anti-carbon, “green energy” push has suffered tremendous setbacks in the past few years. Consumers have balked at the coerced...

Kash Patel’s big mouth might have just gummed up another investigation.The FBI director frustrated Secret Service officials by prematurely announcing the details of an investigation into a violent attack planned for the White House UFC event, according to multiple sources that spoke with MS NOW Tuesday.Patel revealed components of the investigation via a social media post earlier in the day, sharing that “multiple individuals” were in custody.“On June 10, FBI and our law enforcement partners became aware of a potential threat to the UFC America 250 event in Washington, D.C. involving individuals outside of the National Capital Region,” Patel wrote.Nearly two dozen people participated in Signal group chats discussing an alleged plot to strike the UFC’s America 250 event with explosive-laden drones so as to rush the evacuating crowd into the crosshairs of a pre-staged sniper team, reported Fox News. Five people are reportedly in custody in connection with the scheme.“While the result represented the best of investigative work, it was also nothing out of the ordinary for this law enforcement team—we are built to detect, respond to, and bring to justice those who threaten the lives of American citizens—particularly during large gatherings like the historic UFC 250 fight,” Patel continued in his X post. “That’s exactly what we did here. I want to thank our great agents and partners, this work remains ongoing and we will continue to update the public as permitted.”A White House spokesman claimed that the incident was exactly why the White House needed the proposed $400 million ballroom—though the 90,000-square-foot space still would not have been capable of housing the UFC event, nor was the fight ever planned to be indoors.It’s not the first time that Patel has flubbed a federal investigation. In September, Patel’s reliance on the bureau’s planes waylaid the investigation into Charlie Kirk’s assassination by at least a day, preventing a critical analysis team from accessing a flight to the crime scene. His personal flights interfered with another FBI investigation on December 13, when the FBI’s shooting reconstruction team was unable to immediately respond to a shooting at Brown University due to a lack of available bureau planes at an airport in Richmond, Virginia, according to Senator Dick Durbin.
The anti-carbon, “green energy” push has suffered tremendous setbacks in the past few years. Consumers have balked at the coerced...
Former Vice President Kamala Harris is reportedly “not surprised” that California Governor Gavin Newsom and his wife are being investigated by the Justice Department. During an Austrian […]
Iran would be allowed to start oil exports immediately under an interim deal with the US and gain access to a $300 billion economic development program following negotiations for a permanent peace that’s meant to address Tehran’s nuclear activities, according to a draft of their agreement.
Lt. Gov. Burt Jones (R), backed by both President Trump and Gov. Brian Kemp (R), is projected to lose the Republican runoff for Georgia governor to healthcare executive and billionaire Rick Jackson, according to Decision Desk HQ. Jones’s loss deals a major blow to the president, adding another statewide loss to his primary scorecard. Jackson will now face Atlanta…
New details after FBI thwarts alleged terror plot; four states and the District of Columbia hold primaries.
The U.S. Senate is threatening to freeze three-quarters of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's travel budget unless it gets what it wants. Politico reported on Wednesday that the requirement is built into the defense policy bill in the Senate Armed Services Committee and would withhold a whopping 75 percent of Hegseth's funds if he doesn't turn over the documents that it has requested about the school bombed in Iran and the boat blown up in the Caribbean. It's a significant escalation in the demands from lawmakers since 2025, when Republicans were happy to sign off on whatever President Donald Trump requested, but put a 25 percent hold on the travel budget. "The renewed provisions suggest lawmakers still haven’t gotten the information they want," reported Politico. "It also signals continued bipartisan dissatisfaction with the Pentagon ignoring or slow-walking responses to congressional inquiries. The provisions are part of the annual National Defense Authorization Act approved last week by the Republican-led panel. Senate Armed Services leaders filed the bill on Tuesday."According to lawmakers who spoke with Politico, the Pentagon leadership rarely speaks to them, and Trump rarely keeps them abreast of details about what his team is trying to accomplish on Capitol Hill. "The latest Senate bid to jam the Pentagon faces a long road to becoming law. Competing legislation approved by the House Armed Services Committee doesn’t include similar language. The funding freeze must survive negotiations between the two chambers over the next few months," said the report.The Pentagon has hit over 200 boats in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea since Trump's efforts in September 2025. An elementary school in Iran was also hit by the U.S. About 150 people were killed, most of whom were children. "In all, the panel linked Hegseth’s travel funds to more than a half-dozen requests for information. Senators are also demanding more information on three American air strikes against suspected Houthi military sites in April 2025 and an unspecified investigation by U.S. Special Operations Command in January," said Politico. Democrats don't support the bill in its current form because they say the president has "no restraint."
FBI Director Kash Patel is completely incapable of doing his job, former FBI agent Michael Feinberg told MS NOW's Nicolle Wallace on Tuesday — and it's gotten to the point that his incompetence is undermining the investigations being done by career agents.This comes after reports that the U.S. Secret Service is enraged at Patel for disclosing details about a sealed investigation into an alleged plot to attack President Donald Trump's UFC event on the White House lawn."You've got ... the deputy at the Secret Service, basically accusing Kash Patel of, quote, 'choking' and saying we decided not to leak," said Wallace, who added that it sounds like the investigation into a major plot to harm the president or those around him has "been compromised at best ... I don't think it gets any more serious.""Why does Kash Patel still have a job?" asked Wallace."I think much of America wants to know the answer to that question," replied Feinberg, who continued that Patel has shown a "weird combination of malevolence and incompetence" and that he is "manifestly unsuited for the job.""He does not have the operational security discipline to realize when he should not run his mouth or post something on Twitter," said Feinberg. "When you arrest somebody under seal, there is usually a pretty good reason" — usually that reason being that there are more people to arrest and agents don't want to risk that they will "panic and flee.""But here, apparently, Kash Patel inadvertently decided to give them a heads up, and now they may be scattered to the four winds," he added.All of this comes after extensive reporting that Patel is constantly paranoid, drinking to excess, and expecting to be fired at any moment — allegations he and the FBI categorically deny. - YouTube www.youtube.com
Secret Service officials expressed anger after FBI Director Kash Patel publicly announced details of a sealed, ongoing investigation into an alleged drone attack plot targeting a White House UFC event.Patel's Tuesday morning social media post potentially compromised approximately 10 pending arrests and disrupted coordinated plans by Secret Service and FBI officials to unseal the case jointly later that afternoon, according to reports by NBC News correspondent Ken Dilanian.An anonymous administration official said, "We all woke up this morning to see this on Twitter."The investigation began when a Cincinnati-area relative reported a suspect discussing Washington attack plans. Secret Service obtained a subpoena for encrypted Signal communications revealing drone attack details, leading to one arrest June 13. Secret Service Deputy Director Matt Quinn publicly rebuked Patel at a news conference, stating, "The Secret Service led that investigation from the beginning. In order to maintain the integrity of the investigation and the security plan, we chose not to leak it."Security has since been dramatically expanded for the event.Watch the video below. Your browser does not support the video tag.