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Wed, 11 Feb 2026 04:25:00 +0000 Panic Ensues After Trump Orders CIA To Give 2020 Election Intel To 'Stop The Steal' Lawyer
Panic Ensues After Trump Orders CIA To Give 2020 Election Intel To 'Stop The Steal' Lawyer
President Donald Trump has instructed the CIA and other spy agencies to hand over intelligence related to the 2020 e
Read more.....
Panic Ensues After Trump Orders CIA To Give 2020 Election Intel To 'Stop The Steal' Lawyer
President Donald Trump has instructed the CIA and other spy agencies to hand over intelligence related to the 2020 election , a bunch of (presumably panicked) US intelligence officials told Politico and NBC News .
The records are to be handed over to Kurt Olsen - now a temporary government employee in the White House - who four years ago was involved in the "Stop the Steal" campaign to determine whether Joe Biden won the 2020 election via cheating.
Attorney Kurt Olsen during his opening statement in Kari Lake's election challenge trial on May 17, 2023, in Mesa, Ariz.Mark Henle / USA Today Network via Imagn
And you know they're freaking out by the way they tell us this...
"The administration last year hired Kurt Olsen, who more than five years ago took part in the “Stop the Steal” campaign that promoted baseless claims of widespread voter fraud, to investigate the 2020 election." -NBC News
...
President Donald Trump has directed top U.S. spy agencies to share sensitive intelligence about the 2020 election with his former campaign lawyer, known for pushing debunked theories of electoral fraud , according to four people with knowledge of the effort. -Politico
Indeed:
"The president has asked Mr. Olsen to look at intelligence related to the 2020 election and the agency is ensuring that he has the access necessary to do his work," a CIA official told NBC in an emailed statement (probably right after hanging up with the reporter).
When asked about Olsen's role, the White House told the outlet "President Trump has the authority to provide access to classified material to individuals as he deems necessary. The entire Trump administration is working together to ensure the integrity of U.S. elections."
The admin did not specifically respond to questions about whether Olsen was focusing only on the 2020 election, or possible security threats to future elections.
The freakout comes after the FBI's recent search of an elections center in Fulton County, Georgia - where they seized ballots from the 2020 election.
Now check out the tone over at Politico :
The decision to provide some of the government’s most sensitive spy material to Olsen is unusual, given that he has no known experience working with the U.S. spy community and only joined the Trump administration as a short-term special government employee in October 2025. Special government employees are supposed to work no more than 130 days during any period of 365 days, suggesting his time at the White House could end soon.
The first person said that Olsen has passed a background check and a polygraph exam. It is not clear how close Olsen is to completing his report on the 2020 elections.
Intelligence analysis is supposed to be nonpartisan, and it appears Olsen’s views on electoral fraud in prior U.S. elections are so deeply held that even some people close to the president question his ability to evaluate the material shared with him.
“This guy has no background” in intelligence , said the second person, a close Trump ally. Olsen “will find some super classified report, say it’s evidence of fraud, but really it’s just completely out of context.”
...
Olsen rose to prominence by working closely with Trump to undermine the results of the 2020 election under the slogan “Stop the Steal.” He urged several DOJ officials that year to file a complaint to the Supreme Court scrutinizing Trump’s loss, and even called the president multiple times during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol
Wow!
About That Raid
As we noted earlier Tuesday , an affidavit filed by FBI Special Agent Hugh Raymond Evans last month, which was unsealed Tuesday, lays out five categories of confirmed problems in Fulton County's handling of ballots, raising questions that have simmered for over five years since Trump and his allies raised questions about the election in Georgia and other states where irregularities were alleged.
According to a report from Just the News, Evans filed the affidavit last month to establish probable cause for a raid that seized around 700 boxes of ballots from an Atlanta-area storage warehouse. The investigation stemmed from a referral by Kurt Olsen, President Trump's election integrity czar. Evans interviewed roughly a dozen unnamed witnesses about allegations tied to the contested Georgia race, where Joe Biden edged out Trump by less than 12,000 votes in the official results.
"This warrant application is part of an FBI criminal investigation into whether any of the improprieties were intentional acts that violated federal criminal laws."
Fulton County admitted it lacks scanned images of all 528,777 ballots counted during the initial count and of the 527,925 ballots tallied during the state's first recount.
County officials also confirmed that during the recount, some ballots were scanned multiple times. Ballot images obtained through public records requests show identical markings appearing on duplicated images.
During the Risk Limiting Audit, hand counters reported vote totals for batches that didn't match the actual votes inside those batches.
According to the affidavit, "The State’s Performance Review Board reported that Secretary of State investigators confirmed inaccurate batch tallies from the Risk Limiting Audit.”
More on that here...
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Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 23:25 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 04:15:00 +0000 Man Detained For Questioning In Nancy Guthrie Disappearance
Man Detained For Questioning In Nancy Guthrie Disappearance
Update (1030ET): A man was detained for questioning in the apparent abduction of Nancy Guthrie,
Read more.....
Man Detained For Questioning In Nancy Guthrie Disappearance
Update (1030ET): A man was detained for questioning in the apparent abduction of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie, from her home outside of Tucson, Arizona over two weeks ago, several major outlets are reporting tonight.
The Pima County Sheriff's Department shared photos of an "armed individual" in relation to the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case.(Pima County Sheriff's Department)
The man was taken into custody after law enforcement circulated photos of a masked individual outside the 84-year-old Guthrie's front door the morning she disappeared. Several outlets are also reporting that there was a supposed ransom note received last week demanding payment to a Bitcoin wallet . According to outlet KGUN, a local TV station, the wallet had received a payment from someone for less than $300.
*UNCONFIRMED REPORTS CIRCULATING ONLINE (so for entertainment purposes only at this time) are suggesting that it might have been an inside job involving a family member .
* * *
The FBI on Tuesday released surveillance footage from a Nest camera showing an armed person at the southern Arizona home of Nancy Guthrie , mother of network TV news anchor Savannah Guthrie.
Video shared by FBI Director Kash Patel shows a masked person wearing a jacket, gloves, pants and carrying a backpack. The person can be seen obstructing the camera, before walking into the front yard. They then return to the front door with a small flashlight in their mouth before attempting to cover the camera with what appears to be foliage, AZ Family reports.
Investigators say the person was armed, as images show what appears to be a holstered firearm on the person's waistband.
"Over the last eight days, the FBI and Pima County Sheriff’s Department have been working closely with our private sector partners to continue to recover any images or video footage from Nancy Guthrie’s home that may have been lost, corrupted or inaccessible due to a variety of factors, including the removal of recording devices. The video was recovered from residual data located in backend systems," the Pima County Sheriff's Department posted in a statement.
"Working with our partners - as of this [Tuesday] morning, law enforcement has uncovered these previously inaccessible new images showing an armed individual appearing to have tampered with the camera at Nancy Guthrie’s front door the morning of her disappearance," they added.
Guthrie was last seen on Jan. 31 after she was dropped off at her home in the Catalina Foothills, and was reported missing the next day after she failed to show up for church.
According to AZ Family , "In the early morning hours of Feb. 1, her doorbell camera disconnected and her software detected a person on the camera. Her pacemaker app also showed it disconnected from her phone."
Reported ransom notes concerning Guthrie were sent to several Arizona news stations, including Arizona’s Family sister station, KOLD 13 News . The first note reportedly demanded a “large sum of money” with a deadline set for last Thursday. The second note allegedly contained a Monday deadline at 5 p.m.
A new video plea from Savannah was released hours before the 5 p.m. Monday deadline. The video didn’t mention the alleged ransom; instead, Savannah shared her family still believes their mom is out there and is hearing everyone’s prayers.
A $50,000 reward has been offered for information in the case.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 23:15 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 04:00:00 +0000 China Inches Ahead Of US In Humanoid Robot Startups
China Inches Ahead Of US In Humanoid Robot Startups
The market for humanoid robots has been growing significantly recently .
In 2025, $2.65 billion was invested in humanoid robotics startups, more than in the
Read more.....
China Inches Ahead Of US In Humanoid Robot Startups
The market for humanoid robots has been growing significantly recently .
In 2025, $2.65 billion was invested in humanoid robotics startups, more than in the years 2018 to 2024 combined, according to data published by the market research platform Tracxn .
This development indicates that investors now view humanoid robotics as a more mature and commercially attractive technology .
As Statista's Tristan Gaudiat reveals in the chart below, China currently leads the field with 23 startups specialized in humanoid robotics, just ahead of the 22 U.S.-based companies.
You will find more infographics at Statista
While China and the United States are the clear epicenters for humanoid-robotics entrepreneurship, a second tier is led by India (12), ahead of several European countries : the U.K. (6) and Germany (5) stand out, followed by France (3).
Beyond these hubs, Statista's chart also shows clusters in Australia (3), Japan (3), Austria (2) and Canada (2), suggesting that while interest is global, the densest startup ecosystems remain concentrated in a handful of markets.
The Chinese and American startup ecosystem is particularly notable in this field.
Chinese companies such as Unitree Robotics and Agibot are currently producing more humanoid robot models than any other country in the world (more than 5,000 each in 2025), while some of the best-known U.S. names, like Boston Dynamics and Tesla, are aiming to ramp up their production of robots for industrial and consumer applications in 2026 (Atlas and Optimus, respectively).
In Europe, current key players include Engineered Arts (U.K.) and Neura Robotics (Germany).
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 23:00 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 03:35:00 +0000 Your Body Clocks Could Predict Dementia Decades Later
Your Body Clocks Could Predict Dementia Decades Later
Your Body Clocks Could Predict Dementia Decades Later
Authored by George Citroner via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
A December study suggested that disruptions in the body’s natural 24-hour cycle, known as circadian rhythm, may increase the risk of developing dementia.
kanyanat wongsa/Shutterstock
The study , published in Neurology, tracked more than 2,000 adults, with a mean age of 79, using wearable heart monitors, and found that people with irregular sleep-wake patterns faced up to a 50 percent higher risk of developing dementia than those with consistent daily rhythms . Of the participants, 176 were later diagnosed with dementia.
“Changes in circadian rhythms happen with aging, and evidence suggests that circadian rhythm disturbances may be a risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases like dementia,” study author Wendy Wang, of the Peter O’Donnell Jr. School of Public Health at UT Southwestern Medical Center, said in a statement .
3 Types of Unhealthy Sleep Rhythms
Circadian rhythm helps regulate sleep, hormones, body temperature, and digestion. People with a strong, well-aligned circadian rhythm tend to follow consistent sleep and activity patterns, despite seasonal changes or schedule disruptions. Conversely, those with a weaker, fragmented, and delayed rhythm often experience irregular sleep and activity times.
A weaker circadian rhythm means that there is less of a difference between active daytime and restful nighttime . A person with a weaker circadian rhythm may not feel fully awake during the daytime and not sleepy at night.
People with fragmented circadian rhythms may have fragmented wakefulness and sleepiness. They may experience daytime wakefulness and fragmented sleep at night.
Beyond rhythm strength, the researchers found that timing also played a role.
Most people experience their peak circadian activity at midday, but those whose peak activity occurred later in the day—from 2:15 p.m. onward, faced a 45 percent higher risk of dementia than those whose activity peaked earlier, between 1:11 p.m. and 2:14 p.m.
A delayed circadian rhythm peak typically causes being most alert and active late at night, feeling sleepy or waking up late, and having difficulty aligning with conventional daytime schedules.
Seven percent of participants with early activity peaks developed dementia, compared to 10 percent of those with later peaks.
The researchers believe that a later activity peak may indicate a misalignment between the body’s internal clock and environmental cues such as exposure to darkness.
Why Circadian Rhythm Matters for Brain Health
The study found that certain changes in sleep or activity patterns were associated with increased risk of developing dementia. Disruptions and changes to circadian rhythm increased the risk of developing dementia by roughly 19 to 54 percent, according to the findings.
Circadian rhythm disruption can affect health in many ways that could impact cognition, and influences multiple organ systems simultaneously, not just the brain, Dr. Rebecca Spiegel, director of Sleep Neurology at Stony Brook Medicine in New York, and not involved in the study, told The Epoch Times.
“It has been linked to cardiovascular disease, metabolic disorders such as diabetes and obesity, mood disorders, poor immunity, and increased mortality risk ,” she noted. “In the elderly, weaker circadian rhythms have also been linked to falls, reduced physical function, and poorer quality of life.”
Wang noted that disruptions in circadian rhythms may alter processes such as inflammation and interfere with sleep, possibly increasing amyloid plaques linked to dementia or reducing amyloid clearance from the brain.
However, it’s important to note that the study did not account for sleep disorders, which could influence the results, and the research shows correlation rather than direct causation.
What Disrupts Your Circadian Rhythm
Dr. William Lu, sleep medicine specialist and medical director at Dreem Health, and not involved in the study, told The Epoch Times that some common factors that can weaken or disrupt a person’s circadian rhythm include:
Going to bed and waking up at different times each day
Spending too much time on screens at night
Not getting enough sunlight in the morning
Being under consistent stress
Late-night eating, or caffeine/alcohol intake
“Consistency matters most for maintaining a healthy circadian rhythm. That means going to bed and waking up around the same time every day, even on weekends.”
Limiting screen time and caffeine intake while increasing exposure to natural light is also important, he said. “Additionally, physical activity throughout the day can help.”
Dementia Cases Expected to Spike
Dementia cases are expected to increase sharply in the coming decades, with projections reaching 1 million new cases annually by 2060 if no significant interventions are made.
A “strong association” exists between reduced deep sleep and an increased risk of dementia. “Deep sleep is crucial for the clearing of toxins and memory consolidation, Lu said. “It is unsurprising that a disruption to the circadian rhythm can, in turn, disrupt both metabolic and neurological processes.”
While the connection between sleep and cognitive function is well understood, research into the role of circadian rhythm in dementia is still emerging. Earlier studies have linked sleep patterns and cognitive decline, such as one last year that found night owls may experience faster decline than early risers.
Other research suggests that sleep habits influence dementia risk, such as a 2022 study that found that seniors who nap more than an hour daily have a 40 percent higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
Hope for Prevention
Wang expressed optimism about the findings and said they could lead to new preventive strategies. “Future studies should examine the potential role of circadian rhythm interventions, such as light therapy or lifestyle changes, to determine if they may help lower a person’s risk of dementia.”
The UT Southwestern study is important because it linked real-world activity patterns, measured through wearable devices, to future dementia risk in a diverse group of older adults, Spiegel said.
“Although causality cannot be determined from this study, the findings encourage further research into circadian regulation as a potentially modifiable factor in brain health,” she said.
* * *
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Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 22:35 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 03:03:40 +0000 10 Dead, 25 Injured After School Shooting In Canada
10 Dead, 25 Injured After School Shooting In Canada
At least 10 people are dead and 25 injured after a mass shooting in northeastern British Columbia , according to police.
Read more.....
10 Dead, 25 Injured After School Shooting In Canada
At least 10 people are dead and 25 injured after a mass shooting in northeastern British Columbia , according to police.
Six people were found dead inside Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, one died on the way to the hospital and two more were found dead in a residence.
Police said the suspect was also found dead inside the school from "a self-inflicted injury."
Police believe they have identified the shooter, but would not be releasing details at this time for privacy reasons, and to protect the integrity of the investigation.
"This was a rapidly evolving and dynamic situation, and the swift co-operation from the school, first responders, and the community played a critical role in our response,” North District Chief Supt. Ken Floyd wrote in a statement.
Tumbler Ridge is one of the most distinct communities in B.C. and is extremely remote : more than 1,100 kilometers (683 miles) northeast of Vancouver by road.
In the late 1970s the population rapidly boomed with the discovery of coal deposits in the area and it became a classic company town throughout the 1980s. A near-collapse followed in the 2000s when those mines shut down.
It was during this time that the community pivoted to tourism, marketing itself as the land of dinosaurs and waterfalls — a place where you can hike to see ancient footprints in the wilderness.
In a statement , the District of Tumbler Ridge said its community experienced a "deeply distressing incident" today and asked residents to rely on official updates from the RCMP and other authorities.
It added that the situation was still unfolding and said additional supports were on their way to assist.
"In the days ahead, we know this will be difficult for many to process," the statement reads.
"Please check in on one another, lean on available supports, and know that Tumbler Ridge is a strong and caring community. We will get through this together."
Police said they don’t believe there are any other suspects, or any ongoing risk to the public.
They said they are searching other homes and properties in the community to find anyone else who may be injured or linked to today’s incident, which appears to rank as one of the deadliest mass shootings in Canadian history .
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 22:03 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 02:45:00 +0000 California Refinery Closures Spell Trouble For Fuel Prices, Supply: Experts
California Refinery Closures Spell Trouble For Fuel Prices, Supply: Experts
California Refinery Closures Spell Trouble For Fuel Prices, Supply: Experts
Authored by Rob Sabo via The Epoch Times,
Several energy companies have announced the closure of some of their refineries in California in recent months, citing the regulatory environment and operational losses.
Multiple experts in the state’s oil and gas industry recently spoke with The Epoch Times about the closures and their potential impacts on fuel prices and fuel availability in the Golden State.
Refinery Closures
Valero Energy Corporation announced in April 2025 that it would shutter its refinery operations in Benicia, in the San Francisco Bay area. The company also said that it had evaluated the refinery assets in Benicia and Wilmington, near the Port of Long Beach, and concluded that the carrying values of both assets were not recoverable.
Valero said it would continue serving the Golden State’s oil needs through existing inventories and oil imports.
The Wilmington refinery produced 15 percent of the asphalt supply for the entire Southern California region and had a capacity of 135,000 barrels per day. The Benicia refinery on the Carquinez Straits of San Francisco Bay, meanwhile, produced as much as 170,000 barrels per day and employed more than 400.
While the Benicia refinery was originally slated to cease production in April 2026, it actually ceased production in late January. The closure comes on the heels of Phillips 66 ending operations at its Los Angeles refineries in the fourth quarter of 2025.
Phillips 66 operated refineries in Wilmington and Carson that distributed fuel throughout California, as well as to Nevada and Arizona. The dual sites spanned 650 acres and employed about 600.
Chevron, meanwhile, announced in August 2024 that it was relocating its headquarters from San Ramon to Houston, Texas. The company had operated in the Golden State since 1879 and employed more than 2,000 people in San Ramon. Its refineries in Richmond and El Segundo supply more than 1,800 retail locations in the state.
Key factors
Michael Mische, a professor at the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business, told Siyamak Khorrami, host of The Epoch Times’s “California Insider,” that Valero’s and Chevron had incurred heavy asset write-offs before they made those decisions.
Valero said in the April 2025 announcement that it had written off a combined $1.1 billion of assets in Benicia and Wilmington in the first quarter of the year.
Chevron revealed in a January Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it had recorded after-tax charges of $3.5 billion to $4?billion in the fourth quarter of 2023, including asset write-offs and impairment charges, primarily in California.
“Of course, they vacated California. Their corporate headquarters is now in Houston,” Mische said, referring to Chevron.
In responding to the company’s Benicia refinery-closure decision during an April 2025 earnings call, Valero CEO Lane Riggs cited California’s regulatory environment as the primary reason.
“California has been pursuing policies to move away from fossil fuels for the past 20 years,” he said.
“The consequence is that the regulatory and enforcement environment is the most stringent and difficult in North America.”
Phillips 66 also cited “changes in governmental policies or laws that relate to our operations, including regulations that seek to limit or restrict refining” as a reason for its decision to cease operations in its announcement.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill AB X2-1 on Oct. 14, 2024, which became effective on Jan.?13,?2025. The bill allows the California Energy Commission to regulate refiners by enforcing minimum inventory levels to prevent spikes in price, effectively capping their profit margins.
“That piece of legislation (was) one of the primary last factors that went into decisions to close these refineries down,” Mische said.
Additional regulations enacted in the state have led to increased production and operating costs for oil refiners.
In 2020, Newsom issued an executive order requiring all new passenger vehicles to have zero emissions by 2035. In 2022, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) adopted new regulations to pave the way for the state’s zero-emission standards.
The state’s Cap-and-Invest Program, meanwhile, has a goal of carbon neutrality by 2045 and requires increasingly stricter standards for carbon emissions.
Mische said that without a significant change in policy and stance toward the oil industry, the state may lose another one or two refineries by 2032.
Potential Impact
Mike Ariza, former senior refinery technician and control board supervisor at the Benicia refinery, told Khorrami that Valero’s refinery operations in Benicia were the most complex and efficient in the state.
The refinery produced between 4.5 million and 4.7 million gallons of gasoline per day, as well as about 600,000–700,000 gallons of jet fuel and diesel fuel, he said.
A bad storm or major problem at one of California’s ports could have huge ripple effects across the state’s fuel supply, Ariza said.
“If something like that happens, we will very quickly run out of gasoline,” he said.
“We don’t have a lot of inventory—14 days, we will run out of supplies. Not only will prices go through the roof, but you will end up having shortages.”
Mische said that 85 percent of all light-duty vehicles in California use gasoline or diesel fuel, and airplanes require “jet fuel”—gasoline or diesel fuel specially refined for jet engines.
“These refineries, as they’re shutting down, place greater and greater pressure, not only on prices but on the supply chains themselves,” he said. “It’s quite possible that you'll have supply disruptions.”
Californians pay the second-highest average gas prices in the United States, behind Hawaii. Gasoline averaged $4.38 a gallon on Jan. 4, the American Automobile Association reported. The national average was $2.88 per gallon. Fuel prices in remote Mono County along the Eastern Sierra Nevada mountains averaged $5.56 per gallon.
Meanwhile, California Assembly member Stan Ellis, a Republican representing Kern and Tulare counties, expressed concerns about the impact of Valero’s refinery closure on the U.S. military installations in the state.
“Forty-some bases, counting National Guard and ... the Marines, and all the bases, naval stations, in California. Where are they going to get their fuel?” he said.
A November 2025 Institute for Energy Research (IER) report warned that several U.S. military installations in California could face jet fuel supply challenges if the state’s refinery capacity declines due to closures.
The state has the nation’s largest concentration of military personnel and national security activity.
According to a 2022 California Research Bureau report, California had more than 30 military installations, including facilities for the Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, and National Guard.
Ellis said India is a supplier of California’s imported crude, but there are few options to refine it outside of the state.
“This is serious business, and these are facts,” he said. “We’re simply trying to bring awareness to the fact that we have an issue and we need to address it.”
He calls for existing oil fields to be exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), passed in 1970, which requires environmental review and public disclosure for projects that could significantly impact the environment, including refineries, roads, and large buildings.
Separately, Mische is calling on Congress to repeal or modify California’s restrictive policies through the legislative process to support refiners.
“That probably won’t be very successful, but nonetheless, we’re going to give it a good shot this legislative session,” he said.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 21:45 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 02:20:00 +0000 Colombia's Left-Wing President Says He Survived Assassination Attempt As Elections Near
Colombia's Left-Wing President Says He Survived Assassination Attempt As Elections Near
Colombia's democratic socialist president claimed Tuesday afternoon that he escaped an assassination attempt on Monday night, after years of war
Read more.....
Colombia's Left-Wing President Says He Survived Assassination Attempt As Elections Near
Colombia's democratic socialist president claimed Tuesday afternoon that he escaped an assassination attempt on Monday night, after years of warning about assassination plots against him.
AFP News reports that Colombian President Gustavo Petro narrowly escaped an assassination attempt after his helicopter reportedly could not land at a location on the South American country's Caribbean coast because gunmen were allegedly ready to open fire upon landing.
"We headed out to open sea for four hours, and I arrived somewhere we weren't supposed to go, escaping from being killed ," Petro stated in a cabinet meeting on live television.
He warned that the incident is part of a longer-running assassination plot by drug traffickers that he says has targeted him since he took office in August 2022.
Petro suggested in 2024 that the commander of the Estado Mayor Central rebel group had planned to assassinate him with snipers.
For some context, EMC is a dissident group of the now-demobilized Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) that rejected a 2016 peace deal with the government.
Petro's latest assassination plot claim comes ahead of presidential elections, with Petro barred by the constitution from seeking a second term.
According to Bloomberg, Colombia's two top presidential candidates - conservative lawyer Abelardo de la Espriella and leftist senator Iván Cepeda - are neck and neck in the latest poll data ahead of the election on May 31.
De la Espriella has about 32.1% support, compared to Cepeda's 31.4%, in the AtlasIntel poll for Semana newspaper. Former Antioquia governor Sergio Fajardo trails with about 7.6%.
Meanwhile, South American politics has shifted sharply in President Trump's second term, with right-wing movements gaining traction across the continent, from Argentina to Chile, after years of failed socialist and communist governments.
The Maduro regime's fall last month may shape the Colombian elections this spring towards a right-wing.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 21:20 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 01:55:00 +0000 Musk Offers Legal Fees For Anyone Sued Who 'Speaks The Truth' About Epstein
Musk Offers Legal Fees For Anyone Sued Who 'Speaks The Truth' About Epstein
Musk Offers Legal Fees For Anyone Sued Who 'Speaks The Truth' About Epstein
Authored by Rachel Roberts via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Tech billionaire Elon Musk said he will pay the legal fees of anyone who speaks out about alleged perpetrators whose names have been redacted from the Jeffrey Epstein files and is sued as a result.
Elon Musk attends a dinner hosted by President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, on Nov. 18, 2025. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
The Tesla CEO made the offer in response to a public service announcement played on Super Bowl Sunday that featured women alleging abuse by Epstein and his associates.
The 40-second video clip notes that 3 million files related to the late sex offender have not yet been released . The women are depicted holding photographs of their younger selves, with black boxes to symbolize redactions over their mouths. The accusers then reiterate their commitment to standing together to demand the full truth about Epstein’s criminal network. They then urge Attorney General Pam Bondi, “It’s time for the truth.”
Daily Wire commentator Matt Walsh questioned on Musk’s platform, X, why the women had not publicly named their alleged abusers, and suggested they could do so safely through congressional advocates.
Walsh wrote on Sunday, “For those claiming that they can’t name names because they’ll be sued: they could simply give the names to any of their many (and mostly very recent) advocates in congress, who could read the names out loud from the floor, insulating themselves and these women from any litigation. But they refuse to do that. Why?”
Redactions
Musk posted in response to Walsh: “I will pay for the defense of anyone who speaks the truth about this and is sued for doing so.”
The offer could potentially give financial protection to victims who fear legal retaliation for naming individuals linked to Epstein, who died in custody in 2019 while awaiting trial on multiple charges of trafficking minors. His death was ruled a suicide.
Musk’s own name is one of many mentioned in the latest release of more than 3 million Epstein-related files into the public domain on January 31, although he has not been accused of any wrongdoing.
Documents show Musk and Epstein exchanged messages between 2012 and 2014, discussing possible visits to Epstein’s private island, Little St James. One email from November 2012 includes Musk asking, “What day/night will be the wildest party on your island?”
Musk has denied ever visiting the island, stating in a post on X that he “refused” Epstein’s repeated invitations and declined to fly on the financier’s private jet, nicknamed the “Lolita Express.” He added that when he called for the release of the files, he was aware that his correspondence with Epstein could be misinterpreted and used to smear his reputation.
“I don’t care about that, but what I do care about is that we at least attempt to prosecute those who committed serious crimes with Epstein , especially regarding heinous exploitation of underage girls,” he wrote on X following the release of the files on Jan. 31.
Marina Lacerda, an accuser in the Jeffrey Epstein case, speaks during a press conference and rally in support of the victims of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Sept. 3, 2025. Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images
The documents released include flight lists, financial ledgers, and email correspondence, with the Justice Department saying many were redacted to protect victims.
The latest tranche of files referenced several high profile names from the world of tech and big business, including Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, as well as high-profile politicians, including former United States President Bill Clinton and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.
Lawmakers Allowed
Musk made his offer prior to the Department of Justice announcing on Monday it will allow members of Congress to review unredacted files, according to a letter sent to lawmakers.
The letter said that lawmakers, but not members of the public, will be able to review unredacted versions of files that the government has released to comply with a law passed by Congress last year.
There are several terms and conditions imposed on lawmakers, who will need to give 24 hours’ notice before being granted access to the files. They will only be able to review the files on computers at the Department of Justice. Only lawmakers, not their staff, may view the files, and while note-taking is allowed, they will not be permitted to make copies.
Among the many high-profile names in the latest files is Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, whose revealed association with Epstein had already caused him to be stripped of his royal title by his brother, British monarch King Charles III.
Buckingham Palace Statement
Police in the UK are assessing claims that the former duke shared confidential reports from his role as the UK’s trade envoy with Epstein.
Buckingham Palace said on Monday it was ready to support any police investigation into Charles’s brother after emails suggested Mountbatten-Windsor might have shared confidential British trade documents with Epstein in his capacity as trade envoy in late 2010.
A Buckingham Palace spokesman said: “The King has made clear, in words and through unprecedented actions, his profound concern at allegations which continue to come to light in respect of Mr Mountbatten-Windsor’s conduct.
“While the specific claims in question are for Mr Mountbatten-Windsor to address, if we are approached by Thames Valley Police we stand ready to support them as you would expect.
“As was previously stated, Their Majesties’ thoughts and sympathies have been, and remain with, the victims of any and all forms of abuse.”
Mountbatten-Windsor has previously denied any wrongdoing over his Epstein links , which are known to have continued after Epstein was convicted for soliciting a minor in 2008.
Thames Valley Police said last week said it was assessing allegations that a 26-year-old woman was sent to the UK by Epstein for a sexual encounter with the former duke in 2010.
The then-Prince of Wales (L) and with the then-Duke of York on Christmas Day in 2017. Joe Giddens/PA
Charles stripped his younger brother of his titles following the posthumous release of a book by Virginia Giuffre, who alleged she was trafficked by Epstein and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell , when she was a teenager.
In 2022, the duke settled a lawsuit with Giuffre, who accused him of having sex with her when she was 17, after they were introduced by Epstein. Mountbatten-Windsor said he has no recollection of ever meeting Giuffre, who was the most high-profile campaigner for Epstein’s victims before her sudden death in Western Australia in April 2025, and was involved in multiple lawsuits against those she accused of exploiting her.
Authorities said Giuffre’s death was not suspicious , although some members of her family have expressed doubts that she took her own life, and a full inquest has yet to take place.
Lauren Hersh, national director of World Without Exploitation, which produced the public information film released on Feb. 8, said in an emailed statement: “Moving forward, the Department of Justice must take every effort to prioritize the privacy and safety of the survivors, who have bravely come forward with their stories over the past decades. We will not stop until survivors get the transparency and accountability they deserve.”
PA Media and Reuters contributed to this report.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 20:55 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 01:05:00 +0000 When Government Subsidies Stopped, Doritos Got 15% Cheaper
When Government Subsidies Stopped, Doritos Got 15% Cheaper
When Government Subsidies Stopped, Doritos Got 15% Cheaper
Authored by James Hickman via SchiffSovereign.com,
PepsiCo spent $2.8 million last year lobbying to keep junk food eligible for food stamps.
But last week - after Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. got 18 states to ban SNAP purchases of products like soda, candy, and processed snacks - PepsiCo announced price cuts of up to 15% on Doritos, Lay’s, Tostitos, and other Frito-Lay products.
The company’s official explanation was “affordability.” CEO Ramon Laguarta cited low-income consumers are switching to store brands.
But the timing tells the real story.
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program— food stamps— is a $100 billion per year program serving roughly 42 million Americans. And according to the USDA’s own data, about 20 cents of every SNAP dollar goes to sweetened beverages, candy, salty snacks, and sugar.
In fact soft drinks alone are the single largest category of SNAP purchases.
And, until last week, products from Pepsi’s Frito-Lay division were in 7.2% of all shopping trips paid for with SNAP (i.e. taxpayer-funded) benefits.
So when the government stopped subsidizing demand for their products, PepsiCo had to do something they hadn’t needed to do in years: compete.
This is what the free market does— it forces companies to be more efficient, cut prices, and pass savings on to their customers.
But here’s the thing— this is one company, one product line, one government program.
Zoom out and you can see just how much of price inflation in our daily lives is due directly to government spending— before we even get into monetary policy like printing money.
When a guaranteed buyer shows up with a bottomless wallet, prices go up.
Just look at college tuition. In 1965, Congress passed the Higher Education Act and began backing student loans with federal dollars.
Since then, tuition has risen roughly three times faster than inflation. A year at a private university that cost $2,800 in 1963 now costs over $85,000.
The New York Federal Reserve studied this directly and found that for every dollar increase in subsidized student loans, tuition rose by up to 60 cents.
The mechanism is simple: when the government guarantees the tuition money, universities raise prices… simply because they can.
Healthcare is even worse.
Before Medicare and Medicaid were created in 1965, the government’s share of healthcare spending was about 31%. Today it’s roughly 64%. Medicaid spending alone has grown from $13 billion in 1975 to over $900 billion today.
And— shocker— healthcare prices have risen dramatically over the same period. The US now spends nearly $5 trillion per year on healthcare, far more per capita than any other developed country, with outcomes that are often worse.
The pattern is the same everywhere you look: the government shows up with money. Prices rise to absorb it. The subsidy becomes permanent. The industry restructures itself around the guaranteed revenue. And then anyone who suggests pulling back the money is accused of “cutting” a vital service.
Now consider the scale of this in America today.
Federal spending has risen from about 18% of GDP in the 1990s to nearly 24% today. That means almost a quarter of the entire American economy is government money.
Of this, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly estimated that 10% of the federal budget— roughly $600 billion per year— is lost to outright fraud of the Somali daycare type in Minnesota.
Then there’s the legal graft. California alone received roughly $100 billion in federal grants over the past few years for DEI initiatives that produced nothing except more government jobs and campaign contributions.
So how much of America’s economic output is actually real?
How much is just government money making a round trip— borrow more debt, hand it out through some boondoggle program where it is spent at a PepsiCo subsidiary, counted as “economic activity,” making people obese… then more money spent on healthcare to keep them alive and paying enough taxes for the government to be able to pay interest on the debt…
It’s absurd when you think about it. We don’t have a precise answer. But the Pepsi story gives us a clue. The moment the government stopped subsidizing one small corner of the economy, prices dropped by 15% within a week.
RFK didn’t regulate PepsiCo. He didn’t cap prices. He didn’t launch an antitrust investigation. He simply stopped the government from funneling taxpayer dollars into unhealthy food… and the market corrected overnight.
Now imagine what would happen if the government stopped subsidizing entire industries— the defense contractors billing $10,000 for a toilet seat, the universities charging $85,000 for a degree in gender studies, the healthcare system where nobody can tell you what anything costs.
We might finally find out how much of this economy is real.
And that, frankly, is what makes it so hard to fix. Because so many peoples’ livelihoods now depend on the government gravy train.
But this trajectory has an expiration date. The federal government borrows $2 trillion a year to keep it all going. Interest on that debt already exceeds $1 trillion annually— more than the entire military budget— and it’s growing faster than any other line item.
If rates stay elevated because inflation won’t come down, the cost of servicing the debt crowds out everything else.
If the government responds by printing money to cover the gap, inflation gets worse.
And it makes sense to have a Plan B that doesn’t depend on Washington finding fiscal discipline before the math catches up with them.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 20:05 Close
Wed, 11 Feb 2026 00:40:00 +0000 FBI Confirms Vote-Counting Irregularities In Georgia 2020 Election
FBI Confirms Vote-Counting Irregularities In Georgia 2020 Election
Last month, FBI agents executed a search warrant in Union City, Georgia, marking a sharp escalation in scrutiny surrounding Fulton County’s handling of the 2
Read more.....
FBI Confirms Vote-Counting Irregularities In Georgia 2020 Election
Last month, FBI agents executed a search warrant in Union City, Georgia, marking a sharp escalation in scrutiny surrounding Fulton County’s handling of the 2020 election. The FBI has now reportedly substantiated major irregularities in vote counting from Fulton County, Georgia, during the 2020 election and is now investigating whether those errors were deliberate violations of federal law.
An affidavit filed by FBI Special Agent Hugh Raymond Evans last month, which was unsealed Tuesday, lays out five categories of confirmed problems in Fulton County's handling of ballots, raising questions that have simmered for over five years since Trump and his allies raised questions about the election in Georgia and other states where irregularities were alleged.
According to a report from Just the News, Evans filed the affidavit last month to establish probable cause for a raid that seized around 700 boxes of ballots from an Atlanta-area storage warehouse. The investigation stemmed from a referral by Kurt Olsen, President Trump's election integrity czar. Evans interviewed roughly a dozen unnamed witnesses about allegations tied to the contested Georgia race, where Joe Biden edged out Trump by less than 12,000 votes in the official results.
"Some of those allegations have been disproven while some of those allegations have been substantiated, including through admissions by Fulton County," Evans wrote.
"This warrant application is part of an FBI criminal investigation into whether any of the improprieties were intentional acts that violated federal criminal laws."
Fulton County admitted it lacks scanned images of all 528,777 ballots counted during the initial count and of the 527,925 ballots tallied during the state's first recount.
County officials also confirmed that during the recount, some ballots were scanned multiple times. Ballot images obtained through public records requests show identical markings appearing on duplicated images.
During the Risk Limiting Audit, hand counters reported vote totals for batches that didn't match the actual votes inside those batches.
According to the affidavit, "The State’s Performance Review Board reported that Secretary of State investigators confirmed inaccurate batch tallies from the Risk Limiting Audit.”
Then there's the matter of the pristine absentee ballots.
Auditors assisting in the Risk Limiting Audit reported counting supposed absentee ballots that had "never been creased or folded, as would be required for the ballot to be mailed to the voter and for the ballot to be returned in the sealed envelope requiring the voter's signature for authentication."
The timeline adds another wrinkle.
On the deadline day to report recount results, Fulton County initially declared a total of 511,343 ballots—17,434 fewer than the original count. By the next day, that number had jumped to 527,925. Thousands of ballots, more than Joe Biden’s margin of victory, had simply appeared overnight.
"If these deficiencies were the result of intentional action, it would be a violation of federal law regardless of whether the failure to retain records or the deprivation of a fair tabulation of a vote was outcome determinative for any particular election or race," Evans said.
“Many of the claims made in the affidavits were previously vetted by the Georgia State Election Board and through litigation,” reports Fox News Digital. “Trump and his lawyers at the time lost all of their cases after judges found they either did not have standing to bring the lawsuits or that the allegations lacked merit.”
For years, officials insisted the 2020 process was sound, dismissing concerns as conspiracy theories.
What remains unclear is whether the problems resulted from incompetence, chaos, or intent.
That's the question the FBI is now trying to answer. For those who spent the last five years arguing that Georgia's election administration deserved scrutiny, the affidavit offers a measure of vindication.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 19:40 Close