Monday, November 17, 2025

The President Who Cried Hoax

More coloured sand products recalled as ACT set to announce when schools will reopen


Coloured sand linked to asbestos contamination scare found at over 100 SA sites


The President Who Cried Hoax Republicans went after Epstein only when it was politically useful.


Jeffrey Epstein emails show he kept tabs on Donald Trump for years


‘Epstein Hoax’ Got Legs? Mark Wauck

 

Sometimes The Media Ignoring A Major Story Becomes The Story—And Other Notes Caitlin Johnstone


Trump Escalates War on Leftists With Antifa Foreign Terror Label Ken Klippenstein

 

Trump Administration Expected to Drastically Cut Housing Grants New York Times. “…could quickly place as many as 170,000 formerly homeless people at risk of returning to the streets.”

 

How Multilevel Marketing Explains Trump’s Corruption The Economic Populist


 

Judge Rules Flock Surveillance Images Are Public Records That Can Be Requested By Anyone

404 Media: “A judge in Washington has ruled that police images taken by Flock’s AI license plate-scanning cameras are public records that can be requested as part of normal public records requests. The decision highlights the sheer volume of the technology-fueled surveillance state in the United States, and shows that at least in some cases, police cannot withhold the data collected by its surveillance systems. 

In a ruling last week, Judge Elizabeth Neidzwski ruled that “the Flock images generated by the Flock cameras located in Stanwood and Sedro-Wooley [Washington] are public records under the Washington State Public Records Act,” that they are “not exempt from disclosure,” and that “an agency does not have to possess a record for that record to be subject to the Public Records Act.”  She further found that “Flock camera images are created and used to further a governmental purpose” and that the images on them are public records because they were paid for by taxpayers. 

Despite this, the records that were requested as part of the case will not be released because the city automatically deleted them after 30 days. Local media in Washington first reported on the case; 404 Media bought Washington State court records to report the specifics of the case in more detail…