Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Responding to Joe Biden’s address to Congress, Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) shined a very bright light on the hypocrisy and extreme agenda of Biden and the Democratic party, and because he is a black Christian, he was ridiculed as an “Uncle Tom.” While Senator Scott said that America is not a racist country, he also exposed a racist political party—the Democratic Party

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

A Cuban refugee warned that Americans have already “swallowed” the “communist poison pill.” He blames the media and “indoctrination” in the country’s classrooms as proof.
Not only have they swallowed it, they digested it. Listen to the media. They’re no longer objective. You can tell how much they hate this country,” Maximo Alvarez said Wednesday on the podcast The Truth with Lisa Boothe when asked if people have “swallowed the communist poison pill.”

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Corporate media and the government are using fear and intimidation to gaslight the world about COVID 19. Gaslighting is a form of psychological manipulation designed to make people question their own perception or judgment and they are unable to come to sensible conclusions. Yes, I understand that many have lost friends or loved ones to COVID 19. One death is too many. My sincere sympathies. Notwithstanding, People are being coerced into taking a vaccination for a virus that there is less than a 1% chance of contracting and less than a .02% chance of dying from, according to CDC statistics. Moreover, there is a .0017% chance of dying from the vaccination. But there is a whole lot more to this.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.) sent a letter to West Point’s superintendent, Lt. Gen. Darryl Williams about “information” that recently came to his “attention from unsettled soldiers, cadets, and families that raises serious concerns about the U.S. Army’s introduction of elements of critical race theory into cadet instruction.”

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Economists had forecast a trade gap of $70.4 billion. The January gap was revised down from $68.2 billion to $67.8 billion. Both imports and exports fell in the month but the pace of the decline of exports was much swifter, enlarging the deficit. Imports fell seven-tenths of a percentage point but remain near record highs. Exports fell 2.6 percent.