

Miranda Devine
96.1K posts

@mirandadevine
Journalist, wife, mother, dog-lover. Truth-teller. @nypost @foxnews. Books: #LaptopFromHell #BigGuy. Podcast: Pod Force One https://t.co/Qa9JAzZpG1





🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump on the rescue operation: "When you go into these areas, you don't come out like we came out... God was watching us." x.com/clashreport/st…


NEW: Republicans lead in net favorability ahead of the 2026 midterms "Democrats are, just simply put, running behind their previous benchmark..."

There’s a fundamental tradeoff for any platform between chasing maximum engagement and surfacing genuinely good content. Right now this platform seems tilted toward whatever drives clicks, even when that means amplifying bad faith posts, outright lies, and low effort ragebait. Maybe there’s a reason to boost lowlifes who cash in on fake outrage, but it’s not obvious. In any case, the result is that the quality of the site degrades. It doesn’t have to be like this. You can allow and host all kinds of trash without actively promoting it.

It’s not even 9:30 am and the briefing room aisles are full of reporters (many from foreign outlets) staking out their spots for the 1pm briefing with President Donald Trump.

Another side of Harmeet Dhillon dlvr.it/TRtvjK

Ed Martin is the obvious choice for a top DOJ role at a time when Americans are demanding accountability and an end to government weaponization. Ed's credentials are undeniable—he clerked for Judge Pasco Bowman, practiced at a major international law firm, served as Chief of Staff to a governor, led the St. Louis Board of Elections, and is a New York Times bestselling author. That’s real legal experience and real leadership. Ed understands the law, how government works, and what happens when power is abused. He’s not a placeholder—he’s a proven fighter with the integrity and backbone to restore trust in our justice system. If we’re serious about fixing the DOJ, Ed Martin is the right choice. f.mtr.cool/gcbbboprqz

EXCLUSIVE: The hidden $250K machine of 9 paid vendors behind the 'flagship' #NoKings protest in St. Paul, Minnesota I followed the money behind the No Kings protest in St. Paul, Minn., and uncovered an estimated $250,000 paid to 9 vendors to produce an event that was about the size of a Def Leppard concert. Sources said that the Democratic nonprofit Indivisible paid the bill. It didn't respond to numerous requests for comment. How did I piece this together? Well, I have a rule when reporting on the protest industry: be the first there and one of the last to leave. That’s how I met Slamhammer Sound & Roadcase Co. production manager Matt Svobodny, one of the very nice hard-working members of the production crew behind the scenes in St. Paul, as they were breaking down the set for the No Kings protest, long after Bruce Springsteen and most of the anti-Trump protesters had left. He was straightforward, candid and matter-of-fact about what it takes to throw a protest and, a few days later, guided me -- and you -- through the warehouse where Slamhammer stores the equipment it pulled out for the protest. He provided the kind of transparency that the secretive nonprofits behind the protests should actually be providing to citizens and the media. See for yourself: ➡️ the mobile stage ➡️ the speakers ➡️ nearly a mile of heavy-duty feeder cable used to distribute electricity throughout the rally site and the ballistic ➡️ bullet-resistant barriers that shielded the Bruce Springsteen, Jane Fonda, Joan Baez, TIm Walz, Ilhan Omar, Randi Weingarten and the day's other bold-faced names WATCH the video that I recorded ⬇️ Thank you to Fox News Digital's Hannah Brennan for her work editing the video. In our new @FoxNews Digital exclusive, I lay out how the "flagship" protest in St. Paul wasn’t spontaneous, like most of the media reported. It was professionally engineered. And that raises a bigger question: When protests look like productions…who’s really behind the curtain? I answer that question in the article and the thread below 🧵👇 A former Obama and Biden administration political strategist and campaign operative Roger Fisk takes credit for being the "Senior Advisor to the #NoKings flagship event," fine-tuning the "art and science" of throwing the St. Paul protest, along with two other "No Kings" protests last year. Fisk didn't respond to a request for comment. The protests have parroted Chinese government propaganda, demonizing America as a "fascist" nation and Trump as a "king." Partners in the protests were pro-communist groups funded by Neville Roy Singham, a tech tycoon living in Shanghai. @DataRepublican, You'll want to read this. READ: foxnews.com/politics/behin… Behind the scenes, I identified 9 vendors that were paid an estimated $250,000 to construct the protest: ➡️ Slamhammer Sound & Roadcase Co. — mobile stage, 100-speaker sound system, lighting, 1,700 ft cable, ballistic barriers → estimated $100,000 ➡️ Fire Up Video — 4 jumbo screens → estimated $20,000 ➡️ Algorithm, an AV company — 2 jumbo screens → estimated $25,000 ➡️ Common World Productions — 2 LED stage screens → estimated $10,000 ➡️ Warning Lites of Minnesota — bike-rack barricades → estimated $15,000 ➡️ E5 Energy — generators, electrical distribution → estimated $15,000 ➡️ Ultimate Events — tents, chairs, tables → estimated $30,000 ➡️ On Site Companies — ~300 porta-toilets → estimated $25,000 ➡️ Fast Kat Connects — high-speed internet → estimated $10,000 Total: an estimated $250,000. This wasn’t a rally that just “popped up,” as CNN reported. It was built, truck by truck, cable by cable, screen by screen. 🧵 with how it worked.



couldnt find myself on this list but here are my numbers