Michael Riley
575 posts

Michael Riley
@Riley_MD
The voice of a generation. Audere est Facere.
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 Katılım Haziran 2010
276 Takip Edilen51 Takipçiler
Michael Riley retweetledi

🚨 Here is the full 40 minutes of my crew and I exposing California fraud, Minnesota was big but California is even bigger... We uncovered over $170,000,000 in fraud as these fraudsters live in luxury with no consequences. Like it and share it, the fraud must STOP.
We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for this to be happening. These fraudsters have been able to defraud American taxpayers for years without any pushback from the public and politicians.
It is time to EXPOSE IT ALL and end America's fraud crisis.
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@barstoolsports Why didn't we just skip the regular season, conference tourneys and the big dance altogether. Just let some fat slob journos tell us who the best team is each year.
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The Dream Is Dead: Miami (Ohio) Blows Its Perfect Season To UMass And Now Everyone Is Arguing If They Still Belong In The Tournament s.barstool.link/c/article-3565…

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@SenSanders Learn how to properly spend the taxes you already steal. You are a corrupt fraud.
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Michael Riley retweetledi

6 yrs ago today, on Feb 1, 2020, a group that included Anthony Fauci, Francis Collins, Jeremy Farrar, Eddie Holmes, Kristian Andersen, Robert Garry, Andrew Rambaut, Ron Fouchier, Marion Koopmans, and Christian Drosten came together to discuss how to mislead the public about the origin of SARS-CoV-2.
Nate Silver@NateSilver538
Let's start by 1) retracting the "Proximal Origins" paper; 2) having scientists like you (i.e. people sympathetic to the natural origins case) call out Andersen et al for their gross misconduct. Then we might have the semblance of an honest discussion.
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Michael Riley retweetledi
Michael Riley retweetledi

As a former Special Forces Warrant Officer with multiple rotations running counterinsurgency ops—both hunting insurgents and trying to separate them from sympathetic populations—I’ve seen organized resistance up close. From Anbar to Helmand, the pattern is familiar: spotters, cutouts, dead drops (or modern equivalents), disciplined comms, role specialization, and a willingness to absorb casualties while bleeding the stronger force slowly.
What’s unfolding in Minneapolis right now isn’t “protest.” It’s low-level insurgency infrastructure, built by people who’ve clearly studied the playbook.
Signal groups at 1,000-member cap per zone. Dedicated roles: mobile chasers, plate checkers logging vehicle data into shared databases, 24/7 dispatch nodes vectoring assets, SALUTE-style reporting (Size, Activity, Location, Unit, Time, Equipment) on suspected federal vehicles. Daily chat rotations and timed deletions to frustrate forensic recovery. Vetting processes for new joiners. Mutual aid from sympathetic locals (teachers providing cover, possible PD tip-offs on license plate lookups). Home-base coordination points. Rapid escalation from observation to physical obstruction—or worse.
This isn’t spontaneous outrage. This is C2 (command and control) with redundancy, OPSEC hygiene, and task organization that would make a SF team sergeant nod in recognition. Replace “ICE agents” with “occupying coalition forces” and the structure maps almost 1:1 to early-stage urban cells we hunted in the mid-2000s.
The most sobering part? It’s domestic. Funded, trained (somewhere), and directed by people who live in the same country they’re trying to paralyze law enforcement in. When your own citizens build and operate this level of parallel intelligence and rapid-response network against federal officers—complete with doxxing, vehicle pursuits, and harassment that’s already turned lethal—you’re no longer dealing with civil disobedience. You’re facing a distributed resistance that’s learned the lessons of successful insurgencies: stay below the kinetic threshold most of the time, force over-reaction when possible, maintain popular support through narrative, and never present a single center of gravity.
I spent years training partner forces to dismantle exactly this kind of apparatus. Now pieces of it are standing up in American cities, enabled by elements of local government and civil society. That should keep every thinking American awake at night.
Not because I want escalation. But because history shows these things don’t de-escalate on their own once the infrastructure exists and the cadre believe they’re winning the information war.
We either recognize what we’re actually looking at—or we pretend it’s still just “activism” until the structures harden and spread.
Your call, America. But from where I sit, this isn’t January 2026 politics anymore.
It’s phase one of something we’ve spent decades trying to keep off our own soil.
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Michael Riley retweetledi

@Riley_MD @pablofindsout @garrett_TFE @PabloTorre But what if the orange man is most definitely bad?
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A weekend round at East Potomac Golf Links costs $48 for 18 holes.
But with Trump in charge, "There might be a desire to turn this into a kind of, like, $1,000-green-fee golf course," warns @garrett_TFE.
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Michael Riley retweetledi
Michael Riley retweetledi

@AlasdairGold What exactly does Porro offer on either defense or offense at this point?
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Villa score. All too easy through the middle for Malen as he turns, runs and passes to the free Buendia, who runs run on and crashes a shot home. football.london/tottenham-hots…
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