Ryan Neal
383 posts






BREAKING: DOJ announces it has arrested a US Special Forces soldier who took part in the raid that captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro after the soldier allegedly pocketed $400,000 by betting more than $30,000 on Maduro’s removal on Polymarket. Name: GANNON KEN VAN DYKE










Once again, I’m going to ask: how come @sneako hasn’t been investigated by the @FBI and arrested for terroristic threats? Here he is last night screaming in Arabic about killing Jews in the name of Islam, in the middle of New York City. He is paid hundreds of thousands of dollars per month by the streaming platform @kick. "Khaybar, Khaybar, ya yahud! Jaish Muhammad soufa yaʿoud!” is what Sneako is chanting with a group of Muslim men in this video. Khaybar is a historic Arabian town north of Medina in present-day Saudi Arabia, sacred in Islamic history as the site of Mohammed’s seventh-century conquest of the Jewish tribes who lived there. The chant “Khaybar, Khaybar, ya Yahud! Jaish Muhammad soufa ya’oud” (“Khaybar, Khaybar, oh Jews! The army of Muhammad will return!”) is a classic Islamic jihadist battle cry. It celebrates how Mohammed’s forces attacked the Jews of Khaybar, resulting in their slaughter, execution of leaders, seizure of wealth, the sexual enslavement and rape of women, and the subjugation or expulsion of survivors. In Islamic tradition, this victory is glorified as divine triumph over the Jews. Today, the slogan is chanted as an explicit threat and call for jihad: it promises that Mohammed’s army — and faithful Muslims — will return to conquer, subjugate, expel, or kill Jews once again. This is why it is routinely heard at Islamist rallies and by groups like Hamas. It is not political “resistance”. It is a religious vow rooted in Islam’s foundational narrative of defeating and eradicating the Jews. Is this what you tolerate on your platform? @BijanTehrani


Last month, the City Council passed two bills related to the constitutional right to protest — one for houses of worship, and one for educational institutions. Today, I’m letting one bill go into effect, and vetoing the other. I’d like to take a moment to explain why. As Mayor, I will always make sure the right to protest, prayer and protection are guaranteed for every New Yorker.






















