Matt Bilinsky

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Matt Bilinsky

Matt Bilinsky

@mattbilinsky

Tech/Media/Business Attorney • Start-Up Advisor/Investor • Podcast: The Prevailing Narrative

ÜT: 34.068722,-118.364146 Katılım Mayıs 2008
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Matt Bilinsky retweetledi
Will Chamberlain
Will Chamberlain@willchamberlain·
No foreign actor has influenced Trump more on the course of conduct in this war/negotiation than the Saudis If you are blaming Israel you are completely out to lunch
Amit Segal@AmitSegal

The bill for American action has arrived at the Saudi door. Last night, Donald Trump reportedly demanded that in exchange for finalizing the current ceasefire deal with Iran—the one desperately needed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—the Gulf states would have to pay a massive premium: immediate normalization with Israel. According to my sources, the ultimatum was met with literal silence. The Arab leaders were so thoroughly stunned by the audacity of the request that Trump actually had to break the silence with a follow-up: “Are you still there?” For months, we have watched a narrative form: Israel deceived the United States into a disastrous war that only empowered Iran. This narrative ignores multiple factors, including but not limited to the fact that it was Trump’s choice, Trump did not follow the Israeli plan, and—perhaps most of all—the presence of another major player calling for war: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. In late February, The Washington Post reported that the decision to go to war had been reached after encouragement from two key allies: Israel and Saudi Arabia. Throughout the war, they reinforced this support. A few weeks later, when Trump was claiming that the war would be over in a few days, The New York Times reported that both nations heavily encouraged a continuation of the conflict. Prince Mohammed reportedly argued that the United States should consider putting troops in Iran to seize energy infrastructure and force the government out of power. But things have changed. The Saudis never expected to put their core energy infrastructure on the line for this conflict, assuming a covert nod to Washington would yield a painless destruction of the Iranian threat. Instead, the smoking ruins of the Ras Tanura refinery, a staggering $33.5 billion first-quarter deficit, and a hull-to-hull backup in the Strait of Hormuz served as a brutal awakening. With the United Arab Emirates stepping aggressively into the vacuum—gladly absorbing the role of America’s primary, hardline Gulf ally—Riyadh is executing a frantic tactical retreat. For the past month and a half, MBS has been beating a different drum: diplomacy. “Okay,” said Trump last night, but constantly shifting positions comes with a cost: normalization. This is about far more than Trump extracting a quick return on investment. By demanding normalization as the price for a ceasefire, he is forcing the Saudis to grab Israel’s other arm to physically restrain Jerusalem from striking Iran alone. It underscores a truth that Trump understood and Obama never did: the most effective way to control Israel isn’t to push them away, but to wrap them in a bear hug. By locking Jerusalem into a close alliance, Washington doesn’t just protect them—it places its hand directly over the Israeli trigger finger. Washington needs its hand over that trigger because Israel has little incentive to hold back when the current deal appears to leave Iran in a stronger position than before. That is the Iranian impression as well. In The Art of the Deal, Trump writes: “The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem desperate to make it. That makes the other guy smell blood, and then you’re dead.” Sensing American eagerness for a diplomatic off-ramp, Tehran has smelled exactly that, aggressively upping its demands before any Memorandum of Understanding can be printed. Despite draft stipulations requiring a return to free transit, the IRGC is leveraging its tactical position to normalize a permanent, permission-based transit regime in the Strait of Hormuz—boasting that 33 commercial vessels were forced to register and coordinate with the IRGC Navy in a single 24-hour window. Meanwhile, Iran has flatly rejected a Pakistani compromise to defer unresolved issues, flipping the entire sequencing of the talks by refusing any nuclear-related commitments or stockpiling concessions at this stage. Instead, an emboldened Tehran is demanding immediate economic rewards, including the unfreezing of blocked assets, while conditioning the entire agreement on an “all fronts” ceasefire that would effectively force Washington to strip Israel of its freedom of action against Hezbollah in Lebanon. At the end of the devastating Iran-Iraq War, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini famously declared that accepting peace was like “drinking a poison chalice.” Today, his successor’s successor, Mojtaba Khamenei, is facing no such bitter brew. Instead, Benjamin Netanyahu is being asked to swallow the fatal mixture this time around. Much to his relief, Donald Trump is trying to mix in a Saudi sweetener to help the medicine go down.

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TJ Harker
TJ Harker@TJ_Harker·
Fact: George Floyd said "I can't breathe" eight times before he was on the ground; eight times before anybody touched his neck; eight times before the Facebook video on which the MSM based its faulty verdict.
Passage Publishing@PassagePress

Today we are proud to announce the release of American Scapegoat: How a Corrupt Justice System Sacrificed Derek Chauvin to the Mob by former federal prosecutor T.J. Harker (@TJ_Harker). Six years ago today, George Floyd died while in custody of Minneapolis beat cop Derek Chauvin, sparking the most destructive riots in our nation's history and becoming the pretext for an era of mass political hysteria that threatened to rip apart the very fabric of American life. Cities burned. Floyd's body was paraded around in a gold casket. Every institution was made to bend the knee to BLM. Ordinary white Americans, represented by the person of Derek Chauvin, were called to account for three centuries of racial grievance. All most Americans saw of that day was the grainy cellphone footage of Officer Chauvin's knee restraining the back of George Floyd's neck. Few bothered to learn any other details about the case, and by the time the trial rolled around, the verdict was a foregone conclusion. An innocent black man had been killed by a racist white cop, they were told. And for America to atone for its original sins, that racist white cop had to pay the price. What they didn't know was that Chauvin's knee did not prevent Floyd from breathing. They didn't know Chauvin was following procedure by the book. They didn't know Floyd had taken lethal amounts of fentanyl minutes before being restrained. They didn't know Floyd had a pre-existing heart condition. They didn't know the autopsy report had been revised under threat of professional harm. They didn't know the original prosecutor removed herself from the case after seeing all of the evidence. They didn't know the subsequent prosecutors had to abandon their theory of the case just days into the trial. They didn't know the prosecution never established a cause of death, let alone that Derek Chauvin was responsible. In American Scapegoat, author T.J. Harker breaks down what happened on that fateful day six years ago, analyzes the thousands of court documents manipulated and recontextualized to achieve the trial result Minnesota politicians demanded, and relives the trial itself in thorough, painstaking detail to definitively show that Derek Chauvin did not kill George Floyd. Never in modern American history has our justice system been so corrupted by public mass hysteria than in the case of Derek Chauvin. This is the story of that trial. This is the story of how a man was sacrificed to the mob. American Scapegoat is available for pre-order now. Coming Fall '26.

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Craig Clemens
Craig Clemens@craigclemens·
For those asking if we reported it - yes, they told us they were too understaffed to send an officer and that we had to go down to the station. The station:
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Craig Clemens
Craig Clemens@craigclemens·
The 2nd station was also closed. Since we've shared this story, we've heard from dozens of other moms who've had their vehicles stolen or broken into. The next morning when we finally spoke to an officer, he suggested we DRIVE AROUND AND FIND THE CAR OURSELVES... but not to approach it as there may be a homeless drug addict sleeping inside. You can't make this up. The LA Times, the current administration, Rolling Stone and Seth Rogen want you to think this is normal. I've lived in the city for over 20 years and I can tell you it is NOT normal. And it was not always like this. Prior to 2020, West Hollywood, Mid-CIty and East Hollywood had almost zero homeless drug addicts. If you wanted to find an encampment, you had to go to Venice or Skid Row. During the heyday of the 3rd Street Promenade in 2006, there was one homeless guy, who would harmlessly shake a cup of coins at you. These days they shake sticks with nails or samurai swords. Today, the failures of the current administration are in our face every time we leave our homes. We are told "this is normal", "this is improving". This is not normal. And it is getting WORSE. We were voting for Spencer before this but now it feels even more personal. I encourage you to do the same and do it before June 2nd. Tell your friends and those you know who live here. The primary is more important than anyone realizes. Say what you want about Spencer's past but he has a real plan to fix this. Most importantly, he is the only candidate not asking you to ignore it.
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Matt Bilinsky
Matt Bilinsky@mattbilinsky·
@LMplusG @ABC7 @abc7JoshHaskell Well if you want to focus on Spencer Pratt's stupidity 15 years ago and not focus on Karen Bass' stupidity in running the city of Los Angeles the past 4 years, then you are, in fact, stupid.
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Lisa Glass
Lisa Glass@LMplusG·
@ABC7 @abc7JoshHaskell Does he actually think that people will just ignore all of his on the record stupidity and believe that he is now an entirely different human being? He is a washed up reality "star" with no experience. Bye bye Spencer. You had your 15 minutes - it's long over.
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ABC7 Eyewitness News
Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt sat down with Eyewitness News for an interview last week, where @abc7JoshHaskell asked him about his past connections to conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. "We could go back 15 years. I've said a lot of dumb things. I've done a lot of stupid things in my life... I'm a different person," Pratt said. Read more: abc7.la/mFsVxE
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Adam Lehrer SOS
Adam Lehrer SOS@AdamLehrerSP·
The amount of hit pieces being put out by libtard media on @spencerpratt speaks volumes. Democratic Party consultants are melting down. Spencer winning in one of the most self-destructively blue cities in America is nothing short of a spiritual rebuke to the democrats’ NGO driven pro crime agenda. If they can’t win on their insane policies in LA of all places, their seats of power are vulnerable all over the fucking country.
Rolling Stone@RollingStone

Spencer Pratt lost his house in the Palisades fire. Now he says he can fix the troubled city. History suggests otherwise rollingstone.com/politics/polit…

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Matt Bilinsky
Matt Bilinsky@mattbilinsky·
Evernote is horrendous what's the best note taking/keeping app. @evernote your product is absolute shit.
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Jeremy Boreing
Jeremy Boreing@JeremyDBoreing·
What a truly tragic post. It’s impossible to tell whether this is just excellent grift-craft or genuine delusion. Either way it is a perfect expression of the sickness rotting the soul of our culture. “They” are powerful enough to control people’s minds, but not powerful enough to just control Trump’s mind. Or the minds of the Iranian regime. Or Charlie’s, presumably. Or this person’s mind. It’s true madness, and either this person herself believes it because the internet has made her insane, or she is counting on other people to believe it knowing the internet has made them insane. Either answer is a complete indictment of our social media age.
Mel@Villgecrazylady

4:00 yesterday Trump announces they’ve made a deal About 2 hours later a man with a long history of mental illness who was literally involuntarily committed by the secret service last July somehow gets access to a gun and shows up and opens fire on the White House. 11 hours after that Benjamin Netanyahu decides to make a public post specifically about this shooting that is very reminiscent of his weird ass posts following Charlie’s murder. He made this one before ever even publicly acknowledging the very unpopular Iran deal. And within hours, it looks like the whole deal is off again. Call me crazy, IDGAF, this shit is not coincidence. I don’t know how they’re doing it, probably some kind of mind control or hypnosis but it’s them. I cant rove it but its them.

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Lomez
Lomez@L0m3z·
Imagine your mowing your lawn and some Massie surrogate shows up to your house who can't spell his own name and wants to tell you why you need to vote for Massie or else the baby eating pedophiles who killed Charlie Kirk are going to use Palantir to steal your adrenocrome.
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captive dreamer
captive dreamer@captive_dreamer·
You took your eyes off Rafah, didn't you?
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Holden Culotta
Holden Culotta@Holden_Culotta·
Tim Dillon on Thomas Massie’s loss: “I don’t know how you run a country where people can just dump $32 million into a race.” “This guy who’s like, release the Epstein files.” “Prosecute pedophiles.” “Get out of foreign wars.” “He loses to a guy who’s like: let’s cover up the Epstein files.” “Let’s not prosecute pedophiles.” “Let’s go to war with your kids.” “You would think just platform to platform, that’s a tough sell.” “If you spend enough money, you can just create any reality you want.” “No one knows who the hell the other guy is.” “He was just handpicked, came out of nowhere … was like, ‘we gotta get kids back into the military, we gotta get them to Iran now.’” “You would think that’s probably not a super popular idea.” “Let’s get your son out of the house and into Iran.” “You would think that as ideas go, that’s probably a relatively hard sell.” @TimJDillon
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Kriss Berg, etc.
Kriss Berg, etc.@KrissBergTweets·
A fact that has lived rent free in my head since the moment I read it
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Matt Bilinsky
Matt Bilinsky@mattbilinsky·
It really is incredible. Every moron who tries to get spicy in the replies is so blatantly a pathetic loser. Who raised these idiots?
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