Fx Red
18.3K posts

Fx Red
@FuchRed
I love to see and post animal posts, because this world has too many FUCKING bad politics. I need these cute, lovable animals to make me happy.


ORANGE COUNTY | June 6, 2023 ‘I am a victim of the corrupt Orange County Family Court system. So are my three children. ‘I wanted to speak to you today. Unfortunately, I can not be present since I'm at the monthly Homeowners Representative Board (HRB) meeting at UC Irvine. ‘On HRB, I represent professors who own subsidized homes on campus. Three of them are politicians: Katie Porter, Dave Min and Kathleen Treseder. That’s why I’ve asked [Joette] to read my public comment to you. ‘Here’s the statement: ‘Orange County Family Court judges Leal, Waltz & Palafox are trafficking children to an abuser in the case of Julie Holborn, a Newport Beach mom. [She also happens to be here today in the audience.] ‘I follow her case as a public court watcher. I also co-wrote a declaration and will testify to it under penalty of perjury. ‘Julie’s representative, Supervisor Katrina Foley, knows that what I'm saying is true. And so do the other four supervisors. ‘OC moms are dying. ‘Why is it so hard to protect and raise children in Orange County? ‘For the record: Since 2007, I've lived in University Hills 92617 in the City of Irvine. ‘Thank you. And once again, [my] name is Brad Conley.’ Joette’s postscript: ‘Julie has been before this board before and she has spoken to you regarding the disastrous situation that her children are in after being turned over to the to their father who was an abuser. ‘He was also doing incredibly ugly stuff. I’ve met him. ‘The first time I met him he handed me a Cease & Desist letter that threatened to sue me for being present at the court. The guy’s a psycho. I don't know why anyone in their right mind would turn children over to the psycho man. ‘Now, Julie can explain more of her circumstances, but you people need to listen because this is deadly. ‘It’s dangerous… and the children of Orange County are suffering. Thank you.’


A Taiwanese TV anchor with hundreds of thousands of followers was secretly submitting his scripts to China for approval before broadcasting them. He was paid in cryptocurrency for every video. And he was using the same bank accounts to bribe military personnel into handing over Taiwan's missile deployment data. Lin Chen-you, known by his screen name "Ma De," worked as a political reporter and anchor at CTiTV, one of Taiwan's major cable news networks, and ran a YouTube channel with a substantial following. On May 6, 2026, Taiwanese prosecutors indicted him on three counts after a four-month investigation. They are seeking 12 years in prison. The charges are specific and documented. First: Lin produced anti-recall propaganda videos during Taiwan's Legislative Yuan recall campaigns while following instructions from an unidentified Chinese contact, submitting his scripts for pre-approval before broadcasting them on television and YouTube. He then sent back viewership statistics and traffic screenshots as proof of impact. He received 4,325 USDT in Tether cryptocurrency for this work, approximately NT$130,000. Second: Lin provided at least five of his personal bank accounts as a money channel, wiring funds to six active and retired military personnel from Taiwan's Army, Navy, Air Force, and missile units. The bribed soldiers were instructed to film pro-CCP "surrender videos" while holding PRC flags and to photograph and transmit classified military documents through messaging apps. The secrets allegedly handed over included drone and missile data, Han Kuang military exercise details, rocket system specifications, missile deployment locations, new missile parameters, and internal operation manuals. From 2023 to 2025, Lin received nearly 50,000 USDT from Chinese sources, totalling over NT$1 million in illegal gains, laundered through Binance and OKX. Third: prosecutors charged him with money laundering for layering the cryptocurrency payments through multiple exchanges to conceal their origin. The lead prosecutor described Lin as a tool for information warfare who handed content control of a mainstream Taiwanese news platform directly to foreign hostile forces, calling his crimes "heinous and unforgivable." The case will not receive a public trial because the evidence involves classified national security material. Lin told investigators he did not know the money came from Chinese forces. Prosecutors noted that he submitted scripts for Chinese approval before every broadcast and sent back viewership data after each one. The evidence includes bank records, crypto transaction logs, chat histories, and confessions from several of his military co-defendants. The CCP did not need to hack Taiwan's military. It found a news anchor who needed money and gave him a script. #Taiwan #CCP #China #Espionage #MediaEspionage #NationalSecurity #Disinformation #CTiTV #Geopolitics #ChinaSpying




A Taiwanese TV anchor with hundreds of thousands of followers was secretly submitting his scripts to China for approval before broadcasting them. He was paid in cryptocurrency for every video. And he was using the same bank accounts to bribe military personnel into handing over Taiwan's missile deployment data. Lin Chen-you, known by his screen name "Ma De," worked as a political reporter and anchor at CTiTV, one of Taiwan's major cable news networks, and ran a YouTube channel with a substantial following. On May 6, 2026, Taiwanese prosecutors indicted him on three counts after a four-month investigation. They are seeking 12 years in prison. The charges are specific and documented. First: Lin produced anti-recall propaganda videos during Taiwan's Legislative Yuan recall campaigns while following instructions from an unidentified Chinese contact, submitting his scripts for pre-approval before broadcasting them on television and YouTube. He then sent back viewership statistics and traffic screenshots as proof of impact. He received 4,325 USDT in Tether cryptocurrency for this work, approximately NT$130,000. Second: Lin provided at least five of his personal bank accounts as a money channel, wiring funds to six active and retired military personnel from Taiwan's Army, Navy, Air Force, and missile units. The bribed soldiers were instructed to film pro-CCP "surrender videos" while holding PRC flags and to photograph and transmit classified military documents through messaging apps. The secrets allegedly handed over included drone and missile data, Han Kuang military exercise details, rocket system specifications, missile deployment locations, new missile parameters, and internal operation manuals. From 2023 to 2025, Lin received nearly 50,000 USDT from Chinese sources, totalling over NT$1 million in illegal gains, laundered through Binance and OKX. Third: prosecutors charged him with money laundering for layering the cryptocurrency payments through multiple exchanges to conceal their origin. The lead prosecutor described Lin as a tool for information warfare who handed content control of a mainstream Taiwanese news platform directly to foreign hostile forces, calling his crimes "heinous and unforgivable." The case will not receive a public trial because the evidence involves classified national security material. Lin told investigators he did not know the money came from Chinese forces. Prosecutors noted that he submitted scripts for Chinese approval before every broadcast and sent back viewership data after each one. The evidence includes bank records, crypto transaction logs, chat histories, and confessions from several of his military co-defendants. The CCP did not need to hack Taiwan's military. It found a news anchor who needed money and gave him a script. #Taiwan #CCP #China #Espionage #MediaEspionage #NationalSecurity #Disinformation #CTiTV #Geopolitics #ChinaSpying














