"They read my speech beforehand, threatened to shut me down, and hit me with emotional manipulation. But I spoke anyway. Here's the full 5-minute speech from Dec 1, 2025, Ozark Board of Aldermen meeting. The fight's just starting."
Hashtags: #OzarkMO #FlockCameras #Privacy #SunshineLaw #CityHallSpeech.
Keywords: Ozark Board of Aldermen meeting Dec 1, Flock cameras speech, Buddy Huggins Ozark, privacy rights Missouri, AI surveillance patent.
Hashtags: #OzarkMO #FlockCameras #Privacy #SunshineLaw #CityHallSpeech.
Keywords: Ozark Board of Aldermen meeting Dec 1, Flock cameras speech, Buddy Huggins Ozark, privacy rights Missouri, AI surveillance patent.
🚨SHOCKING: Candace Owens Just Went NUCLEAR On Her LIVE — SLAMMED HER BRASS BALLS ON THE TABLE And Told The Globalist Pedo Elite "COME GET ME"
— Project Constitution (@ProjectConstitu) December 2, 2025
Here’s what she just dropped (Dec 2, 2025 livestream):
A French government whistleblower handed her documents showing the French Foreign… pic.twitter.com/QCSe3NvbUe
The Honduran drug smuggler whom Trump just pardoned received a 45-year sentence from a US federal court for flooding the US with cocaine.
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) December 2, 2025
Given this, how can anyone believe Trump’s motive for toppling Maduro is to impede drug trafficking to the US????pic.twitter.com/i3HPo9QHM4 https://t.co/nI0jBxBzsg
- Glenn Greenwald's post critiques President Trump's recent pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, convicted in 2024 of overseeing cocaine shipments exceeding 400 tons to the US, as evidence undermining Trump's claims that military action against Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro targets drug trafficking.
- The accompanying video from Greenwald's "System Update" details Hernández's 45-year sentence for narco-terrorism, including ties to the Sinaloa Cartel and 56 murders, and contrasts it with Trump's support for a pro-Hernández candidate in Honduras elections while escalating threats against Maduro.
- Trump's differential treatment—pardoning Hernández at Honduras' request while authorizing US boat strikes on Venezuelan drug vessels—suggests motives beyond narcotics control, potentially involving regime change or oil interests, as noted in analyses from BBC and POLITICO.
No comments:
Post a Comment