pedophile power

Do you follow @MonteMader? She’s a smart woman with a lot to say to a lot of people who need to hear it. She has almost 2 million followers on IG , has a YouTube channel, Substack and Patreon accounts.

This was a good one she posted about the pedophiles/Epstein cronies changing the age of consent to avoid prosecution.

Thank you for reading today's post. Have an InterStellar Day! ~PrP

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27 Responses to pedophile power

  1. wake up cuz it’s really happening says:

    Yet another OMG moment….read this.

    September 25, 2025
    Heather Cox Richardson
    Today, with the popularity of President Donald J. Trump and his administration dropping, Trump’s disastrous performance at the United Nations, the return of comedian Jimmy Kimmel to the airwaves, and the Tuesday’s election in Arizona of Democratic representative Adelita Grijalva, who will provide the final signature on a discharge petition to demand a floor vote in the House over releasing all the government files on convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the administration appears to be making a dramatic push to seize complete control of the government.

    Last night, Office of Management and Budget director Russell Vought tried to jam the Democrats into passing the Republicans’ continuing resolution to fund the government. Officials leaked a memo to Politico, Punchbowl News, and Axios—publications that focus on events concerning Capitol Hill—saying that if the Democrats refuse to pass the Republicans’ measure, the administration will try to fire, rather than furlough, large numbers of federal employees.

    Such a move would be challenged in the courts, and the government has been forced to rehire many of the people it forced out earlier this year after those firings left agencies badly understaffed. But the threat is not idle; Vought is a Christian nationalist who has called for a “radical Constitutionalism” that demolishes the modern American state and replaces it with a powerful executive.

    House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) responded: “Listen Russ, you are a malignant political hack. We will not be intimidated by your threat to engage in mass firings. Get lost.” Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said in a statement: “Donald Trump has been firing federal workers since day one—not to govern, but to scare. This is nothing new and has nothing to do with funding the government. These unnecessary firings will either be overturned in court or the administration will end up hiring the workers back, just like they did as recently as today.”

    Trump appears focused on September 30, when the government funding crisis will hit, and the days after it. Although courts have ruled that he does not have the power to impose tariffs willy-nilly, today Trump announced new tariffs of 100% on pharmaceuticals, 50% on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, 30% on upholstered furniture, and 25% on “Heavy (Big!) Trucks” beginning on October 1. On social media, he claimed such tariffs were necessary “for National Security and other reasons.”

    Today, James LaPorta of CBS News reported that the National Archives and Records Administration improperly released Democratic representative Mikie Sherrill’s full military records to an ally of her Republican opponent, Jack Ciattarelli, in the New Jersey governor’s race. The two candidates are tied, and Ciattarelli appears to be trying to link Sherrill to the 1994 Naval Academy cheating scandal involving more than 100 midshipmen.

    Sherrill had an unblemished career in the Navy and as a midshipman, LaPorta notes. She did not turn in her cheating classmates, but she was never accused of cheating herself. The unredacted release of Sherrill’s records appears to violate the 1974 Privacy Act. Sherrill said: “That Jack Ciattarelli and the Trump administration are illegally weaponizing my records for political gain is a violation of anyone who has ever served our country. No veteran’s record is safe.”

    While the National Archives maintained the release was a mistake and apologized for it, the administration’s influence in the Department of Justice tonight could not be explained away.

    Days after Trump demanded that the Department of Justice move “now” to prosecute those he perceives to be his enemies, a federal grand jury has indicted former FBI director James Comey for allegedly lying to Congress and obstructing an investigation. Comey was an early casualty of Trump’s first administration, fired after he refused to kill the FBI investigation of the ties between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russian operatives.

    Over last weekend, Trump exploded at then–acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Erik Siebert, a career prosecutor, after Siebert concluded there was not enough evidence of a crime to charge Comey for allegedly lying to Congress or New York attorney general Letitia James for alleged mortgage fraud.

    On Monday Trump replaced Siebert with White House aide and Trump’s former personal lawyer Lindsey Halligan, and yesterday three sources told Ken Dilanian and Carol Leonnig of MSNBC that they expected Halligan to try to get a grand jury to indict Comey before the five-year statute of limitations on lying to Congress runs out next Tuesday.

    Tonight the DOJ delivered an indictment against Comey.

    “My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump,” Comey said tonight in a video. “But we…will not live on our knees, and you shouldn’t either. Somebody that I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool of a tyrant, and she’s right, but I’m not afraid, and I hope you’re not either. I hope instead you are engaged, you are paying attention, and you will vote like your beloved country depends upon it, which it does. My heart is broken for the Department of Justice, but I have great confidence in the federal judicial system. I’m innocent. So let’s have a trial and keep the faith.”

    The DOJ was busy today. It also sued six states—California, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania—to force them to hand over their voter rolls and information identifying those voters. Matt Cohen of Democracy Docket notes that state officials from both Democratic and Republican governments have questioned why the government wants that information. This lawsuit comes after a nearly identical lawsuit the DOJ filed last week against Maine and Oregon.

    Democratic secretary of state Tobias Read of Oregon called the lawsuits an attempt by President Donald Trump “to use the DOJ to go after his political opponents and undermine our elections.”

    Tara Copp, Dan Lamothe, Alex Horton, Ellen Nakashima, and Noah Robertson of the Washington Post reported today that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered about 800 of the military’s top generals and admirals, along with their senior enlisted advisors, to come to the Marine Corps base in Quantico, Virginia, next week. Such a demand is highly unusual, and no one knows why Hegseth has made it.

    In The Bulwark, Mark Hertling, who was commander of U.S. Army Europe from 2011 to 2012, noted that the demand “is baffling and the cost will be staggering.” Instead of using the Pentagon’s secure video teleconferencing system, the personnel will require flights and accommodations that will cost millions, while the lost focus and readiness will affect their mission.

    Hertling points out that “[a]dversaries and allies are watching. This sudden, global, emergency recall of America’s top brass is a flashing red light to them: Something must be wrong inside the Pentagon.”

    Both Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance tried to downplay the meeting. “Why is that such a big deal?” Trump asked reporters. Vance incorrectly said the meeting is “not particularly unusual,” and said: “I think it’s odd that you guys have made it into such a big story.”

    This evening, Trump signed a memorandum targeting activists and nonprofits as part of what he called a “terror network” that he claims is fueling violence, especially against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. He and his allies claim that “radical left Democrats,” or “Radical Left Terrorists,” are behind that violence, although, as scholar of authoritarianism Timothy Snyder notes, the majority of political violence in the U.S. comes from the right.

    “Titled “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence,” the memo alleges that “common threads animating this violent conduct include anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; extremism on migration, race, and gender; and hostility towards those who hold traditional American views on family, religion, and morality.”

    The document gives law enforcement wide latitude to “investigate, prosecute, and disrupt entities and individuals” engaged in behavior the administration opposes, as well as nonprofit organizations that fund them. It also orders law enforcement to “question and interrogate” people “regarding the entity or individual organizing such actions and any related financial sponsorship of those actions prior to adjudication or initiation of a plea agreement.”

    Former federal prosecutor Daniel Richman, who teaches at Columbia Law School, told Robert Tait and Aram Roston of The Guardian that an executive order cannot create new crimes, and Timothy Snyder noted that the memo nonetheless “undoes the basic tradition of American liberty and law, which is…that we are individuals to be judged on the basis of what we do as such. This memo, quite to the contrary, begins from the premise that the world is governed by mysterious, invisible entities to which individuals can be arbitrarily associated by the power of the government, thereby making those individuals guilty and subject to prosecution and punishment.” It makes responsibility collective, thus enabling the government to target everybody. “The groups that will…be targeted will be groups that are concerned with things like counting the votes, human rights, freedom of speech, and the rule of law.”

    All this, said Snyder, is both a “big lie” and a cliché. Authoritarians always say the country is facing an emergency and that their opponents are “terrorists.” It’s a cliché to say “there’s a mysterious, bottomless, organization that we have to chase to the ends of the Earth and break all the rules to find. That’s what they always say.”

    Snyder noted that Congress can pass laws to rule such behavior illegal, courts can find actions illegal and protect victims, commentators can describe reality, and citizens can say they “don’t want to be subject to an imagined emergency based on a big lie that does away with the essence of American liberty and law.” He concluded: “This has been done before. It can be stopped.”

  2. Elaine says:

    Tiny dick MFs will always attempt to subjugate young girls because they don’t know what a tiny dick is.

  3. O]4 says:

    The missing forks have a story all their own.

  4. Conatance says:

    A little more about the sleeve balls who tried to cancel Jimmy Kimmel.

    Sinclair CEO David Smith has been shifting its editorial coverage to the right for years, and Smith reportedly told Trump in 2016, “We are here to deliver your message.” Likewise, Nexstar chairman Perry Sook has repeatedly praised Trump and poured money into the coffers of GOP groups.

    Sinclair attempted to get in front of the obvious criticisms that it would face as a result of both its initial decision not to broadcast ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ and its latest call to bring him back to the airwaves in Sinclair markets.

    “Our decision to preempt this program was independent of any government interaction or influence,” the company said. “Free speech provides broadcasters with the right to exercise judgment as to the content on their local stations. While we understand that not everyone will agree with our decisions about programming, it is simply inconsistent to champion free speech while demanding that broadcasters air specific content.” It apparently took the company a solid week to remember that commitment to free speech, but it got there.

    The reality is that Sinclair was going to back down eventually, if only for legal reasons. As a broadcast executive explained to Deadline, local affiliates contractually can only preempt a program so many times before it breaks the contract and loses the ability to broadcast the show entirely. Sinclair’s “principled stance” was destined to last for exactly as long as it didn’t actually cost them anything and likely not a second longer.

    Once word started spreading that Disney might threaten to withhold live sports broadcasts from affiliates who pulled Kimmel, it was only a matter of time before Sinclair suddenly found its unwavering belief in “free speech” again. There may be a subset of people pissed off that Kimmel is back on Sinclair’s airwaves, but you can bet even more would be pissed if they couldn’t watch LSU play Ole Miss on Saturday. That would hurt Sinclair’s real primary principle: always maximize profits.

  5. Katie says:

    Epstein was found dead in his jail cell in 2019, and his death was declared a suicide. But many people don’t think that’s how he died, and roughly 70% of Americans think the federal government is hiding something about Epstein.

    Julie K. Brown, the journalist who’s arguably most responsible for bringing Epstein’s crimes to broader public attention in the late 2010s, tweeted “Have these been redacted by @GOPOversight @OverSightDems or by the Estate?”

    We don’t have an answer to that question yet, but the press release from House Democrats notes, “Extensive redactions have been made to protect victims as Committee investigators continue to analyze the new documents.”
    https://gizmodo.com/app/uploads/2025/07/donald-trump-and-jeffrey-epstein-in-1997-1600×1067.jpg

    Democrats clearly aren’t going to stop asking about Epstein, who was friends with President Trump for about 15 years before they had a falling out.

    “It should be clear to every American that Jeffrey Epstein was friends with some of the most powerful and wealthiest men in the world,” Dem Oversight spokesperson Sara Guerrero said in a statement posted online.

    “Every new document produced provides new information as we work to bring justice for the survivors and victims. Oversight Democrats will not stop until we identify everyone complicit in Epstein’s heinous crimes. It’s past time for Attorney General Bondi to release all the files now.”

  6. Eric says:

    Drones and your privacy are at odds:

    In its press release, Flock Safety pitched its drones specifically to retail stores, arguing that organized retail crime remains high. It cited an industry report showing that retailers saw a 93% increase in shoplifting incidents in 2024, and said the drones’ quick response could help reduce related costs over time. Of course, it’s worth noting that retailers’ claims of a shoplifting epidemic were largely debunked in 2024, but that didn’t stop police departments from going on a shopping spree for new toys.

    Keith Kauffman, Flock’s drone program director, told the MIT Technology Review how the drones could work in practice.

    When a store’s security team spots shoplifters leaving the scene, they can activate the drone, which is docked on the roof. Equipped with video and thermal cameras, the drone can track thieves escaping on foot or in a vehicle. Its video feed can then be sent to the company’s security team and transmitted directly to local police.

    Flock’s technology is already in use in many police departments. Just this week, its license plate cameras were credited with catching a murder suspect in El Paso and locating a missing teen in Boulder, Colorado.

    But not everyone is thrilled with the company’s tech. The city of Evanston, Illinois, ordered Flock Safety this week to uninstall 18 license plate readers after Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias discovered that Flock had given U.S. Customs and Border Protection access to the readers’ data. And in August, Congress launched an investigation into what one member called Flock’s “role in enabling invasive surveillance practices that threaten the privacy, safety, and civil liberties of women, immigrants, and other vulnerable Americans.”

    ACLU Senior Policy Analyst Jay Stanley has warned in recent years that the expanding use of drones in policing and private security requires strict privacy guardrails, including limits on when and where drones can be used and how video and other sensor data are handled.

    “We don’t want to end up in a nightmare scenario where drones are used for mass surveillance and the experience of having police flying cameras buzzing overhead becomes routine in people’s daily lives,” Stanley wrote in a recent blog post.

  7. John says:

    Fuck tpusa and the horses they ride in on, students shouldn’t feel any embarrassment or shame in not falling into the “debate me” trap. Because that’s all it is: a trap. Real debates are intellectual exercises that take place among people who are factually prepared and open to persuasion. The ultimate goal is a pursuit of truth, not “owning” anybody or grandstanding. Honest debates are not “gotcha” affairs.

    It’s a shame that since Kirk’s death, arguing in bad faith has become characterized as virtuous and edifying. It’s not. And it’s not beneficial to try to rebut people making bad faith arguments because, by definition, people making bad faith arguments can’t be persuaded of anything.

    No, the students at TSU didn’t owe the so-called debaters any of their time or attention Tuesday. Like so many HBCU students since Kirk’s death, saying “Leave us alone” is enough.

  8. Helen says:

    Did You Know
    Dimples are believed to be caused by variations in the structure of the facial muscle zygomaticus major and studies suggest that dimples (both cheek and chin) are more common in females.

  9. Tomas says:

    I have lots of “friends” who tell me that they liked Charlie Kirk and they couldn’t tell if he was a racists. This is my response to the lying pieces of shit. “if you can’t tell he’s racist, it’s because you’re a racist”

  10. Barry says:

    https://qph.cf2.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-0dd9099916306d58b1bdb1c0d92a1ccb

    The terrorist Abd al-Fattah Naeem Abu Taem – eliminated

    His delusions died with him.

  11. fmsp says:

    It’s called The Uncensored Library, and it’s one of the most creative digital responses to global censorship. Built inside Minecraft by Reporters Without Borders in collaboration with BlockWorks, MediaMonks, and DDB, the library was launched in 2020 as a way to bypass media restrictions in countries where journalism is tightly controlled.

    According to Minecraft net and Dezeen, the structure is a grand neoclassical-style virtual building, with elaborate halls dedicated to different nations, each containing articles, journals, and press freedom reports that are banned or censored in their home countries.

    The idea is simple but powerful: while websites and social media may be blocked, Minecraft often remains accessible, especially among younger users. The library uses this loophole to host over 300 books from journalists in countries like Egypt, Russia, Mexico, and Iran. Players can read these texts inside the game, but cannot alter them, preserving their integrity.

    The project is regularly updated and has been downloaded over 200,000 times, making it nearly impossible to take down — even by its creators. It’s a brilliant fusion of gaming, activism, and digital preservation.

  12. Robert says:

    France offered Benjamin Netanyahu permission to fly through French skies for a shorter flight to the U.S. But the Ear warned him it was a trap. The French intended to force his jet down over France and have him arrested and sent to The Hague for trial as a war criminal.

    Benjamin Netanyahu refused and chose another route.

    • If only says:

      I would’ve loved to have seen that! I can think of another sitting head of state that needs to be brought before charges. What side is the Ear on anyway?

      • Barry says:

        That would be your opinion. Of course you have no skin in the game since more than a thousand of your people weren’t tortured, raped, murdered or kidnapped by a bunch of psycho animals. So very human of you to forgive an evil act by someone when the evil wasn’t personal to you.

        Go suck your mother’s dick and die of AIDS you hypocritical bastard.

      • Sarah says:

        So you don’t think the actions by Putin on a country that didn’t invade Russia and commit heinous crimes on the Russian people isn’t worse that what Netanyahu did? Hate Jews much?

      • Hanka says:

        So, the daily torture of women and female children by the fucking Muslims is okay with you as long as they don’t fuck with your loved ones. How noble of you. No wonder you chose that inane title for a name. “If only” you had a brain?

      • Natalie says:

        He, unlike you and others, is on the side of right whoever that may be. If Hamas is rewarded for their heinous acts, the rest of the Muslims will feel that any atrocity is okay if it gets them what they want. You are telling those psychos that the End justices the means.
        So when they come for your loved ones, you will be like the US when they leveled their Twin Towers. You will go scorched earth. Not much condemnation there.
        Christians have inhabited modern-day Iraq for about 2,000 years, tracing their ancestry to ancient Mesopotamia and surrounding lands. The great patriarch Abraham came from Ur (modern-day Nasiriyah), while Isaac’s wife Rebecca came from Assyria (in modern-day northwestern Iraq.) But after the Sunnis took over, they began to slaughter any non Muslim. At least 10 times the number of Palestinians slain in Gaza. Where was your or the world’s condemnation then?
        Selective, a bit are you in your outrage? Or just easily manipulated by the bots and media.

      • Yehuda says:

        The same Palestinians that you are feeling so sorry for would cut off your head and take a dump down your neck if their allah or some imam told them to.

        Stupid is as stupid does. You better hope Netanyahu does the dirty work for you and the rest of the world and eliminates the Hamas organization. If the Palestinians want to continue to support those savages, then fuck them.

      • Frank says:

        You can’t think of another sitting head of state that need to be brought before charges. So how about that clown POTUS? You don’t think he and his ICE shouldn’t be up for some charges

  13. Anonymous says:

    Congressman says aliens are living underwater in U S seas

    https://mol.im/a/15138459

  14. Anonymous says:

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DPFCp8HD_xd/?igsh=Z2U0c3pyZmx6eDhr

    Ellison now owns TikTok and the censorship has begun.

    Are we too far gone to stop the crazy train???

    • Douglas says:

      Blame the niggers, spicks, white bitches, and the wannabe whites. Now it’s their country, the rest of you sorry MFs just live in it.

  15. G*/~ says:

    The Immortal has to go down. The creature shifted the parallel Galaxy to the Milky Way so that it is slightly to the left of center. When IT was asked why IT tampered with the Universe, IT said IT had no obligation to explain ITS action to one not on the same level.

    What does that even mean? Nothing in the Universe, but the GODS, is from the same height as IT is. I say we work to take this creature down or drive IT out of this Galaxy.

    • C[5 says:

      There are many sides to a being that is as old as the Universe itself. I knew him about 2,000 years ago. None of us knew that he was immortal. We were friends together on vTixumi. Our world had been conquered by the Jhains. We had been in hiding for about 4 years. There were 31 of us. We suffered almost starvation, several times. The Immortal suffered along side of the rest of us. 4 years later when we regained our independence by accepting the aegis of ˇÓ´ ´Â∏´‰O‰, the Immortal was awarded several medals for the sacrifice and courage he had shown under fire. It was then when he refused any award that he secretly told me that he could not die. I didn’t believe him. He said that he could die in the form that he took to look like us, but he was by nature not a solid entity and as that entity he was immortal. He demonstrated this by walking through many solid objects. He would pick up things and they would fall through his hand as if it were not there. He would reach into an animal and pull out its heart, watch it die, and then put it back and give it life again. I was amazed and angry with him all at the same time. Why had he allowed some of our friends to suffer lost of limbs and some of us to die?

      I asked him why he had not save our planet or us from all those years of suffering. He looked at me dumbfounded and said, “I suffered with you too, those 4 years.” I was so angry that I told him I never wanted to see him again. He looked at me and smiled. Then he walked away. We have never spoken since.

      I never told the rest of our group that he was immortal. I did tell them that I had asked him to leave us. They never spoke to me again. I regretted that I had been so unforgiving to him, but those 4 years of misery had been so fresh in my mind that, at the time, I hated him.
      I have about 120 years of life left and I would like to see him before I die. I know now that many of those miraculous saves of our lives back then were because of him doing things that we couldn’t see. I still don’t know why he stayed and suffered along side of us. I wouldn’t ask him if he agreed to see me again. I would only ask that he forgive me a mad outburst and be my friend again.

  16. W]4 says:

    Neutral field tissue in the human body has the same ability to form any part of the human body that the tissue of a human embryo has. However, there is always the possibility that carcinomas will form when neutral field grafts are used internally. We us a plastic surgery technique to compensate for the lack of heavy medical hardware.

    Grafts are frozen.

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