Left Wing ‘Resist’ Libs From Hollywood Line Up Behind Eric Swalwell’s Bid for Governor in California

Eric Swalwell / MSNBC

Rep. Eric Swalwell’s bid for governor of California is being supported by a ‘who’s who’ list of Hollywood’s most insufferable left wing celebrities.

It’s rather telling that these are the people who want him to lead the state, even after legitimate questions have been raised about him not even being qualified to be in the race.

His involvement with a supposed Chinese spy should be disqualifying enough on its own.

The liberal celebrities who are backing him just don’t seem to care.

The New York Post reports:

Sean Penn, Robert De Niro lead Hollywood A-listers lining up behind lefty Eric Swalwell’s bid for California governor

Hollywood’s woke donor class has a new favorite: Eric Swalwell.

The lefty congressman has raked in more than $100,000 from entertainment industry donors as he eyes a run for California governor, The California Post has learned.

Democrat Swalwell, whose district in the East Bay is a few hundred miles north of Los Angeles, has hauled in the most money from entertainment industry players among hopefuls to replace term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom this year, a Post review of campaign records shows.

Donors included “One Battle After Another” star Sean Penn, who tossed $15,000 into Swalwell’s campaign coffers, the records show.

A-list actors Robert De Niro and Jon Hamm pitched in $10,000 apiece, as did “Two and a Half Men” star Jon Cryer.

The late actor and director Rob Reiner also contributed $10,000 before his tragic death.

No one is surprised by any of this.

Celebrities in Hollywood still don’t understand that their influence on politics has the exact opposite effect that they think it does.

Even Bill Maher is now telling Hollywood to shut up about politics now. They just can’t seem to help themselves.

The post Left Wing ‘Resist’ Libs From Hollywood Line Up Behind Eric Swalwell’s Bid for Governor in California appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

David Sacks Expertly Breaks Down What’s Behind the Democrat Media Campaign Against ICE (VIDEO)

Screencap of Twitter/X video.

During a recent episode of the ‘All In’ podcast, Trump crypto czar David Sacks offered an excellent breakdown of what is behind efforts by Democrats and the media to resist efforts by ICE to deport people in the country illegally.

Sacks begins by pointing out that Trump’s efforts are working. He cites the fact that the murder rate has dropped to historic lows.

He points out that what ICE is doing has worked fine in other cities and states, but that Minneapolis is different because of absolutely terrible decisions on behalf of Governor Tim Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey, who have ordered local police not to intervene or help in any way.

Why is all of this happeneing?

If you stay with the video, Sacks gets to the main reason for all of it. It’s all about the census and the apportionment of representation.

Democrats know that without the base of support they receive from illegals, they will lose elections.

Here are some key quotes via the All In Podcast on Twitter/X:

“And you can see this in the 2030 apportionment forecast, which just came out.”

“Illegal aliens count towards the census, which occurs every decade, and the census determines the apportionment of congressional seats and electoral votes.”

“And what you see in these maps is that citizens of blue states have been migrating to red states because those blue states are failing.”

“As a result of that, blue states are expected to lose nine house seats and electoral votes because of the changing population numbers.”

“Illegal aliens in blue states have been propping up those numbers, and so for example, in the last election, President Trump would’ve won an additional nine electoral votes if we had an accurate accounting.”

Watch the whole video below. David Sacks does a really great job here:

This is the sort of factual analysis you will not see on CNN or MSNOW and Sacks is right about all of it.

Democrats are in an absolute panic about this because they know it will cost them politically. At the end of the day, that’s all they really care about.

The post David Sacks Expertly Breaks Down What’s Behind the Democrat Media Campaign Against ICE (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Snowbound Scribbler 

Snowbound Scribbler 

When the winter weather worsens, what else is a writer to do?

Winter Snowstorm Drops 40 Centimeters Of Snow Across The Greater Toronto Area

Last weekend, Winter Storm Fern brought forth snow, ice, bitter cold—and, for me, several long, wearying days in front of my computer.

No, I was not monitoring the forecast but instead pecking out the half-dozen or so articles I either had due early the following week or at least had to start getting into shape for delivery not long thereafter. Being the professional wordsmith that I am, I would have undoubtedly been attending to some of these articles over the weekend even if the weather had remained merely seasonably brisk for Ohio at this time of the year. But in the days before the storm hit, I saw the radar pictures, and the big blob that, for most, represented the unpleasant prospect of a glimpse of life in Siberia, but for me, the crushing weight of my deadlines. 

The storm, I could see, would be so bad that I would have no excuse but to sit down and write—a task I have been doing all of my adult life but about which I often find myself in agreement with the great American humorist S.J. Perelman. “I do it only in order to support myself, and not for any pleasure that I possibly get out of it,” Perelman said of his struggles with writing in an interview on the public television show Day at Night in 1974.

In the weekly routine I have established in furtherance of, like Perelman, supporting myself by way of keyboard, I often view the weekend as a respite. In this, I am not so different than most working stiffs. I might see a movie for a review due the following week, but I will often give myself until Sunday evening to start writing it. I jealously hoard Saturday as a day when I might browse at a bookstore, go on a day trip, or treat myself to a meal out. It is not generally in my thinking to weld myself to the chair beside my computer to continue the torture I subject myself to Monday through Friday—the torture that was so well articulated by Perelman: extracting sentences from my brain for the promise of pay.

Yet I knew as well as the rest of us that Winter Storm Fern was going to keep me tethered to home. Ominously, the zoo announced it would shut down ahead of the storm, and I could see that the projected snowfall would be sufficient to put a damper on my usual Saturday activities. Even the movie I had to review that weekend was available on Netflix. Like it or not, I was going nowhere, and had little else to do but write.

Of course, I could have busied myself around the house without crossing the threshold of my home office—the space I scrupulously avoid except when committed to doing actual work. (This is not as odd as it sounds: How many people blessed with normal jobs would hang out at their place of employment during off-hours?) I could have reorganized my movie collection for the thousandth time, or sorted my winter sweaters by fabric, age or frequency of use. But the professional that resides within me—the voice that has kept me employed in this gig for so many years—was also aware that with Fern came the serious risk of power outages. I became gripped by the fear that I would lose power without having completed my next wave of articles, let alone having filed them. Disaster. 

So I got to it. Last Saturday, with its spookily quiet premonition of imminent bad weather, would be devoted to long periods of concentrated work. I soon realized, or admitted, what I actually knew all along: Being snowbound—as I was by Sunday morning—was not an impediment to writing but inducement to it. Denied the option of distracting myself with outside activities, the words came readily, easily, even cheerfully. What had annoyed me about being compelled to work that weekend was not the fear that I would be unproductive but that I would be too productive. Stephen King got it all wrong: Attempting to write a novel while in an old hotel in the bleak midwinter, as Jack Torrance does in The Shining, does not automatically lead to lunacy, but is likely to result in the efficient completion of said novel! Like all of us, I am loath to deny myself a break from work, but how can I permit myself such a break if the work is proceeding pleasantly? Would this mean I would be compelled to similarly toil each time a major weather event came through my area?

By Monday, my fear of losing power had somewhat abated, so I took my foot off the pedal and settled into more casual writing habits as I finished up what I had started. I was even mildly late in sending some of the pieces I had labored over so conscientiously that weekend. This will not come as a surprise to any editor who has ever worked with me, including the editors of this column—penned days after the winter storm but in my usual spirit of writerly discontent. 

On the whole, I must admit that the burst of work I did during Fern gave me an unusual head start on my writing week. Inevitably, I will confront another raft of deadlines next week—I just hope I won’t need another winter storm to meet them.

The post Snowbound Scribbler  appeared first on The American Conservative.

Ignore the Hawks. Attacking Iran Comes With Huge Risks

Ignore the Hawks. Attacking Iran Comes With Huge Risks

President Trump should resist the regime-change temptation.

Ballistic missiles and drones displayed in Tehran

President Donald Trump appears tempted to use military force against Iran, perhaps even to push for regime change. The temptation is understandable—but must be resisted. Trying to topple the Ayatollah would be bad politics and worse policy, endangering American lives and making the Middle East less secure for decades to come.

Hawks in Washington have been advocating for regime change in Tehran for decades. No president has yet been willing to adopt their most extreme ideas. Today, however, key variables seem to be aligning in the hawks’ favor, leading some to speculate that Trump could be convinced to deliver a death blow to the regime.

According to the hawks, Iran is a sitting duck. Most obviously, the regime is under serious—perhaps fatal—pressure at home. Iran’s economy is in freefall. The most recent protests showed that ordinary Iranians are fed up with the mismanagement of their country, while previous protests revealed popular revulsion at the regime’s hardline social policies. 

In the past, it was possible to sympathize with anti-regime protesters while lamenting the lack of a viable alternative. But today, the hawks point to the exiled crown prince, Reza Pahlavi, as someone who could unify the opposition and lead a transitional government. There are also armed groups in some Kurdish (western) and Baluch (eastern) provinces that could conceivably take and hold territory from the central government.

Back in 2019, Trump considered bombing Iran in response to the downing of a U.S. drone over the Persian Gulf. He called off those airstrikes because he was persuaded that a war with Iran would result in too much blood being shed.

Since then, Trump has ordered the assassination of the Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, and even authorized a direct attack on Iran, striking Tehran’s nuclear facilities last year. Each time, Iran made largely symbolic attempts to retaliate. No American lives were lost.

Now, Iran is even more vulnerable to airstrikes, given the significant damage done to the country’s air defenses by Israel and the United States last June. What is more, its most powerful regional proxies—Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Assad regime in Syria—have been destroyed or badly degraded.

According to the hawks, this constellation of domestic and military factors has opened a window of opportunity to pursue regime change.

What could go wrong?

Needless to say, the hawks are giving Trump only half of the story. There are still huge risks that come with attacking Iran.

The key point is this: Any attack on Iran now will likely be interpreted in Tehran as the beginning stages of a regime change operation. From the Iranian perspective, there could be no other explanation for a U.S. attack, given that the country’s nuclear program has already been placed offline for the foreseeable future.

Backed into a corner and with nothing to lose, the regime can be expected to fight back with everything it has. And while Iran might be weaker than it was a few years ago, it still has the military capacity to inflict severe damage upon U.S. military personnel across the Persian Gulf region.

The United States has around 1,000 troops in Syria, 2,500 in Iraq, 13,000 in Kuwait, and another 15,000 or so in Bahrain and Qatar. It would be impossible for the Pentagon to protect all these forces from Iranian missiles, rockets, and drones if the regime unleashes its entire arsenal. The problem of defense would be even worse if the Houthis and Iran-backed militias in Iraq were to join the fray.

Even Israel, with its vaunted Iron Dome defense system, suffered direct hits during last year’s 12-Day War, including on military bases. Most observers agree that Iran held back its most advanced missiles during the conflict with Israel. The damage could have been even worse if Iran had viewed the war as a fight for survival.

The bottom line is that, if Trump launches additional strikes on Iran, the lives of American troops would be at risk. This would be bad enough if there was a guarantee that a war of regime change would succeed.

But, of course, there can be no guarantees. On the contrary, the evidence is overwhelming that airstrikes usually fail to bring about regime change. And even if the Iranian government were to collapse due to a combination of international and domestic crises, it is always possible that an even worse regime will take its place.

One needs to look no further than Libya for a cautionary tale. Toppling the corrupt and hated regime of Moammar Gaddafi was one thing. Bringing peace and security to ordinary Libyans, however, has been quite another.

For context, Libya is a country of around 7.5 million people. Iran has a population of around 93 million. There is no telling what state collapse or a civil war in Iran could do to the Middle East. This is why even Iran’s regional rivals are wary of foreign-imposed regime change.

The Iranian regime is weak and getting weaker. If left to deteriorate, it could collapse under its own weight or be pushed aside by a popular uprising. The worst-case scenario is that it muddles through and emerges from the present crises more vulnerable than ever to coercion by the United States.

Choosing war with Iran now would be a grave mistake. Those closest to Trump should remind him that he has options to select from—and that those options will only get better with the passage of time, not worse.

The post Ignore the Hawks. Attacking Iran Comes With Huge Risks appeared first on The American Conservative.

The Board of Peace: A Return to a Failed Approach

The Board of Peace: A Return to a Failed Approach

The new architecture enmeshes the U.S. more deeply in the Middle East, not less.

U.S. President Trump Attends World Economic Forum In Davos

In the opening lines of the newly released National Defense Strategy, the Trump administration defines an “America First” foreign policy as one in which the U.S. government puts the concrete interests of Americans first. The NDS calls for America’s allies and partners to “take primary responsibility for their own defense,” thereby reducing the burden borne by American taxpayers and servicemembers. In this, Trump is fulfilling his promise to reduce U.S. military commitments, especially in the Middle East, responding to Americans’ frustration with two costly and futile wars in the region. Yet, with the Board of Peace, Trump is taking on a massive and unnecessary burden, and appears poised to repeat the mistakes of his predecessors.

A leaked State Department resolution on the Board of Peace illustrates that Trump intends to rule over Gaza. A U.S.-backed governing authority would assume full legislative, executive, and judicial control over the territory. Trump is chairman for life, with other key members of his administration serving on the Executive Board; so far, 26 other countries have agreed to join. Yet the resolution “makes clear the United States is in charge of Gaza, with all other countries and entities playing a support role,” according to the former U.S. consul in Jerusalem, Michael Ratney. 

Many have criticized the Board of Peace for undermining the UN or for robbing the Palestinians of agency over their own fate. It is unsurprising that Trump exhibits minimal respect for the UN or for the fundamental rights of Palestinians. But by Trump’s own rubric, the Board of Peace is a mistake: The U.S. shouldering the full responsibility for establishing security and rebuilding Gaza is a direct contradiction of his stated doctrine. 

As the NDS articulates, the U.S. should prioritize actual threats to the security and well-being of Americans. Although peace between Israel and Palestine matters to American interests, Gaza poses no such direct threat. While stability in Gaza represents a core security interest for U.S. partners like Israel and Egypt, as the NDS says, “a threat to a person halfway around the world is [not] the same as to an American.” The NDS asserts that Israel is a “model ally,” which has demonstrated its capacity to defend itself; it also states that America’s Arab partners are “increasingly willing and able to do more” to secure their own region. But instead of incentivizing the region to take primary responsibility for Gaza, Trump’s Gaza plan does the opposite.

Moreover, the Board of Peace undermines another institution that the U.S. could and should use for burden-shifting: the United Nations. While there are many valid criticisms of the UN, America’s need for this institution will grow as the world moves away from unipolarity. A UN that returns to its original mandate of peace and security could prove pivotal in further shifting the burden of global security away from the American taxpayer. Building new ad hoc organizations centered on the U.S., however, deepens American overextension while providing the illusion of control. 

There is a better path in the Middle East. Trump should encourage Middle Eastern countries to develop their own autonomous security architecture, a structure where the U.S. could remain a partner but no longer the lynchpin. 

During his first term, the Trump administration pushed for the establishment of the Middle East Strategic Alliance (MESA). Yet, at that time, several U.S. partners in the Gulf Cooperation Council feared that MESA would institutionalize antagonism toward Iran that would only heighten tensions and make war more likely. In the recent context of increased Israeli attacks on regional powers, including Qatar, America’s partners are feeling that Israel, rather than Iran, presents the greater threat to the region’s security.

In contrast, a fully inclusive regional security architecture, as proposed by the Quincy Institute’s Better Order Project, would serve American interests far better while ensuring peace and security in the region. This arrangement would be fully inclusive, meaning it would include all Arab states as well as Turkey and Iran—and ultimately Israel as well. Israel would be included following the establishment of a state of Palestine, or the granting of equal rights for Palestinians in all of Israel–Palestine. The inclusion of Israel—which would mean that a country like Iran also would have to accept Israel’s involvement or lose its own role in the architecture—would offer Israel the strongest security guarantee yet from the region. In return, Israel would have to end its occupation of Palestinian territory. This is essential for U.S. interests, not only because Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestine would finally heal a festering wound that has driven conflict in the region for decades, but also because that wound is a key reason why the United States repeatedly gets dragged back into the region. 

For the security architecture to develop into a functioning institution, the U.S. would need to allow the region to take the lead in its development while anchoring it in the UN Security Council rather than in American guarantees.

The U.S. spent decades investing in the abilities of Israel and our Arab partners to defend themselves. As the NDS states, “our allies and partners must shoulder their fair share of the burden of our collective defense. This is the right thing for them to do, especially after decades of the United States subsidizing their defense.” At present, the U.S. continues to subsidize Israel’s security by providing $3.8 billion a year in assistance, which increased to $17.9 billion in the first year after the October 7 attacks. With the most powerful military in the region, and with the only nuclear weapons in the Middle East, Israel is more than capable of defending itself. How much more is the U.S. about to spend on stabilizing Gaza? Experts project the cost of reconstruction at $70 billion. If the U.S. steps forward as the primary actor responsible for Gaza, how much of that burden will fall on the American taxpayer?

Many of the principles put forward in Trump’s National Defense Strategy are much-needed corrections to America’s past strategic follies. But articulating better paths has never been the challenge—following through on those pathways has. Thus far, Trump’s actions in the Middle East do not match his stated ambitions or the strategic discipline his National Defense Strategy demands.

The post The Board of Peace: A Return to a Failed Approach appeared first on The American Conservative.

Bystander Tackles Man Who Pushes Through TSA Checkpoint at Atlanta Airport (VIDEO)

Security footage captures an altercation at an airport where a man is restrained by a security officer, with other personnel observing the situation.

Security footage captures an altercation at an airport where a man is restrained by a security officer, with other personnel observing the situation.

Newly released surveillance video shows a bystander tackling a man who pushed his way through a TSA checkpoint at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

The bystander, Mark Thomas, tackled and bodyslammed Fabian Leon after he breached the TSA checkpoint late last year.

“I saw him knock over the first dude and then a TSA agent tried to grab him, and once he was going to get past me, I was just like, okay, I’ll just take over if I can,” Mark Thomas told Fox 5.

Fabian Leon was charged with simple battery and avoiding security measures.

WATCH:

Fox 5 Atlanta reported:

Newly released surveillance video shows how quickly a man accused of breaching the main TSA checkpoint at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport was stopped, just feet from getting through the entire security checkpoint.

The video, obtained by FOX 5 through a public records request, shows what police say is 40-year-old Fabian Leon moving through the airport before attempting to enter the TSA checkpoint on the morning of Oct. 30, around 8:30 a.m.

Police say Leon tried to go through one lane and was stopped, then shifted toward another lane where bystander Mark Thomas was standing.

Thomas says a TSA officer yelled “breach,” prompting him to turn around and react without hesitation.

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CNN’s Abby Phillip Sighs Loudly When Proven Wrong About Don Lemon Indictment – Doesn’t Apologize (VIDEO)

Screencap of Twitter/X video.

CNN’s Abby Phillip was recently discussing the arrest of Don Lemon, when one of the guests made a point about what is in the Lemon indictment.

Phillip confidently jumped in claiming that the person was wrong.

Moments later, the same guest read directly from the indictment, proving that she was right. Did Phillip apologize? No, she simply sighed loudly and then moved on to trying to make other points.

Why is she the host of this show? It seems like all she ever does is interrupt the non-liberal guests and tell them that they’re wrong, even if they’re right.

Mediaite has more details:

Here’s what happened: New York Post reporter and frequent CNN guest Lydia Moynihan joined NewsNight on Friday to talk about Lemon’s arrest after he livestreamed — and some would argue, assisted — anti-ICE protesters who stormed a Minnesota church and wrecked its service earlier this month. Lemon insists he was not a participant in the protest and only covering it as a journalist.

Moynihan said, “The question is, is he a protester or a journalist? And the indictment obviously suggested that he posted himself at the main door, he prevented people from exiting. ”

That comment got an instant reaction from Phillip, who jumped in and said Moynihan was way off.

“No, no it does not say that,” Phillip protested. “It says that protesters did that, it names the other people, it did not say that Don did that.”

But 17 minutes later, Moynihan circled back to their brief tussle from earlier, saying, “I just want to respond because you accused me of mischaracterizing the indictment.”

She then read the following section directly from the court filing: “At one point, defendant LEMON posted himself at the main door of the Church, where he confronted some congregants and physically obstructed them as they tried to exit the Church building to challenge them with ‘facts’ about U.S. immigration policy.”

Watch the video below:

Why does it seem like Abby Phillip thinks her job is to defend Don Lemon? Why is she not just delving into the facts of the case, like a journalist would do? We all know the answers to these questions, don’t we?

The post CNN’s Abby Phillip Sighs Loudly When Proven Wrong About Don Lemon Indictment – Doesn’t Apologize (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Dr. Ben Carson Calls Out the Left’s Politicization of Medicine: ‘Patients Should Never Fear Political Bias’

As readers of the Gateway Pundit know, there have been multiple disturbing recent cases of people who work in healthcare saying things on social media that are horrifying.

A nurse from VCU Health in Virginia was just dismissed from her job after encouraging people to poison and/or drug ICE agents. We saw a similar thing happen after the assassination of Charlie Kirk.

Dr. Ben Carson, one of the most revered pediatric neuro-surgeons in the country, recently spoke out against this.

He wrote an opinion piece for FOX News. Here’s an excerpt:

We all have deeply-held beliefs, and, thankfully, we live in a nation where we can freely express our ideas without fear of government oppression. That freedom is one of our nation’s greatest strengths. But freedom also comes with responsibility — especially for those entrusted with the lives of others. Recently, several shocking incidents have brought to light a disturbing trend: Doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals are putting politics and ideology ahead of their duty to protect the health and safety of their patients.

The examples are legion. A nurse in Florida posted on TikTok wishing White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt a severe fourth-degree tear during childbirth.

A nurse in Virginia uploaded a video suggesting ways to injure ICE agents, urging viewers to “make their lives miserable.” Detectives in New York City who were injured while making an arrest were reportedly treated rudely and disrespectfully by hospital workers because staff suspected that they were ICE agents…

Trust and morality are the bedrock of good healthcare. Unfortunately, that trust has already been tested and broken in recent years. The poor handling of COVID-19, combined with widespread misinformation about vaccines and the efficacy of masking, to name just two, left many Americans skeptical of the health care providers and the public health establishment generally…

Medical misconduct includes breaches of ethical duty and intentional bias. When health care professionals publicly wish harm on someone they have never met, they violate the most fundamental principles of their profession. How can patients be expected to trust a system in which those entrusted with their lives might treat them differently because of their views, religion or background?

Of course, Dr. Carson is right about all of this.

People on the left who work in healthcare and medicine need to learn to set aside their politics. They work in a profession that requires an immense amount of trust from individuals and the public at large.

The post Dr. Ben Carson Calls Out the Left’s Politicization of Medicine: ‘Patients Should Never Fear Political Bias’ appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Leftists Said ‘Melania’ Film Would Bomb — Box Office Makes It the Top Documentary in Over a Decade!

The First Lady dancing with her husband at his second inauguration in January 2025.

The media just cannot stop embarrassing themselves.

Spiteful journalists across the left-wing media have spent the last week mocking Melania Trump’s latest Amazon documentary, Melania, declaring it would be a box office bomb and humiliation for the First Lady and writing negative reviews.

However, receipts for the opening weekend are in and are already coming in far higher than expected.

According to The New York Times, it is the best-performing documentary film in the past 14 years!

Their report states:

Amazon’s gold-plated rollout for Melania Trump’s documentary is likely to result in opening-weekend ticket sales of roughly $8.1 million in the United States and Canada, box office analysts projected on Saturday.

That would give “Melania” the best start for a documentary (excluding concert films) in 14 years.

It would be a face-saving result for the first lady — just a few days ago, ticket sales were pacing at about $5 million — but not for Amazon, which spent an exorbitant $75 million to buy distribution rights to “Melania” and market its release.

Theater owners keep roughly 50 percent of ticket sales, meaning that Amazon would end the weekend with about $4 million to show for its investment.

Meanwhile, The Hollywood Reporter reports that it is the third best performing film of this weekend:

If that sunny forecast holds, the film will come in No. 3 behind fellow newcomers Send Help and Iron Lung after icing out Jason Statham’s new action pic, Shelter.

No one saw that coming, with many suggesting Melania was a bomb before it even opened based on empty, or nearly empty, seat maps in cinemas across the country.

The pic is galvanizing conservatives in the South and South-central part of the country, and specifically older females over the age of 55, who made up 72 percent of the opening-day audience.

And a stunning 78 percent of all ticket buyers were 55 and older.

The film, simply titled Melania, focuses on the run-up to her husband’s second inauguration and her role in its preparations.

Following its limited international rollout, the documentary will then be distributed exclusively by Amazon Prime Video.

The post Leftists Said ‘Melania’ Film Would Bomb — Box Office Makes It the Top Documentary in Over a Decade! appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Maxine Waters Incites Violent Leftist Rioters in Los Angeles – Threatens ICE, “We’re Going to Fight You Every Inch of the Way” (VIDEOS)

Democrat Rep. Maxine Waters

Far-left Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) was in Los Angeles on Friday, inciting her radical left followers to riot against law enforcement before several were arrested. 

The Gateway Pundit reported on the riots in Los Angeles, where anti-ICE demonstrators clashed with federal law enforcement and local police outside of the ICE detention center in LA during the nationwide “ICE Out Everywhere” protests.

Anti-ICE Rioters Clash with Federal Agents and Local Police, Set Dumpster Ablaze Outside Los Angeles ICE Facility (VIDEOS)

Rioters were seen hurling objects at shielded federal agents who pushed back with pepper balls and nonlethal munitions.

Via ABC 7:

Eventually, the rioters moved a dumpster toward the entrance of the ICE detention facility and set it ablaze.

WATCH:

Over 100 Los Angeles Police officers reportedly responded in riot gear to quell the violence.

Multiple videos circulating on social media show Maxine Waters at the front lines of the riot as leftists were told to disperse for surrounding the federal building, trespassing on federal property, and later assaulting federal officers.

After pepper spray was deployed, Waters returned to the front of the riot with a mask and continued leading the insurrection.

Waters was seen pulling up to the scene early in the day in a black SUV before stepping out to rally her troops, flailing her arms and leading chants of “ICE Out of LA.”

In another clip, Waters tells independent reporter Anthony Cabassa that her message to the mob of rioters is “stay on the street, stay on the street.” When reminded that the demonstrators were on federal property, Waters doubled down, stating, “Stay on the street.”

She then said, “We don’t want you in Los Angeles, and we thought you had sense enough with the President to start getting out of Minneapolis, but I guess you have no sense and you don’t understand the power of the people,” in a message to ICE agents. Waters continued, “We are not going away. We don’t want you in any of our cities in this country, and we’re going to fight you every inch of the way.”

In a message to President Trump, Waters cried,

“Donald Trump, you are absolutely the most outrageous, the most terrible, the most deplorable human being that I’ve ever met. You have no compassion for anybody. You have targeted this immigration, this migration, and you want to make MAGA people believe that you are all-powerful and that you’re going to see to it that they get these people of color out of this country. But they’re attacking everybody, Americans too. You see what they’re doing up in Minneapolis. And so, Donald Trump, we are going to make sure we’re going to beat you!”

Asked about the violence, Waters later told Cabassa, “Well, let me tell you, we have to know that they have violent ICE, they have violent police, they have violent bodyguards, and we have to be careful. We must protest, we must not be intimidated, but we must be careful.” When asked specifically about rioters throwing objects, including rocks, at ICE agents, Waters claimed, “I haven’t seen that,” while purporting to want “peaceful protests” protected by the Constitution.

As The Gateway Pundit reported earlier, President Trump has directed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to “guard, and very powerfully so, any and all Federal Buildings that are being attacked by these highly paid Lunatics, Agitators, and Insurrectionists.”

Trump announced in a statement, “Please be aware that I have instructed ICE and/or Border Patrol to be very forceful in this protection of Federal Government Property. There will be no spitting in the faces of our Officers, there will be no punching or kicking the headlights of our cars, and there will be no rock or brick throwing at our vehicles, or at our Patriot Warriors. If there is, those people will suffer an equal, or more, consequence.”

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