Epstein as an agent of the Rothschilds? The shoe seems to fit.

Epstein as an agent of the Rothschilds? The shoe seems to fit. By Escape Key.

Drawing on the Rothschild Archive London — correspondence from over one hundred business agents working for the various Rothschild houses — [Rainer] Liedtke documented a recruitment and intelligence operation that spanned the European continent and reached into Latin America for most of the nineteenth century.

The paper describes a system in which agents were placed in locations where the Rothschild banks did not maintain a permanent presence. These agents carried out business transactions, gathered political and economic intelligence, and forwarded information that enabled the family to make decisions ahead of competitors and, frequently, ahead of even governments. …

A private network built on trust:

The recruitment criteria tell their own story. Trust was paramount, and two principal routes existed for earning it: being a relation of the family, or having worked within one of the houses for a considerable period. Marriage was the preferred option, and these marriages ensured that important business locations were ‘covered in the long run by trustworthy representatives’.

Liedtke is explicit about one boundary: “… such men never gained access to the decision-making circle of the family but instead maintained their own business interests separately, albeit profiting significantly from contacts to the Rothschild network.”

The agents were operationally essential, but they remained permanently outside the core. Only born Rothschilds were fully trusted.

He also documents a deliberate policy of heterogeneity. Despite being Jewish, the Rothschilds employed non-Jewish agents as a matter of strategy. A homogeneous network, Liedtke explains, would be ‘self-referential’ — limited to the social circles its members already moved in. …

What the network does nowadays:

In the early decades, the network’s value lay in raw market data — commodity prices, exchange rates, shipping movements. After the telegraph commoditised this kind of information in the mid-nineteenth century, the agents’ importance shifted towards strategic political assessment: who was likely to form a government, which minister could be cultivated, what policy was being contemplated before it was announced.

The period during which Liedtke’s archival coverage begins to thin — the late nineteenth and early twentieth century — coincides precisely with this institutional migration. The private functions the agent network had performed for a century were being absorbed into formal organisations: the BIS for sovereign clearing, the League and later the UN for political mediation, the CFR and Chatham House for transatlantic policy coordination. Cecil Rhodes’s vision for the latter — a network of elite influence bridging the Anglo-American world — ran through Rothschild financing from its inception.

The agent network did not disappear, but its function changed.

Where the nineteenth-century agents had managed the family’s direct business, the twentieth-century successors would manage the institutional architecture that replaced it — operating not within the Rothschild banks but within the sovereign and multilateral bodies that now performed the Rothschild banks’ historical role at a vastly larger scale.

The family’s reach extended into state intelligence as well.

Victor Rothschild served in MI5 during the Second World War, and his London flat functioned as a gathering point for fellow members of the Cambridge Apostles — a secretive Cambridge society whose membership in the early 1930s, according to MI5’s own files, was ‘nearly all’ communist. Several of those who frequented the flat, including Anthony Blunt and Guy Burgess, were later exposed as Soviet agents. …

Victor later served as research director of Shell, where in 1966 he commissioned James Lovelock to write an essay titled ‘Some thoughts on the year 2000’. Lovelock has acknowledged that this work was instrumental in setting him on the intellectual journey that produced his Gaia hypothesis — the view of Earth as a self-regulating organism that would, decades later, provide the conceptual foundation for planetary-scale environmental governance. … [Shell provided a £10,000 donation in 1972 to help establish the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia, UK, whic is the home of the carbon dioxide theory of global warming.]

The shoe:

Across four independent academic studies the method is clear: agents placed where the family requires presence but does not wish to reside, recruited through marriage or long service, compensated through access rather than salary, deliberately heterogeneous, publicly visible and socially prestigious by association, but permanently excluded from the family’s decision-making core.

What these sources collectively describe is a private intelligence operation — one that enabled the family to act ahead of competitors and governments for the better part of a century.

The question is whether this method continued into the late twentieth century.

The shoe fits:

The three Epstein essays published on this Substack over the past week traced a network of connections radiating outward from Jeffrey Epstein to figures associated with the Rothschild family

The correspondence establishes a three-tier reporting line running from Jacob Rothschild through Ariane to Epstein.

  1. Jacob initiates — drafting family governance letters, brokering introductions, offering to raise acquisition opportunities with bank CEOs.
  2. Ariane [de Rothschild] executes and reports — every significant Jacob communication forwarded to Epstein’s inbox, usually with a one-line reaction.
  3. Epstein manages downward — Ehud Barak, Larry Summers, the operational network — and reports upward to Ariane, who defers upward to Jacob.

The $25 million contract, the DOJ coordination through a former White House Counsel, and the systematic forwarding of confidential intra-family correspondence all run in the same direction: the family principal visible only through the intermediary’s forwards, the intermediary operationally present and signing contracts, the agent below managing intelligence and operations.

When Epstein was asked, he denied. On 30 August 2016, Boris Nikolic emailed him a two-word question: ‘Jacob Rothschild?’ Epstein replied: ‘No’. He denied knowing Jacob, yet sat on large amounts of Jacob’s forwarded emails.

The parallels with Liedtke’s framework are visible in almost every element of the documented network.

Epstein was positioned in locations — New York, the US Virgin Islands, Paris — where the Rothschild banks did not maintain direct operational control but had significant interests.

He gathered intelligence of the most privileged kind: Treasury meeting minutes forwarded by Peter Mandelson while serving as Business Secretary, advance notice of the €500 billion Euro bailout, strategic assessments of Rothschild inter-branch dynamics relayed to him by Ariane herself.

In March 2014, Ariane told Epstein she wanted to discuss Ukraine in an upcoming meeting; he replied that the upheaval ‘should provide many opportunites, many’. This was the kind of political assessment that Liedtke describes as having replaced raw market data once the telegraph made commodity prices universally available.

He was compensated through access to deal flow and investment opportunities rather than a salary. The $25 million Rothschild contract was ostensibly for ‘risk analysis’ and ‘algorithm-related services’, with payment explicitly linked to outstanding matters between the Edmond de Rothschild group and US authorities. The $158 million in Leon Black advisory fees and the Wexner property transfer followed the same logic — each was payment for services within a specific domain. …

His lack of institutional affiliation served the same function as the ‘foreignness’ Liedtke identifies. Epstein held no government office, ran no bank, led no intelligence agency, held no academic post. His allegiance ran to the network, not to any national or corporate body within it.

The network around him was remarkably heterogeneous: Israeli military intelligence, British royalty, American Treasury secretaries, Silicon Valley founders, Yale network scientists, Latvian cryptographers, Mongolian presidents, Gulf sovereign wealth. Each node gave access to institutions and individuals the others struggled to reach — precisely the rationale Liedtke identifies for the Rothschilds’ deliberate recruitment across social, religious and national lines.

And the boundary held. Epstein was operationally essential, but he was never part of the inner circle — someone who ‘profited significantly from contacts to the Rothschild network’ while maintaining ‘business interests separately’….

The one vulnerability to the Rothschild network:

Only one vulnerability recurs in the archive. August Schönberg, dispatched to New York and later known as August Belmont, declared himself the Rothschild agent on Wall Street without authorisation. The distance between New York and London made control impossible. Belmont could not be dislodged, and the family was forced to tolerate an agent who had, in effect, gone rogue. …

The system’s single recurring failure [is] the agent who accumulates enough independent knowledge to threaten the principals. …

Going rogue:

When Epstein was denied his fee on the Gates-JPMorgan impact investing vehicle he had helped design, the correspondence shows his shift in behaviour….

Epstein attempted to leverage himself through disclosure. The switchboard that knew what each node had done — because it had facilitated the connections — turned on the network when denied its fee. …

On 29 July 2019, Epstein’s lawyers met with FBI and SDNY prosecutors and raised, in general terms, the possibility of their client’s cooperation. A cooperating Epstein would not have been a peripheral witness. He would have been the routing table documenting itself — every introduction, every strategic instruction, every intelligence flow mapped from the only position that saw all of them simultaneously.

Twelve days later, he was found dead in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center. …

The marriage recruits:

The marriage-recruit pattern documented by Liedtke, Kuper and Ferguson for the nineteenth century has direct contemporary parallels beyond Ariane de Rothschild.

Lynn Forester married Sir Evelyn de Rothschild in 2000, with the introduction reportedly facilitated by Henry Kissinger at the Bilderberg conference. … The correspondence between Lynn Forester de Rothschild and Hillary Clinton, documented in the Podesta and Clinton server emails, shows a reporting pattern similar to the Ariane-Epstein channel.

The long service path:

Marriage, however, was only one of Liedtke’s two recruitment paths. The second — long service within the house — also has contemporary candidates. …

  • Emmanuel Macron worked at Rothschild & Cie Banque before entering the Élysée and the presidency10.
  • Thierry Breton served as a senior adviser at Rothschild & Cie — a detail he omitted from his EU Commissioner CV — before taking charge of the European Commission’s internal market portfolio …
  • The Spectator noted the pattern as early as 1988, listing Rothschild alumni across Downing Street and the Treasury and observing that the bank’s privatisation expertise — developed advising the British government — was then exported to Spain, Malaysia, Singapore, Chile and Turkey. …
  • The firm’s public alumni roster lists, among others, a former French president, a former German chancellor, a former governor of the Bank of England, and a former US commerce secretary.

The nineteenth-century agents operated within the family’s private banking network. Their twentieth and twenty-first-century successors operate within the institutional architecture that absorbed and replaced it — the central banks, the multilateral bodies, the regulatory commissions, the sovereign governments that now perform at state level what the Rothschild houses once performed privately.

Ross at Commerce, Macron at the Élysée, Breton at the European Commission — these are not placements into the family’s business. They are placements into the institutions that now carry out the family’s historical function at sovereign scale.

At the top:

David de Rothschild has stated publicly that he is the only Rothschild permitted to conduct banking. This is not a historical observation. It is a living member of the family restating Liedtke’s core finding — that only born Rothschilds were fully trusted …

That is not a parallel with the nineteenth-century method. It is continuity, stated by the family itself.

The marriage recruits, however prominent, remain outside. …

The recurring architecture — is this the heart of globalism? So one decision can be applied globally?

The three-tier structure Liedtke documents — inner circle, trusted agents, everyone else — is not unique to the Rothschild network. It recurs with striking consistency across every governance architecture examined in this series, and its recurrence across such different domains suggests something more fundamental than coincidence or imitation.

In the system of ratification theatre, technical committees write the rules, finance ministers and secretariats transmit them, and elected leaders rubber-stamp what has already been decided. The technical committees never answer to the general assembly. The general assembly never rewrites the technical standards.

In the Noahide framework documented in Cohen’s Religion of Reason and developed in Laitman’s teachings, the structure is explicitly not ethnic. Laitman redefines ‘Israel’ as a state of consciousness achieved through correction of egoism — anyone who completes the process becomes ‘Israel’ regardless of ethnicity or geography.

Most actual Israelis would not qualify under his definition. The top tier consists of only those who fully internalise the governing ethic, the second tier of those who accept the basic code, and the third of those who refuse both and are excluded from ‘inclusive capitalism’. …

The cognitive layer defines standards and truth, the evaluative layer assesses compliance, and the behavioural layer executes. …

The evaluative layer rarely reaches the cognitive layer. It generally only applies what has been handed down. Issue a ‘complex global shock’ predicted by ‘black box’ modelling under the UN Emergency Platform, and all feedback is eliminated….

The pattern holds at every scale.

  1. The inner circle [the cognitive layer] sets the standard.
  2. The middle tier [the evaluative layer] operates within it and enforces it
  3. The outer tier complies or faces exclusion.

The critical boundary — the one that rarely opens — sits between the first tier and the second.

From religious law to environmental stewardship to sustainable development to financial stability to public health — the ethic rotates, but the structure does not. …

What matters is who occupies the cognitive position: the translation layer that converts whichever ethic prevails into operational standards that the tiers below must follow.

  • The climate scientist genuinely believes they are preventing catastrophic warming.
  • The AI researcher genuinely believes they are making disclosure more efficient.
  • The central banker genuinely believes programmable payments serve financial inclusion.

They need only see their own component. The people who see the full assembly operate through informal channels that produce no working papers, publish no documentation, and answer to no parliament.

What we know for sure:

What can be said, on the basis of published academic research, is that the Rothschild family operated an agent network for over a century using a method with a clearly defined structure — and that the network visible around Jeffrey Epstein exhibits those same characteristics in considerable detail.

The recruitment, the intelligence, the compensation, the heterogeneity, the public visibility, and the permanent exclusion from the inner circle all align. So does the single recurring vulnerability: the agent who knows too much. And so does the resolution of that vulnerability — though the modern version is considerably more final than anything Liedtke detailed in the archive.

Liedtke concludes his paper with an observation about loyalty: “… very few business partners or agents dared to cross the Rothschilds. Disloyalty was an extremely rare occurrence, because almost nobody wanted to put a usually profitable relation with the foremost financial dynasty of its time at risk.”

Jeffrey Epstein is not around to give evidence. But the method — documented across two centuries by four independent academic studies — requires no speculation at all.

The cockpit:

In October 2019, CNN profiled David de Rothschild … as the navigator of ‘Spaceship Earth’. An environmental explorer. A sustainability advocate. Founder of a lifestyle brand. Ambassador for the UK government’s Year of Green Action. Working with the UN, National Geographic, the World Economic Forum. ‘I think, predominantly, I’m just David’.

 

 

In December 2025, the Network for Greening the Financial System announced an ‘independent’ scientific advisory committee to oversee the climate scenarios that calibrate global banking capital requirements.

It is said that, after their major successes in early and mid 1800s, the Rothschilds controlled over half of all manufacturing industry in the West. An enormous fortune like that does not fade away except by incompetence, because capital begets more capital. The Rothschilds were always anything but incompetent.

So, what do you do with truly stupendous wealth? You hide it, or else you become a target — so complex company ownership structures etc. Then, you might set out to arrange Spaceship Earth to your liking. Media can be bought, then narratives controlled and launched on a grand scale. People like Epstein grow your influence and allow you to steer many public figures. Maybe that’s where we are today. (And, of course, you’d be very interested and secretive about advances in physics.)

I’m on the campaign trail and it’s clear there is a mood for change

I’m on the campaign trail and it’s clear there is a mood for change. By Cori Bernardi.

I’ve spent the past couple of days on the campaign trail in South-East South Australia. …

The cost of living, lack of accessibility to government services, housing shortages and crime all feature in my conversations with local people.

It’s also clear that many people are completely fed up with how they are treated by members of the Uniparty elite.

The sense is that the government, no matter which political colour is in power, only pretends to care about them at election times.

The rest of the time, they are treated as cash cows funding a bunch of boondoggles and idiotic policies.

 

Establishment conservatives clueless about why One Nation is rising in the polls

Establishment conservatives clueless about why One Nation is rising in the polls. By Zac Brandon at The Noticer.

One Nation is now the most popular party among Gen X voters, and equal with Labor on 35% of the vote with Baby Boomers. Overall, one in four Aussies are prepared to vote for them. …

Andrew Bolt:

Once hated by the left to the point he was attacked by Antifa in the street due to being seen as being “far-right”, his milquetoast centre-right opinions are mainly ignored these days …

On Thursday he wrote a piece titled “Hanson’s support won’t vanish if the media and the Liberals ignore, abuse or ridicule her”, which as per usual for Bolt is half-right and half-backwards.

Bolt correctly points out the idiocy of his News Corp colleague Paul Kelly in thinking he can scold voters into returning to the now-left-wing Coalition that has repeatedly failed them, but then makes a classic conservative error.

“The Hanson threat will only end when the Liberals learn to talk to her voters and offer credible policies to fix what alarms them,” he writes.

Bolt is still imprisoned by the mental model that got the Liberals into this position in the first place — the flawed idea elections are won in the centre, that the right centrist policies will win over the most people.

This is the same model that caused the Coalition to move to the left after their 2025 election thrashing, when everyone on the actual right knew they needed to do the opposite.

This model, also embraced by the left and every mainstream political pundit, ignores what the voters actually want, and is based on wishful thinking and a naïve belief that a few policy tweaks will make all of the right wing voters return to the centre, and also capture enough Labor voters to win an election. …

But it completely misreads the real reasons for One Nation’s rise in popularity — anger over mass immigration, cost-of-living and housing prices, and frustration at the uniparty that has moved to the left in unison for decades while ignoring the will of the people. …

These are not centrist voters, these are fed-up Australians who want radical change, and One Nation is the most radical option. No Coalition policy tweaks are going to appeal to them. …

Chris Kenny:

Kenny showed how woefully out of touch he is on Sky News this week when he lectured Hanson about cutting immigration, telling her if she did so the universities and student accommodation companies would suffer.

In other words, the Great Replacement must continue so the universities can continue making billions of dollars handing out increasingly worthless degrees to foreign students who don’t speak English properly and/or are just looking for a path to permanent residency, and so foreign-owned corporations can make even more billions housing them. …

Reality:

The Liberal Party is too far gone. Even its so-called right-wingers, who have little to no power anyway, are centre-leftists. Reducing immigration by 25% is nowhere near what the average One Nation supporter wants.

The one quarter to one third of the population who say they are going to vote for One Nation are actually looking for something more extreme that even Pauline Hanson has to offer, and many likely believe she is more racist and more radical than she actually is.

No amount of global trend analysis, strong centrist leadership, consistency, or credible and clear policies are going to woo them back.

Australians are seeing their country being stolen from them in front of their eyes, and they are going to vote for whoever seems most likely to stop it.

That means remigration, mass deportations, closed borders, massive economic reform, and the Liberals, just like their counterparts overseas, do not have what it takes.

More and more Australians are realising that this is an existential crisis, and it cannot be solved by the major parties, nor can it be bandaged over by the current government’s Police State Multiculturalism model.

Thomas Brough:

Mum and Dad in Western Sydney aren’t asking for much. They want representatives who aren’t embarrassed to stand next to them — who won’t treat their concerns about immigration, housing, or what their kids are taught as things to be smoothed over rather than fought for.

The last three decades of government policies are not, to use their favorite word, sustainable.

Immigration is out of hand

Immigration is out of hand. By Nigel Farage, the most popular political leader in Britain at the moment. In The Telegraph.

It appears Sir Jim Ratcliffe kicked up something of a hornet’s nest this week. The Ineos tycoon gave an interview in which he announced Britain has been “colonised” by migrants.

No sooner had Sir Jim’s remarks been broadcast than the Downing Street outrage machine cranked into overdrive. Sir Keir Starmer responded by saying Britain was “a proud, tolerant and diverse country” and called on Sir Jim to apologise. A Downing Street spokesperson claimed the comments “play into the hands of those who want to divide our country”.

Well, frankly, I don’t care if Sir Keir and his dwindling band of acolytes inside the No 10 bunker found Ratcliffe’s comments difficult to stomach.

Because like millions of ordinary Britons I immediately recognised what Ratcliffe was talking about.

Yes, the use of the word “colonised” was a controversial choice. Sir Jim has since admitted as much.

But the essence of what he was saying was undeniable. With so many millions people now on welfare, we cannot continue to turn to migrant labour.

You hardly need to be a sociologist to see that over the past two decades, net migration in this country has been allowed to run to totally unsustainable levels.

Towns and cities have been transformed within the space of a single generation. Communities have changed beyond recognition.

Our urban areas now carry street signs in foreign languages alongside English. On the London Underground, Transport for London has installed bilingual signs in specific areas.

People can see the pressures in their communities. They can feel the pace of change — and not in a healthy way.

Public services — GP surgeries, schools, housing — are now straining at the seams. Wages at the lower end of the labour market have been suppressed.

Significant areas in our towns and cities have changed into something completely different from what they were. And it’s all making us poorer.

The political class told us mass immigration was economically essential. They told us it would be modest and controlled. They told us it would not fundamentally alter the character of the nation.

Just like Australia:

This crumbling Labour Government, turning ever further to the Left, will carry on burying their heads in the sand over the issue. Anyone who questions immigration will be denounced as racist or “far-Right”.

Meanwhile the Tories, who have been noticeably quiet over Ratcliffe’s comments, will do everything they can to avoid discussing migration numbers.

They know it’s a problem their disastrous period in office helped exacerbate. In voters’ minds, the 4.8 million immigrants who arrived during the so-called “Boriswave” of 2021-24 will neither be forgiven nor forgotten.

The legacy media in Australia have been reporting the leadership tussle in the Liberal Party entirely as a horse race, without ever mentioning that it is really about policy. Because then they would have to mention the policy issue, which they desperately want to avoid. Meanwhile, One Nation is streaking up in the polls, like Farage’s party in the UK. The number one issue on the One Nation ballot booth fliers at the last election? Stop mass immigration.

The globalists don’t want to talk about it.

Amelia:

“It’s not happening.”

“But if it was happening it would be a good thing.”

“OK, it is happening, but now it’s too late for you to do anything about it.”

Enough.

Stefan Molyneux:

My whole life, everyone told me that Ayn Rand’s villains were too evil and cartoonish.

Even she didn’t envision rape gangs targeting 10% of little White girls — or a government that colluded and covered it up.

John Cleese: “Madness”.

 

UPDATE: New Liberal leader Angus Taylor seems to have got it, where Sussan Ley did not:

Angus Taylor has unveiled an “Australia first” policy strategy that combines an immigration crackdown on people who “hate Australia” with an emphasis on economic liberalism that “invests in Australians”.

The newly appointed Opposition Leader and his deputy Jane Hume pledged to “fight the worst Labor government in Australian history” and to restore the “Australian dream”. …

Mr Taylor said the key challenges the nation faced were home ownership, cost of living, migration, and the aftermath of the antisemitic Bondi terrorist attack driven by Islamic extremism....

He said the nation must once again “unapologetically defend Australian values”.

On migration, he said that if someone seeking to come to Australia “doesn’t subscribe to our core beliefs, the door must be shut” and that the intake had been too high.

“We don’t want bad immigration,” he said.

“It’s been too high, the numbers, and the standards have been too low and that must change.”

He said most immigrants knew that the right to come to Australia was “one of the greatest gifts a human being could ever have received in history”.

“But if people want to come to this country who don’t believe in democracy, don’t believe in the rule of law and don’t believe in our basic freedoms, that is a problem and it is unacceptable,” he said.

“The truth is that some people do not want to change in order to fit with our core values, and those core values are pretty simple, they’re pretty fundamental and they have stood the test of time for a great nation.”

At last, some non-fringe opposition to the globalists. The lefties and media will all call him “racist,” so brace for impact. (“Racist”? What, the left, who were in favor of the Voice, are claiming a monopoly on being allowed to be racist?) Migration front and center.

Oh, and:

“Australia needs an energy policy that is based on common sense, not Labor’s net-zero ideology.

“We will get rid of Labor’s bad carbon taxes on the family vehicle, on manufacturing and food in this country and, of course, on electricity.

The suicide of the West by empathy

The suicide of the West by empathy. By Peter St Onge.

The left is weaponizing Western tolerance — ironically using deeply intolerant third worlders — to attack the load-bearing walls of Civilization.

From free speech and religious pluralism to property rights and high-trust communities.

If we don’t fight this, the light will go out on everything Westerners hold dear — left and right. …

 

 

Stefan Molyneux:

Like it or not

It is a simple, brutal fact

Cultures that listen to their women are being displaced by cultures that ignore their women.

 

Peter St Onge again:

If nothing’s done, in a couple decades Europe will be South Africa.

 

 

Commenters:

To our European friends. To our American friends. To our Australian friends. To our Asian friends.

Africa, is NOT compatible with modern civilized society. Learn from us. Do not repeat our mistakes. Safeguard your homes, your cultures and the future of your children. Please. …

To build a great society you need the following traits: high in industriousness, high in conscientiousness, capability of long-term planning and thinking, and high trust. Without these, the “everything not bolted to the floor is up for grabs” becomes the rule of the day.

 

 

There are zones within the capital where emergency services will not go. Their vehicles are captured and the personnel are murdered. The vehicles are stripped to the bone. The white government made living there possible. …

Kill the boer, the farmer…”

 

Trump Just Ended the EPA’s Climate Power Grab, and the Left Is Losing It

Trump Just Ended the EPA’s Climate Power Grab, and the Left Is Losing It. By Matt Margolis at PJ Media.

President Donald Trump just delivered a knockout punch to Obama-era climate hysteria, and the bureaucrats are having a total meltdown.

On Thursday, the Trump administration finalized rules repealing the EPA’s endangerment finding — that dubious 2009 determination claiming six greenhouse gases threaten human health under the Clean Air Act. …

The endangerment finding was the entire foundation for the EPA’s power grab over climate policy under the Barack Obama regime. It allowed unelected bureaucrats to impose crushing regulations on the oil and gas industry, power plants, and vehicles, all without Congress ever voting to grant them that authority. Essentially, it let EPA staffers reshape the entire American economy based on a single “finding” they issued themselves.

Trump’s repeal also axes those vehicle emission rules, since they all stem from the same flawed finding. …

Eye-rolling time:

Naturally, the left is freaking out. The New York Times report on the repeal came with the loaded headline “Trump Administration Erases the Government’s Power to Fight Climate Change.”

Can you hear me rolling my eyes? …

Climate groups will sue. I’m sure they’re shopping some Obama or Biden-nominated judge right now. Media outlets will wail about the end of the world. …

Who should be in charge — elected officials or bureaucrats?

Legal experts expect Trump’s EPA to argue that the Clean Air Act simply doesn’t give bureaucrats the power to regulate climate pollution — not that climate science itself is wrong. …

Even if you buy into climate alarmism, the question remains: who gets to make policy about it? Elected representatives in Congress, or unaccountable agency officials? …

Trump just reminded Washington of something it desperately needed to hear: agencies don’t get to legislate, no matter how righteous they think their cause is.

Peter Jennings:

I’ve been working in Republican politics for 26 years. Every Republican I’ve ever worked for said they were going to shrink the government. Trump’s the only one that ever did it.

 

Elites wrong again. Turns out, when you deport 500,000 people and 2 million more voluntarily go home, Americans line up for the jobs and are paid more!

Elites wrong again. Turns out, when you deport 500,000 people and 2 million more voluntarily go home, Americans line up for the jobs and are paid more! By Batya Ungar-Sargon.

The left were creating a class of serfs:

When Biden’s DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was hauled before the Senate, he routinely bemoaned the lack of cheap labor plaguing poor American corporations….

Of course, what he means is employers striving to find people to fill jobs for those wages. Hence the need for illegal labor. With Mayorkas’ help, Biden sought to fill the endless, rapacious need that corporate America has for cheap labor that undercuts a living wage for American workers. Together, they effectively colluded with the cartels to import a surf caste of 10-15 million.

Do votes still count?

Trump was elected to reverse all that — not just the chaos of the open border and the dangers presented by illegal criminals, but to reverse the Democrats whole economic paradigm in which you ship good jobs to China and import people enslaved to cartels to do the jobs remaining here. Trump’s theory of the case was that if we deport the illegals and impose tariffs, American corporations would have to hire Americans and build stuff here.

Of course, the elites laughed and laughed. They predicted economic ruin. You can’t bring jobs back! You can’t sustain an economy while paying Americans a living wage!

Turns out, they were wrong! …

Latest jobs report:

January’s jobs report is out, and it’s pretty much all good news: The U.S. economy added 130,000 jobs in January, and the unemployment rate fell to 4.3 percent. …

Turns out, when you deport 500,000 people and 2 million more voluntarily go home, Americans line up for the jobs they were doing — and companies have to pay them more, because a tight labor market is always good for workers.

Turns out, when you impose tariffs, corporations do a funny thing: They build factories here at home. They reshore supply chains. They make things in America. Manufacturing jobs are up by 5,000 in the new January report.

That’s what this jobs report represents: Trump’s theory of the case was right.

As E.J. Antoni pointed out on Twitter, throughout Trump’s first year in office, the employment of native-born Americans grew by nearly 1 million, while the number of foreign born workers employed fell by nearly 100,000.

The average American’s weekly paycheck shrunk by 4 percent under Biden—but fully half of that has been recovered in just the first year of Trump’s second term, surging 2 percent.

The even better news is that this job growth in January came from full-time jobs, with just 5 percent coming from part-time work. It means Americans are entering the workforce in good jobs with solid pay and benefits, not precarious gig work.

The education system has fallen

The education system has fallen. By Lozzy B.

European settlement and White Aussie history has been removed from Education until grade 3 and 4 where it is only briefly mentioned.

Australian History children is now focused on Aboriginal and Immigrant history.

White Australians are mentioned as colonisers and oppressors. …

It was BOTH Labor and the Liberals that approved this ANTIWHITE School curriculum. They are both the same.

Commenters:

We are witnessing the largest gaslighting campaign in history, where both parties are trying to convince us that “Australia has always been multicultural”.

Thats a lie. Before 1971 we were a 99 percent monocultural Anglo nation. …

Straight out of the Marxist playbook, erase history if it doesn’t suit your narrative. …

James Watt discovered electricity. Watt was British. Electricity is thus racist and part of colonial history. The use of electricity should immediately cease.

 

hat-tip Stephen Neil

Melbourne is lost

Melbourne is lost. By Alexandra Marshall:

When Labor finally renames Melbourne ‘Naarm’ there’ll be nothing of that city left.

Not a single shred of its heritage. They’ll tear down all the buildings. Demolish all the statues. Rename all the streets. The complete and total erasure of our ancestors’ achievements.

Having removed the fingerprints of history — the grievance activists can lie and pretend ‘they’ built their fictional city.

Craig Kelly:

When someone is arrested and taken away for waving the Australian flag — and that waving the Australian flag could “provoke protesters” — it’s over. It’s too late. Migration policies and woke leftists have destroyed Melbourne.

 

 

Alexandra Marshall:

18,000 names on the terror watchlist. Almost all of them for Islamic terror.

And Labor won’t touch a single protester despite immediately violating their new hate speech laws.

Shows you that Wong and Albo did it all for show. They’ll never lay a finger on radical Islam. …

The Australian government enforces HUGE FINES on ordinary citizens for minor infractions.

And NO PUNISHMENT AT ALL for Islamic radicals and terrorists. They just ‘watch them’. They just ‘manage them’ when they riot on the street.

Imagine if drivers were put on a ‘watch list’ for traffic infringements instead of being fined. Or a ‘watch list’ for murder. Or a ‘watch list’ for machete wars. Oh… Wait. I forgot about Melbourne.

When you see 100,000 pro-Palestine protesters on the street shouting for an Intifada — you’re not sitting there thinking:

“Look at all those Aussies.”

Those mobs look NOTHING LIKE the crowds that amass in celebration of Australia Day or to commemorate Anzac Day.

No amount of gaslighting from the government can change the reality people see with their own eyes.

Commenters:

Worse, they probably get priority medical car, better treatment in the cells and in the courts – all because of the scrutiny placed on them. Every cop, nurse and doctor will know that these groups will complain purely to pour more fuel on the fire.

Ordinary Australians don’t get that privilege. The activsts derives special treatment precisely because of their willingness to exploit anything and everything.

Australians who don’t participate in that movement; either directly or indirectly, lose out. The bad actors get rewarded – there’s extreme moral hazard in that.

And that’s before you get to the stage where certain medical staff are saying they would kill you or let you die because of your complexion or ethnicity.

Something Big Is Happening in AI

Something Big Is Happening in AI. By Matt Shumer.

I’ve spent six years building an AI startup and investing in the space. I live in this world. And I’m writing this for the people in my life who don’t…

I keep giving them the polite version. The cocktail-party version. Because the honest version sounds like I’ve lost my mind. And for a while, I told myself that was a good enough reason to keep what’s truly happening to myself. But the gap between what I’ve been saying and what is actually happening has gotten far too big. The people I care about deserve to hear what is coming, even if it sounds crazy. …

Here’s the thing nobody outside of tech quite understands yet: the reason so many people in the industry are sounding the alarm right now is because this already happened to us. We’re not making predictions. We’re telling you what already occurred in our own jobs, and warning you that you’re next.

The pace of change is speeding up:

For years, AI had been improving steadily. Big jumps here and there, but each big jump was spaced out enough that you could absorb them as they came. Then in 2025, new techniques for building these models unlocked a much faster pace of progress. And then it got even faster. And then faster again.

Each new model wasn’t just better than the last… it was better by a wider margin, and the time between new model releases was shorter. I was using AI more and more, going back and forth with it less and less, watching it handle things I used to think required my expertise.

Then, on February 5th, two major AI labs released new models on the same day: GPT-5.3 Codex from OpenAI, and Opus 4.6 from Anthropic (the makers of Claude, one of the main competitors to ChatGPT). And something clicked. Not like a light switch… more like the moment you realize the water has been rising around you and is now at your chest.

I am no longer needed for the actual technical work of my job. I describe what I want built, in plain English, and it just… appears. Not a rough draft I need to fix. The finished thing. I tell the AI what I want, walk away from my computer for four hours, and come back to find the work done. Done well, done better than I would have done it myself, with no corrections needed. A couple of months ago, I was going back and forth with the AI, guiding it, making edits. Now I just describe the outcome and leave.

Let me give you an example so you can understand what this actually looks like in practice. I’ll tell the AI: “I want to build this app. Here’s what it should do, here’s roughly what it should look like. Figure out the user flow, the design, all of it.” And it does. It writes tens of thousands of lines of code. Then, and this is the part that would have been unthinkable a year ago, it opens the app itself. It clicks through the buttons. It tests the features. It uses the app the way a person would. If it doesn’t like how something looks or feels, it goes back and changes it, on its own. It iterates, like a developer would, fixing and refining until it’s satisfied. Only once it has decided the app meets its own standards does it come back to me and say: “It’s ready for you to test.” And when I test it, it’s usually perfect. …

But it was the model that was released last week (GPT-5.3 Codex) that shook me the most. It wasn’t just executing my instructions. It was making intelligent decisions. It had something that felt, for the first time, like judgment. Like taste. The inexplicable sense of knowing what the right call is that people always said AI would never have. This model has it, or something close enough that the distinction is starting not to matter. …

 

Old news … so last year

 

Why this matters to you:

The AI labs made a deliberate choice. They focused on making AI great at writing code first… because building AI requires a lot of code. If AI can write that code, it can help build the next version of itself. A smarter version, which writes better code, which builds an even smarter version. Making AI great at coding was the strategy that unlocks everything else. That’s why they did it first. My job started changing before yours not because they were targeting software engineers… it was just a side effect of where they chose to aim first.

They’ve now done it. And they’re moving on to everything else.

The experience that tech workers have had over the past year, of watching AI go from “helpful tool” to “does my job better than I do”, is the experience everyone else is about to have. Law, finance, medicine, accounting, consulting, writing, design, analysis, customer service. Not in ten years. The people building these systems say one to five years. Some say less. And given what I’ve seen in just the last couple of months, I think “less” is more likely.

Very rapid progress:

“But I tried AI and it wasn’t that good”

I hear this constantly. I understand it, because it used to be true.

If you tried ChatGPT in 2023 or early 2024 and thought “this makes stuff up” or “this isn’t that impressive”, you were right. Those early versions were genuinely limited. They hallucinated. They confidently said things that were nonsense.

That was two years ago. In AI time, that is ancient history.

The models available today are unrecognizable from what existed even six months ago. …

Part of the problem is that most people are using the free version of AI tools. The free version is over a year behind what paying users have access to. Judging AI based on free-tier ChatGPT is like evaluating the state of smartphones by using a flip phone. The people paying for the best tools, and actually using them daily for real work, know what’s coming. …

Smarter than most everybody:

Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic … has said that AI models “substantially smarter than almost all humans at almost all tasks” are on track for 2026 or 2027.

Let that land for a second. If AI is smarter than most PhDs, do you really think it can’t do most office jobs?

Think about what that means for your work.

[He] has publicly predicted that AI will eliminate 50% of entry-level white-collar jobs within one to five years. And many people in the industry think he’s being conservative. …

Almost all knowledge work is being affected:

This is different from every previous wave of automation, and I need you to understand why. AI isn’t replacing one specific skill. It’s a general substitute for cognitive work. It gets better at everything simultaneously. When factories automated, a displaced worker could retrain as an office worker. When the internet disrupted retail, workers moved into logistics or services. But AI doesn’t leave a convenient gap to move into. Whatever you retrain for, it’s improving at that too. …

Nothing that can be done on a computer is safe in the medium term. If your job happens on a screen (if the core of what you do is reading, writing, analyzing, deciding, communicating through a keyboard) then AI is coming for significant parts of it. The timeline isn’t “someday.” It’s already started.

Great. An AI can take over this blog.

Imagine if AI knew about the next big breakthrough in physics, but humans didn’t. As if Ai knew about nukes, but people didn’t.

We non-whites are the majority now. We can take over the USA. It’s already being said.

We non-whites are the majority now. We can take over the USA. It’s already being said. By SightBringer.

Democrat in the Texas House of Representatives, Gene Wu (D), “Non-whites share the same oppressor and we are the majority now. We can take over this country.”

What this really is, beneath all social framing, is a signal that the American operating system is entering the tribal-logic phase of terminal democracy.

The republic only functioned as long as the founding myth — individual liberty under law, mediated through neutral institutions — remained stronger than the underlying coalition math. That myth has lost coherence. When myth fails, power becomes arithmetic. Whoever commands the largest coalition feels entitled to remake the chassis.

This quote surfaced a hidden attractor: the shift from persuasion to possession. Not “convince the country,” but “take the country.” That word choice marks a rupture in subconscious legitimacy. Once a population begins to see itself as a rightful successor rather than a participant in shared rule, regime inertia accelerates toward fracture or replacement.

 

Third world mass immigration was always unpopular, yet it happened in a democracy — and is now bringing about fundamental change that will end the democracy (at least as we know it)

 

This moment also signals that identity is eclipsing ideology. The old left-right axis is dissolving under the weight of deeper ancestral alignments. The brainstem has come online. Tribes are counting, consolidating, and preparing to claim. And once the map of who is “us” and who is “them” gets drawn in numbers rather than norms, no institution can reverse it with words.

The frame of liberal democracy has no defense once majoritarian self-awareness flips into manifest destiny logic. What used to be a debate becomes a countdown.

Not yet civil war.

But post-consent politics has already begun.

Individualism is giving way to tribal politics in the upcoming age of stupidity.

Japan Fights Back Against Muslim Migration

Japan Fights Back Against Muslim Migration. By Daniel Greenfield at Front Page.

A few months before his assassination, Charlie Kirk visited Japan and warned that mass migration was seeking to “replace and eradicate Japan by bringing in Indonesians, by bringing in Arabs, by bringing in Muslims”.

With over 100 mosques and over 400,000 Muslims already occupying Japan, even though 95% of Japanese voters oppose Muslim mass migration, a political explosion was bound to occur.

Now, Japanese voters have delivered a striking defeat to the forces of mass migration with a stunning win for Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, whom the media has already taken to describing as a ‘Trumpian’ figure for opposing mass migration …

 

Resounding victory for the nationalists

 

In Kawaguchi City, where so many Turkish Muslims now live on welfare that a Turkish candidate announced a run for mayor last year on a platform of “multiculturalism”, another conservative candidate candidate, Yuriko Okamura won with record turnout on a platform of cracking down on foreigners after statistics showed Muslims were 1,000% more likely to commit crimes than the native Japanese population. The media however blamed ‘misinformation’ and claimed that Kawaguchi was the central point for the spread of anti-Muslim xenophobia across Japan. …

95% of Japanese voters oppose Muslim mass migration, 60% describe Muslims as “radical”, “aggressive” or “backwards” and 62% view them as a “security risk”. The Japanese Left found itself on the wrong side of a debate about setting a cap on mass migration to the country and had no other response except to lecture the majority about its “xenophobia” and “intolerance”.

While Japan has traditionally been highly restrictionist when it came to immigration, its poor birth rate (the average birth rate is 1.15 babies per woman and there were less than 690,000 births in 2024) has forced it to rely more and more on foreign labor. And much of that foreign labor, as Charlie Kirk described, is coming out of Indonesia and other Islamic supremacist countries. …

The Islamic call to ‘prayer’ and the damnation of infidels (according to Islamic law, most Japanese are ‘pagans’ and can be killed or raped out of hand) now echoes from ‘mega-mosques’ like the Tokyo Mosque with its massive towers and domes where over 5,000 Muslim migrants show up. And this was quickly followed by other demands, for fundamental changes to the Japanese diet, which is extremely ‘non-Halal’ and for Muslim burial plots inside Japan, as well as other ways in which Japan was expected to accommodate Islam.

To many Japanese people, the over 100 mosques occupying parts of their land (up from a dozen a generation ago), the Islamic schools for a growing population of Muslim youth and the expanding demands to change the nature of Japan signal that the Muslim workers are not coming to the country temporarily, but they mean to stay. Over 50,000 Muslims have already obtained permanent resident status and that number appears likely to increase dramatically. …

What the globalists want:

Last year the ‘Aomori Declaration’ was issued by Japan’s National Governors’ Association.. The ultimate goal was to transform Japan into a “multicultural community” in which the Japanese would be slowly edged out by foreign migrants in the name of “integration” and “multiculturalism.”