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President Donald Trump has long understood something many Washington, D.C. bureaucrats never grasped. America’s border does not begin at the Rio Grande, Niagara Falls, JFK Airport, or along any of the unpatrolled areas along the Southwest border. It begins wherever our enemies begin planning to bring terrorists, narcotics, human traffickers, or deadly contraband toward the United States.

That is precisely the philosophy behind U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) Office of International Affairs. While the agency recently highlighted its growing international partnerships on social media, this initiative deserves far more attention than a promotional post with a globe emoji. The concept is remarkably simple. Instead of waiting for dangerous people or cargo to arrive at our ports of entry (POE), CBP works with allied governments to identify and stop those threats overseas. Officers stationed at American embassies coordinate intelligence sharing, train foreign customs agencies, strengthen cargo screening, improve aviation security, and work with international partners to disrupt terrorist networks, fentanyl trafficking, human smuggling organizations, and transnational criminal enterprises before they ever reach American soil. This is common sense.

Every kilogram of fentanyl precursor intercepted in Asia is one less shipment reaching the Mexican cartels. Every terrorist identified by a European intelligence service before boarding a flight is one less threat confronting American law enforcement. Every human smuggling organization dismantled overseas means fewer illegal crossings at our southern border.

That does not mean Americans should blindly celebrate every international initiative coming out of Washington. International cooperation is only as effective as the governments involved. Some nations are dependable allies. Others struggle with corruption, weak institutions, or political agendas that do not always align with America’s interests. Intelligence sharing must always protect American sovereignty, and every partnership should be judged by measurable results rather than diplomatic press releases.

President Trump has consistently demonstrated that strong border security begins with strong leadership at home. Border walls, aggressive enforcement, ending catch and release, pressuring foreign governments to secure their own territory, and restoring respect for immigration law remain the foundation of any successful strategy. International partnerships should reinforce those policies, not replace them. America First has never meant America All Alone. When foreign governments are willing to stop terrorists before they board airplanes, intercept narcotics before they reach our hemisphere, or dismantle criminal organizations before they target American communities, that cooperation serves our national interest.

The true measure of success will not be hashtags or carefully staged photographs featuring international flags. The real questions are far more important. Are fentanyl shipments declining? Are terrorist travel routes being disrupted? Are human trafficking organizations being dismantled? Are Americans safer today than they were yesterday? Time will tell and and if the answer to those questions is yes, then CBP’s international mission deserves continued support and expansion. If not, no amount of diplomatic symbolism can compensate for failed security.

President Trump has repeatedly shown that protecting the American people requires layered defenses. A secure border begins with strong enforcement inside the United States, but it also means confronting our enemies long before they ever reach America’s doorstep. That is exactly where they should be stopped.

For more than two decades Iraq has been synonymous in the minds of many Americans with war, sacrifice, terrorism, and seemingly endless military commitments. Presidents came and went. Strategies changed. Trillions of taxpayer dollars were spent, thousands of brave American service members made the ultimate sacrifice, and countless more returned home carrying the physical and emotional scars of war. Yesterday, however, President Donald J. Trump signaled that America is finally turning the page. His Oval Office meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al Zaidi represented far more than another diplomatic gathering. It marked the beginning of an entirely new relationship founded upon commerce, investment, energy development, and mutual prosperity instead of endless conflict.

Prime Minister Ali al Zaidi is among the youngest leaders in the Middle East. At just 41 years of age, he rose from the private sector into Iraqi politics and was selected to lead Iraq in May 2026 after a period of intense political negotiations following national elections. Born and raised in Iraq, al Zaidi built his reputation as a businessman before entering public service, presenting himself as a reform minded leader determined to modernize Iraq’s economy and reduce corruption. His election represented a generational shift in a nation that has endured dictatorship, foreign occupation, sectarian violence, Islamic terrorism, and persistent political instability. Whether he ultimately succeeds remains to be seen, but he clearly understands that Iraq cannot build a prosperous future while remaining trapped by the ghosts of its past.

President Trump welcomed the Iraqi leader with unmistakable warmth, praising him repeatedly before reporters gathered in the Oval Office. Trump described al Zaidi as “an amazing man,” “a great leader,” “a great fighter,” and “a great fan of America.” He remarked that the two men had developed “tremendous chemistry” almost immediately and joked that the prime minister was “young and handsome, which I don’t like.” The room erupted in laughter, but beneath Trump’s characteristic humor was an unmistakable message of confidence. He expressed his belief that Iraq finally has a leader capable of steering the nation toward stability, prosperity, and a genuine partnership with the United States.

President Trump also emphasized Iraq’s extraordinary natural wealth, pointing to its enormous oil reserves and vast economic potential. He stated that major commercial agreements involving American companies are already taking shape and indicated that additional announcements will soon follow. Trump explained that America’s future relationship with Iraq should no longer revolve around military deployments but instead around business partnerships that create jobs, generate investment, and produce lasting economic growth. In one of his most significant observations, the President reiterated that the United States no longer needs to define its presence in Iraq through combat operations. Instead, he envisions American engineers, investors, energy producers, financial institutions, and entrepreneurs becoming the primary ambassadors of American influence.

Prime Minister al Zaidi responded with equal enthusiasm, describing the visit as the beginning of a true economic partnership between the two nations. Speaking through an interpreter, he thanked President Trump for the warm reception and declared that Iraq wants its future relationship with America to be centered upon investment, technology, finance, infrastructure, and energy development. He proudly referred to Iraq as “the oldest civilization in the world” extending its hand to what he described as the world’s greatest economic and technological power. He pledged to strengthen Iraqi sovereignty, continue financial reforms, attract American businesses, and build an economy capable of providing opportunities for future generations of Iraqis.

Perhaps the most significant announcement to emerge from the meeting was the confirmation that the remaining American military presence in Iraq is expected to conclude by the end of September. That decision reflects a remarkable transformation in American strategy. Rather than serving indefinitely as Iraq’s security guarantor, the United States is transitioning toward a relationship based upon trade, commerce, diplomacy, and private enterprise. It is the difference between constantly repairing a leaking roof and finally constructing a stronger foundation that can withstand future storms. President Trump has consistently argued that America’s strength should be measured not merely by military power, but by its ability to create prosperity that benefits both our nation and our allies.

This new partnership carries enormous potential benefits for the American people. American energy companies could secure substantial new opportunities to develop Iraq’s vast oil and natural gas resources. American engineering firms may participate in rebuilding infrastructure that was damaged by decades of conflict. Manufacturers could find new markets for their products, while financial institutions and technology companies gain access to an emerging economy eager for modernization. Every successful commercial agreement has the potential to create jobs here at home, expand American exports, strengthen our energy sector, and reinforce the United States as the world’s leading engine of innovation and economic growth.

The strategic implications extend well beyond economics. Iraq occupies one of the most important geographic positions on the planet, sitting at the crossroads of the Persian Gulf, Türkiye, Syria, Jordan, and the broader Middle East. A stable and prosperous Iraq can serve as a commercial bridge connecting regions that have too often been divided by conflict. Pipelines, highways, railways, electrical grids, and digital infrastructure can become the arteries through which commerce flows instead of violence. Just as healthy blood vessels sustain the human body, reliable trade routes and economic partnerships can sustain regional stability in ways that military force alone never could.

Yet no serious observer should ignore the dangers that remain. For years, Iran has worked tirelessly to extend its influence inside Iraq through political proxies, militia groups, intelligence operations, and economic leverage. Tehran has sought to transform Iraq into a strategic buffer and a platform from which it can project power throughout the Middle East. Iranian backed militias have repeatedly challenged the authority of Iraq’s elected government while threatening both Iraqi citizens and American interests. The road ahead will not be easy because dismantling years of foreign interference requires patience, determination, and strong leadership from Baghdad.

Encouragingly, Prime Minister al Zaidi spoke directly about strengthening Iraqi sovereignty and ensuring that weapons remain under the authority of the Iraqi state. Those commitments are essential if Iraq hopes to emerge as an independent nation rather than remaining caught in the geopolitical tug of war between competing regional powers. President Trump has long maintained that genuine allies must be capable of standing on their own feet while working cooperatively with the United States. That philosophy encourages independence rather than dependency and partnership rather than permanent occupation.

President Trump also reminded Americans that he opposed the original Iraq invasion long before entering politics, arguing that the United States had pursued the wrong strategic course. Yesterday’s meeting demonstrated that he is determined to write a different final chapter. Instead of defining America’s legacy through another generation of military deployments, he seeks to define it through economic opportunity, energy production, commercial investment, and mutually beneficial partnerships. Like a skilled architect who transforms the ruins of an old structure into the foundation for something stronger, President Trump is attempting to replace the architecture of endless war with the framework of enduring prosperity.

America and Iraq still face significant challenges, and no one should pretend that decades of instability disappear overnight. Nevertheless, yesterday’s meeting offered something that has been absent from the region for far too long, namely a hopeful vision rooted in common interests instead of perpetual conflict. If Iraq continues on the path of reform, resists Iranian domination, strengthens its democratic institutions, and embraces free enterprise, it can become one of America’s most valuable partners in the Middle East. That would not merely represent a diplomatic success. It would stand as another example of President Donald Trump’s belief that lasting peace is most often secured not by endless wars, but by strong allies, thriving economies, and the shared pursuit of prosperity.

The Trump administration is intensifying efforts to hold schools accountable for not protecting students from sexually abusive teachers, zeroing in on California, where lenient union protections and the practice known as “passing the trash” have long enabled the problem.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon is leading the effort, targeting districts that ignore sexual assault allegations or quietly transfer accused teachers to new schools. Officials have warned that three schools in two California districts, including Tulare City Unified and Wilsona School District, could lose nearly $50 million in federal Title I funding if they fail to address violations, according to the New York Post.

This action follows years of documented failures. A ProPublica/KQED investigation revealed how California has allowed dozens of educators to retain their credentials despite districts finding them guilty of sexual misconduct.

Between 2019 and 2023, the state’s school districts paid an estimated $2–3 billion to victims of sexual abuse by school employees, according to data cited by Attorney General Rob Bonta.

LAUSD in particular has come under heavy criticism. Superintendent Alberto Carvalho resigned following an FBI raid on his home and office in February 2026 related to district contracts. The district is also facing a $22 million kickback scandal involving a former IT manager and a Texas tech company. These repeated leadership and financial scandals reinforce concerns that student safety and taxpayer dollars are often treated as secondary priorities.

One of the 67 cases reviewed illustrates outright failure. Jason Agan, a math teacher fired by the Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District in 2019, faced more than 20 complaints of inappropriate touching and sexual harassment from female students at Angelo Rodriguez High School.

These included hugs and shoulder massages that left students uncomfortable.

An independent panel deemed him “unfit to teach,” yet the state declined to revoke his license. He was transferred three times to other schools, where he faced similar accusations.

Data shows some districts, including LAUSD, reported zero incidents despite clear evidence. This has only intensified demands for strict enforcement and real consequences.

Union contracts in places like LAUSD have triggered strong federal pushback because they contain near-predatory provisions that keep teachers credibly accused of serious misconduct, such as sexual harassment of students, inappropriate physical contact, or failure to report suspected child abuse, in the classroom or on paid administrative leave during prolonged investigations.

The Department of Education is now sending formal reminder letters to school districts nationwide and launching civil rights investigations in cases where federal reporting appears incomplete or inadequate.

California stands out as a major target due to the enormous scale of its public school system, the largest in the nation, serving more than 5.8 million students across hundreds of districts, and its well documented track record of failing to adequately address educator misconduct.

“Our schools must protect America’s children,” Secretary McMahon said. “Parents should never have to worry that their kids’ school is shielding or employing sexual predators.”

These enforcement actions show that the Trump administration is committed to protecting our children. Under Secretary McMahon’s leadership, federal officials are drawing a clear line: union protections and bureaucratic excuses will no longer come before the safety of students.

Districts that continue to ignore misconduct or shield predators will be held accountable and lose their federal funding.

Enough is enough. The practice of shielding predators and “passing the trash” has gone on far too long. California and every other state must now place the safety and well-being of students ahead of adult institutional interests. It is telling and deeply troubling that federal intervention has become necessary to uphold this fundamental responsibility.

Michigan Democrats will face a real test this August 4. Their votes will prove whether the progressive left still has real pull in the industrial Midwest, or if its ideals are too out-of-touch for working families.

For the first time, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders are teaming up in Michigan this weekend for the “People vs. the Powerful Tour,” with rallies scheduled in Detroit, Lansing, and Grand Rapids.

The events are designed to help El-Sayed, who lacks elected government experience, overcome his main rival: three-term Rep. Haley Stevens, the establishment favorite backed by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, former Wayne County health director and 2018 gubernatorial candidate, is the party’s progressive candidate.

El-Sayed currently leads in polls, has cast himself as the “people’s champion” pushing Medicare for All, steeper taxes on the rich, and anti-corporate rhetoric.

The Democratic primary has now consolidated into a clear progressive- versus moderate showdown between Dr. Abdul El-Sayed and Rep. Haley Stevens, after state Sen. Mallory McMorrow suspended her campaign in early July. The winner will go on to face likely Republican nominee Mike Rogers in November.

Local support has come in from Rep. Rashida Tlaib, but the national progressive heavyweights will prove if the progressivism movement is still strong in the midwest.

Democrats are now working with a big unknown: will this high-profile endorsement and weekend tour actually change the course of the race?

While recent general election polls show El-Sayed narrowly leading or tied with likely Republican Mike Rogers (often in the 45-47% range to Rogers’ 44-46%), the margins are razor-thin. Based on Sabato’s Crystal Ball, the general election is currently rated as a toss-up in this highly competitive state.

For most Midwesterners, the progressive pitch of class warfare, bigger government, and Green New Deal-style ambitions comes across as a recycled, outdated trend that is beyond tone-deaf.

Michigan autoworkers, suburban families, and manufacturers care more about jobs, grocery prices, energy costs, and the border security than ideological experiments from coastal outsiders.

These rallies may excite activists, but they risk reinforcing the very perception that really damages Democrats in purple states: that national progressivism does not understand heartland priorities.

The spectacle arrives this weekend. Michigan voters will deliver the verdict.

During his January 22, 2026, testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, former Special Counsel Jack Smith rejected accusations of spying, telling lawmakers, “My office didn’t spy on anyone.” Smith and his team defended the use of toll records as a “routine and lawful” investigative step.

Mounting evidence of the deep state operating through Biden’s weaponized Justice Department emerged Tuesday when Senators Chuck Grassley and Ron Johnson released a damning “Arctic Frost Filter Review” document from Jack Smith’s Special Counsel probe.

This explosive development doesn’t just undermine, it destroys, Smith’s credibility, as it proves his team accessed not merely toll record metadata but the raw content of private text messages with zero proper safeguards.

What has previously been reported as mere toll data has now been exposed as a largely covert spying operation targeting, “most targets,” while a hand-picked filter team, governed by strict protocols the Special Counsel’s office had established and was tasked with protecting millions of documents, emails, devices, and accounts from improper exposure.

The evidence, released on July 14, 2026, revealed that Smith’s team secretly obtained and reviewed text messages involving 44 current and former members of Congress.

The communications were pulled from a June 2, 2023 request by senior Smith prosecutor Thomas Windom to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) for White House text messages covering the period from October 2020 through January 20, 2021.

NARA delivered the materials on August 21, 2023, weeks after Smith’s indictment of Trump.

Within minutes of NARA’s delivery, at 12:19 p.m. senior Smith prosecutor Thomas Windom had already downloaded the spreadsheets containing the texts. By 12:45 p.m. he emailed the team to do the same, and by 1:02 p.m. he was sharing specific excerpts, completely bypassing the filter team.

Records further show Smith’s team planned to turn some of these materials over in pre-trial discovery to Trump’s legal team, raising questions about potential mishandling and strategic use of the improperly accessed communications.

These protocols were designed to protect congressional communications, Speech or Debate Clause privileges, attorney-client privilege, and other sensitive materials.

The messages included exchanges between the lawmakers and senior Trump White House officials and associates, including Mark Meadows, Dan Scavino, Ivanka Trump, Stephen Miller, Peter Navarro, and others. The topics focused on the certification of electoral votes and post-election challenges.

The disclosure has prompted Republican lawmakers to condemn Smith and his team for what they describe as outright spying and unauthorized surveillance on members of Congress.

Grassley and Johnson went further, accusing Smith’s team of deliberately bypassing standard filter-team review protocols that had been established for both Project Coconut, the January 6 investigation, and Project Cranberry, the Mar-a-Lago documents case. They described the actions as a serious violation of established investigative procedures and an unconstitutional intrusion into the duties of elected officials.

“Jack Smith’s criminal investigation of President Trump was a runaway train that had no brakes,” Grassley stated. “Biden DOJ and FBI investigators apparently ignored their own routine investigative protocols to obtain and review work-related messages from me and dozens of my Republican and Democrat colleagues… Smith’s team ran roughshod over the Constitution.”

Grassley added that he intends to bring Smith before the Senate Judiciary Committee for accountability and to answer for this unconstitutional intrusion.

“This is yet another grotesque example of the Biden administration’s weaponization of the Justice Department,” Johnson said. “Jack Smith’s team acted with impunity… no one should be shocked by Jack Smith’s recklessness and blatant abuse of power.”

This latest revelation builds on earlier controversies in which Smith’s office issued at least 197 grand jury subpoenas targeting sensitive records from over 400 Republican groups and individuals, as well as phone toll records (metadata) for approximately nine to 20 current or former Republican members of Congress including figures such as Lindsey Graham and Josh Hawley.

Prominent figures including Sen. Marsha Blackburn and Rep. Darrell Issa have accused Smith of targeting Trump allies. Critics frame the efforts as part of a broader pattern of politicized investigations.

The filter team had reviewed millions of documents across the two investigations, yet Smith’s team reportedly accessed the congressional texts directly.

The 44 affected members include Grassley and Johnson themselves, along with other Republicans such as Lindsey Graham, Josh Hawley, Tom Cotton, and Susan Collins, plus a handful of Democrats, forming a bipartisan group of senators and representatives.

Further congressional oversight and disclosures are expected, including additional document requests and potential hearings, along with questions about whether Smith’s earlier testimony constitutes perjury. This is more proof of how the Biden administration turned the DOJ into a political weapon, as legitimate questions remain about the balance between investigative authority and constitutional protections for elected officials.

The Trump Justice Department is stepping up enforcement against non-citizen voting, reporting roughly two dozen arrests, prosecutions or convictions in recent months, with nearly 90 additional cases reportedly under investigation. Federal law prohibits non-citizens from voting in federal elections, and Justice Department officials say election administrators could also face prosecution if they knowingly help ineligible voters register or cast ballots.

The department has sent notices to officials in all 50 states, warning that knowingly retaining non-citizens on voter rolls or assisting them in voting could constitute aiding and abetting a federal crime. States were reportedly given five days to explain how they are complying with voter-eligibility laws. Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon said the warning is not an empty threat. She argued that officials who knowingly ignore evidence of non-citizens on voter rolls could be held criminally responsible.

This crackdown is a basic matter of election integrity. American elections should be decided by American citizens and American citizens only. Democrats have facilitated lax registration systems and weak enforcement in order to create their election fraud machine. In their quest to cheat and steal elections, they have systemically undermined public confidence.

Some cities permit non-citizens to participate in certain local elections, but citizenship remains a requirement for voting in federal contests. But this enables the fraud to more easily take place. The enforcement push comes as President Trump urges the Senate to approve the SAVE America Act, which would require documentary proof of citizenship and voter identification in federal elections.

The issue is straightforward: voting is a sacred right of citizenship, and government officials have a duty to protect it through accurate voter rolls, firm safeguards and equal enforcement of the law.

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ROGER STONE MEDIA

WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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