Wednesday, June 10, 2026

For Commies if you're not one of them surely you must be a Nazi!

Two dozen Latino lawmakers come together to slam Colombian President Gustavo Petro’s ‘Heil Hitler’ twee

Ending animal abuse in Central Park NYC

NYC carriage horse collapses and dies in Central Park, traumatizing parkgoers



The Gaza genocide blood libel: “It warns before attacks using text messages, phone calls, leaflets and broadcasts,” he writes."


Democrats’ Gaza genocide claims reveal the depths of their depravity

The spirit of Buchenwald lives on, we are supposed to believe, in the Israeli military operation in Gaza. 

It’s now nearly mandatory for progressive Democrats to denounce Israel for its alleged genocide, while Tucker Carlson and Hasan Piker — radical influencers on the right and left respectively — say that the moral offense is the same as the Holocaust, even if the scale is less extensive. 

Israel’s haters surely enjoy the perversity of accusing the Jewish state of the same enormity that contributed to its creation, of comparing the Jews to heinous murderers of Jews. 

The charge is a grotesque libel.

If Israel wanted to kill everyone in Gaza, it could do so easily.

What we have witnessed in the Hamas-controlled territory is not a genocide — the deliberate destruction of a people — but an urban battle. 


The homeless in LA are useful pawns for the leftists

CALIFORNIA NEWS 
EXCLUSIVE

Skid Row homeless claim they’ve been paid to vote for Karen Bass and Nithya Raman

A series of shocking videos show homeless residents on Los Angeles’ Skid Row claiming they were paid to vote for Mayor Karen Bass and councilwoman Nithya Raman.

The California Post obtained copies of the videos after they were published Tuesday on the TikTok account LaneNeedsSpencerPratt.

The footage, recorded near 7th Street and Flower Street in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday morning, has since been provided to the Department of Justice. It also follows The Post’s revelations that thousands of homeless voters were registered to shelters where they didn’t live. 

One shelter in Venice, where 185 Raman voters were registered, received $600,000 from taxpayers care of the socialist Raman. 

In one of the clips, a man who calls himself Kevin Shepherd, claimed he received $4 to vote for Bass.

Rene Johnson, 39, said groups regularly came through the area asking residents to sign paperwork. Obtained by CA Post

When asked whether he would also have been paid to vote for Raman, Shepherd answered ”yes” and said Spencer Pratt was not among the candidates he was encouraged to support.

“They gave you an optional choice,” Shepherd claimed, alleging the was offered $2 but negotiated for a higher payment and ultimately received $4.

Shepherd further claimed he completed a mail-in ballot for Bass and deposited it in a ballot box.

Skid Row resident, Rene Johnson, 39, also claimed she received $5 after being told to vote for Bass.

Johnson said she supported Bass, but told the creator she was still unclear about some of the forms she had completed.

“But, you know, at the time, I didn’t know that that was going on,” she said.

Obtained by CA Post

“I was just trying to make five bucks, you know? But I didn’t do the fraud.”

When asked if she thought it was fraud, she said she thought that it was “fraudulent behavior.”

She also said she thought people were being taken advantage of.

Another woman, who said she was living on the street, also claimed she accepted money to vote for Mayor Bass. 

“It was like two bucks,” the unidentified woman said, adding that “yeah they come out here all the time.”

The content creator behind the videos said he visited the area after being alerted by a friend who works nearby and claimed to have seen political volunteers operating in the neighborhood in the lead-up to the election.

“Everybody said it was normal,” the content creator told The Post.

“They said people came through all the time.”

The creator said he spent about two hours speaking with residents, many of whom claimed voter-registration and outreach efforts were a routine part of life on Skid Row before Election Day.

Several residents alleged that groups regularly visited the area asking people to sign paperwork, though some acknowledged they did not fully understand what they were signing.

According to multiple residents interviewed on camera, outreach workers allegedly visited the area as often as three to five times a week before the election, with several organizations purportedly involved.

Kevin Shepherd said outreach workers visited the area ”three to five times a week” before the election. Obtained by CA Post

A fourth resident, identified as Mark Sanchez, claimed he had been approached repeatedly by political canvassers.

“To sign a petition for the mayor or different things in office and they paid me $4 or $5 in different accounts,” Sanchez claimed.

Sanchez further alleged the payments occurred multiple times.

“It happened more than four or five times,” he claimed.

The videos surfaced one day after former reality television star Spencer Pratt was eliminated from the Los Angeles mayoral race as Raman surged into contention for a runoff spot.

The California Post was unable to independently verify the claims made in the videos. 

An unnamed woman said she voted for Karen Bass for $2 Obtained by CA Post

However, The Post visited several locations with large concentrations of registered voters on Monday and Tuesday and spoke with nearly 20 individuals about voting and voter registration.

Many said they knew they were registered to vote but could not recall who registered them, whether they had recently voted or what happened to their ballots after registration.

Don Garza, a disabled military veteran who has lived on Skid Row since 1999, said voter registration is common in Skid Row and that nonprofit organizations regularly conduct voter registration drives throughout the area.

“We are tired of it. We don’t want people coming in and deciding elections and taking advantage of us,” Garza said.


“Every one of them thinks they have claim to our voice. They think they speak for us.”

A Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America openly promotes a guide instructing volunteers on how to encourage voters to cast ballots on the spot and hand them over for delivery.

The practice, commonly known as ballot harvesting, is legal in California but remains highly controversial. The guide, titled “How To: Ballot Delivery,” was published by the Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America in May 2022 and remains available online.


The instructions provide a step-by-step process for collecting completed mail ballots and urge volunteers to repeatedly press voters to submit them immediately. “Will you vote now?” the guide tells volunteers to ask, before adding: “Ask at least 3 times.”

The California Post reached out to Bass and Raman campaign for further comment but did not hear back.




Democrats hate American citizens


California main driver of welfare flow to illegal immigrants: HHS report

Feds snare Newport Beach financier who ‘bilked $100M to fund private jets, fleet of supercars and sex-fueled mega parties’


Feds snare Newport Beach financier who ‘bilked $100M to fund private jets, fleet of supercars and sex-fueled mega parties’

Federal agents swooped early Wednesday morning on the Orange County mansion of a slick Indian financier accused of bilking a local bank out of almost $100 million.

With automatic weapons dawn, G-men in tactical gear pounced on Mahender Makhijani, 44, at his plush home on Montecito Drive in the exclusive coastal enclave of Corona del Mar in Newport Beach.

The California Post watched as agents with guns and a shield breached the mansion’s gate and pounded on the front door. “Police with a warrant – Come to the door!” yelled an agent.

With automatic weapons dawn, G-men in tactical gear pounced on Mahender Makhijani, 44, at his plush home on Montecito Drive in the exclusive coastal enclave of Corona del Mar in Newport Beach. Ringo Chiu for CA Post
Federal agents swooped early Wednesday morning on the Orange County mansion of a slick Indian financier accused of bilking a local bank out of almost $100 million.
After a few tense moments, Makhijani came out in pajamas. Ringo Chiu for CA Post

After a few tense moments, Makhijani came out in pajamas. Agents placed him in cuffs and put him black sedan to be transported to jail. It was a dramatic ending to a high-flying financial career marked by scandal and brutality.

Federal prosecutors say Makhijani defrauded a bank out of nearly $100 million by doctoring title policies to make real estate used as collateral look more valuable than it truly was. The money still has not been recovered, according to court papers.

Makhijani, who is a permanent US resident from India.


He is expected to make his initial appearance this afternoon in the United States District Court in Santa Ana.

“When criminals are allowed to deceive lenders, the spillover effects can harm consumers and businesses,” said First Assistant United States Attorney Bill Essayli. “Today’s arrest highlights our office’s continued determination to combat threats to our nation’s banking system.”

Makhijani, who often wore designer sunglasses even while indoors and favored posh linen shirts, was accustomed to traveling by private jet and kept two mansions side by side, with the second reserved for his in-laws, according to prosecutors.

Agents placed him in cuffs and put him black sedan to be transported to jail. Ringo Chiu for CA Post
He is expected to make his initial appearance this afternoon in the United States District Court in Santa Ana. Ringo Chiu for CA Post
The financier used Newport Beach-based company called Cantor V to execute his cons, according to prosecutors. Ringo Chiu for CA Post

The flashy financial mastermind rolled around in a fleet of luxury cars that included a Bentley, Porsche, and Mercedes G-Wagon, controlling “vast sums of money,” to support his lavish lifestyle, according to court documents.

But Makhijani obtained the money illegally, according to authorities who say he used a complex web of companies and financial instruments to hide the true value of his wealth, which still remains unknown.

“Makhijani has significant financial resources, but the government has not fully traced and accounted for those resources, which are almost certainly not held in Makhijani’s name,” states a criminal complaint.

The financier used Newport Beach-based company called Cantor V to execute his cons, according to prosecutors, but Cantor V was just one of “numerous entities” the fraudster controlled, court documents say.

Witnesses said Makhijani would also blackmail his underlings, hosting parties with sex workers and drugs which were attended by bank employees. Ringo Chiu for CA Post
Video and photo evidence collected by prosecutors showed Makhijani in shades and designer clothes as he calmly directed his thugs to attack security guards. Ringo Chiu for CA Post
“When criminals are allowed to deceive lenders, the spillover effects can harm consumers and businesses,” said First Assistant United States Attorney Bill Essayli. Ringo Chiu for CA Post

To bilk the bank, which was not identified by authorities, out of almost $100 million, Makhijani personally falsified bank real estate titles using a laptop, prosecutors say, by manually changing metadata fields or by printing and scanning altered documents.

Makhijani bragged to associates that he would flee to India if he were ever caught and used a team of henchmen to carry out his deeds, according to feds, controlling them by threatening to “kill” them and put their “family on the street” and “their kids on welfare.”

Witnesses said Makhijani would also blackmail his underlings, hosting parties with sex workers and drugs which were attended by bank employees, later threatening to expose those who participated in the twisted festivities.  

He employed brute force against his financial rivals, posting eviction notices at the homes of their family members and directing men to break into their businesses. In one dispute, he posted a billboard accusing an enemy of robbery in a bid to ruin his reputation.

Video and photo evidence collected by prosecutors showed Makhijani in shades and designer clothes as he calmly directed his thugs to attack security guards, smash windows, and take financial documents from his business competitors.


In a 2023 dispute with a former partner over who had the right to run the Hotel Laguna, he brought his bouncers into the hotel lobby, where they roughed up workers there, evidence in the criminal complaint shows.

The disturbances caused the Hotel Laguana and another hotel called 14 West to be temporarily closed for business by the city manager, according to The Daily Pilot, which reported that armed guards were involved in a 20-person brawl at the properties.   

In May an arbitrator awarded approximately $1.34 billion to Laguna Beach businessman Mohammad Honarkar over the dispute, which included dozens of other properties, concluding that Makhijani breached agreements and defrauded Honarkar.

“Criminals like this, they have multiple companies, multiple places,” Honarkar told The Pilot. “They hide, and [Makhijani] doesn’t give you any paper.”