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American Pilots Arrested During Guinea Fuel Stop
What happened on the tarmac Two American pilots on a…
What happened on the tarmac Two American pilots on a Gulfstream IV say they were met by soldiers instead of a fuel truck after landing in Conakry, Guinea for a scheduled refueling stop. Nearly 100 armed military personnel reportedly surrounded the jet, pointed weapons at the crew and detained the pilots on December 30, 2025. Guinean officials later accused them of entering airspace illegally and making an unauthorized landing. The pilots are Brad Schlenker, 63, from Illinois, and Fabio Espinal Nunez, 33, from New Jersey. The family who chartered the flight was Brazilian and headed to Dubai. How a routine stop can go wrong Charter flights sometimes rely on local handlers to arrange permits and fuel. Family sources say the crew believed the necessary paperwork had been handled on the ground. That claim raises a simple question. Was this a paperwork failure, or something more deliberate? Either way, the pilots say they followed air traffic control and filed requests to land. Airports and handlers in some countries run on different standards of red tape and habit. When those systems break down, pilots can be caught in the crossfire. Prison conditions and consular access Relatives describe overcrowded cells, dirt floors and…
Left Aims To Bankrupt Independent Writers
The claim on social media On February 18 a post…
FCC Chair Slams Colbert and Talarico Hoax
The Claim Late-night host Stephen Colbert and Texas Democrat James…
The Claim Late-night host Stephen Colbert and Texas Democrat James Talarico said the Federal Communications Commission blocked a Colbert interview with Talarico from airing on CBS, and that the interview was pulled because the Trump FCC feared Texas would flip. CBS did not air the segment and the video appeared on YouTube. Colbert used his monologue to complain that the network and its lawyers told him not to run the interview on broadcast television. What CBS Told Viewers CBS issued a plain legal explanation. The network said The Late Show was not prohibited from broadcasting the interview. Lawyers warned that airing the segment could trigger the FCC equal-time rule for other candidates, including Representative Jasmine Crockett, and offered options for how to satisfy equal-time obligations. The show chose to post the interview on YouTube and promote it on air rather than implement those equal-time options. How Colbert and Talarico Framed It Colbert turned the legal guidance into a free-speech bit on his show and used satire to rail at network lawyers. Talarico posted a clip on X saying, "This is the interview Donald Trump didn't want you to see" and claimed the FCC "refused to air" the interview. That message…
Trump Honors Limbaugh Five Years After Passing
Trump's Tribute Former President Donald Trump released a short video…
Censorship Complex Losing To New Media
The New Media Surprise Joe Hoft told Bannon's WarRoom that…
Meta’s Patent Could Let Dead Users Post
What the patent proposes In December Meta was granted a…

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