The corporate-controlled media only covers a few stories. They miss a lot. I am bringing you this newsletter to give you stories that they aren’t covering on a national level. If you are able to become a paid subscriber, it will help me to keep doing this work. It’s $6 a month, you can quit whenever you like.


WASHINGTON D.C. - A group funded by Alexander and George Soros’s network of left-wing non-governmental organizations (NGOs) is behind a lawsuit that is now preventing President Donald Trump from deporting violent criminal illegal aliens to South Sudan.
In March, Human Rights First joined two other organizations in suing the Trump administration on behalf of illegal aliens with final deportation orders. The lawsuit claims that a directive from Trump’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) permitting illegal aliens to be deported to countries that are not their home countries is unlawful.
Human Rights First, which is also behind a lawsuit to preserve former President Joe Biden’s parole pipeline for migrants, has deep financial ties to the Soros network, now run by Alex Soros, George Soros’s second-youngest son. Click here to read more.

CLARK COUNTY, Wash. - Officials in Oregon are warning people and pet owners about some local waterways that have tested positive for a new type of toxic algae.
A family’s dog died after coming into contact with the algae.
It was October, the last boating day of the season.
The Pang family was taking their boat out on the Columbia River, and their Kavapoo, Cedar, was with them.
“I saw Cedar, he was out. I was watching him the whole time, and he was out kind of playing with my, she was four at the time, my 4-year-old, and they were kind of digging playing in the sand together,” Elise Pang said.
Pang said she noticed her 2-year-old dog had a sick look in his eyes. He collapsed right in front of them, and it all went downhill from there.
“I pretty much immediately started doing CPR on him,” she said.
Cedar was already gone by the time his family raced him to the vet. Test results later showed he died from toxic algae that officials did not even know was in the Columbia River. Click here to read more.

CHICAGO, IL - Next to inflation, Americans ranked housing as their top financial worry in a Gallup survey last May. It’s only gotten worse. January home sales were down 5% from last year’s dismal numbers. Record numbers of first-time buyers are stuck on the sidelines as housing affordability stands at the lowest level ever recorded, while one in three Americans now spend over 30% of their income on mortgage or rent.
The housing crisis is not just an American problem, but a global phenomenon that hits the middle and working classes the hardest. Studies of the Canadian, British, European, and East Asian markets have also found that housing prices have risen far faster than household incomes and inflation. A report from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development concluded that “housing has been the main driver of rising middle-class expenditure.” In prosperous and communitarian Switzerland, Zurich studios sell for well over $1 million, and small houses even more, making downpayments unaffordable to affluent people despite the overwhelming financial advantages to homeowners. Click here to read more.

BOSTON, MASS - On Monday, President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that his administration was considering giving $3 billion in grant money initially slated for Harvard to trade schools.
This comes right after he tried to block foreign students from attending the school. That move was initially halted by a court, but there is plenty of reason to believe Harvard and other schools are violating federal law and are admitting foreign students who are connected to terrorist groups.
The Daily Signal depends on the support of readers like you. Donate now
And if they are and the order stands it won’t be good for Harvard’s current model since 27% of the school’s enrollment is foreign and that’s where it makes a lot of its money.
On Tuesday, Trump tripled down. An administration official said Tuesday that all direct federal aid to the Ivy League school will be stripped. Click here to read more.

MARENGO, Ohio — A sheriff’s deputy in Ohio who responded to a domestic violence call at a home was fatally shot by a suspect who was wounded, authorities said.
The Morrow County Sheriff’s office said the shooting occurred Monday night in the town of Marengo, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) north of Columbus. Speaking at a news conference on Tuesday, Sheriff John Hinton identified the deputy as Daniel Sherrer, 31, who had served with the department since May 2021.
Sherrer “always had a smile on his face, never in a bad mood,” Hinton said. He noted the death was a tough blow for the department but said everyone came into work Tuesday because “that’s what we have to do, it’s what he would have wanted.”
In a statement posted on the department’s Facebook page, Hinton said Sherrer was shot shortly after he arrived at the home. The deputy and the suspect were both taken to a hospital, where Sherrer was pronounced dead a short time later.
The sheriff said Tuesday he has not yet viewed body camera footage of the shooting, so he could not provide further details about what occurred. Click here to read more.