CLETA MITCHELL: The Main Problem At The DOJ Is Not A Lack Of Talent But A Lack Of Will And Killer Instinct


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: February 24, 2326

MIKE DAVIS: This One Shocked Me. The Law Firm Jones Day, Which Represented Trump, Is Now Adverse To Him In The J.P. Morgan Debanking Lawsuit


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: February 24, 2326

BANNON: Pat McCrory, Let Me Be Blunt. Brother, You Are A Bald-Faced Liar. In 2016, President Trump, With Mark Meadows And The Team, Pulled North Carolina Out By 1-1.5 Points


Posted originally on Rumble on Bannon War Room on: February 24, 2326

Confidence in US Government – 1958 to Now


Posted originally on Feb 25, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

Confidence wide

When the National Election Study first asked the question in 1958, about 73% of Americans said they trusted the federal government to do what is right most or all of the time. Today, that number has collapsed to roughly 17%, one of the lowest readings in nearly seven decades. This is not a partisan anomaly. It is a structural decline that began in the 1960s and 1970s during the Vietnam War, Watergate, and rising economic instability, and it has never fully recovered since.

Confidence is the foundation of every political and economic system. I have said countless times that inflation, currency crises, and civil unrest are not merely monetary events, but rather, they are confidence events. When trust in government falls, people begin to disengage from institutions, question policy legitimacy, and ultimately shift capital and allegiance away from public systems. Pew data shows rising frustration across both parties, with roughly half of Americans in each political camp describing themselves as frustrated with the federal government.

Economic Confidence Model Public to Private Wave 1929 2032

Even in recent years, only about two in ten Americans say they trust Washington to do what is right most or all of the time, while the majority say they trust it only some of the time or never. That is a profound psychological shift.

Trust tends to rise during external crises and collapse during prolonged domestic political conflict. After 9/11, trust temporarily rebounded, yet the long-term trend resumed downward following wars, financial crises, and political polarization. This cyclical behavior aligns perfectly with the broader Economic Confidence Model. Institutional trust peaks during periods of perceived unity and declines during fragmentation and fiscal stress.

Declining trust in government is one of the most reliable leading indicators of political restructuring. The late Roman Republic saw collapsing confidence in the Senate before the rise of authoritarian rule. The French monarchy lost legitimacy long before the financial crisis triggered the revolution. Confidence always breaks before structural change becomes visible.

When the National Election Study first asked the question in 1958, about 73% of Americans said they trusted the federal government to do what is right most or all of the time. Today, that figure has fallen to roughly 17%, placing confidence near the lowest levels in nearly seventy years. This is not a minor fluctuation tied to one administration. It is a structural decline that began in the 1960s amid war, political scandal, and economic volatility and has trended downward ever since.

Confidence is the real foundation of any political and economic system. Inflation, debt crises, and social unrest are confidence events. As trust in government deteriorates, the public disengages from institutions, questions policy, and shifts capital and behavior away from public systems they no longer believe are acting in their interest.

The data show that only a small minority of Americans now trust Washington to do what is right most of the time, while the overwhelming majority say they trust it only some of the time or never. That represents a profound psychological shift from the postwar era, when government was widely viewed as competent.

Looking forward to the 2032 ECM turning point, the trajectory of government confidence in the United States is unlikely to stage a sustained recovery. The Economic Confidence Model implies that we are in a phase of declining public-sector confidence and rising skepticism toward centralized authority into the late 2020s. That does not mean an immediate collapse, but rather continued volatility in trust, punctuated by brief rallies during crises followed by deeper erosion as fiscal pressures, political polarization, and institutional overreach intensify. As we approach 2032, the model suggests a further migration of confidence away from government and toward private assets, alternative systems, and localized structures of governance.

Kaja Kallas Against War?


Posted originally on Feb 25, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

Kaja Kallas

Top EU Neocon Kaja Kallas is against war, well, she’s against war that does not benefit her. “We don’t need another war in this region. We already have a lot,” Kallas said in regard to US and Iran tensions.

Europe is facing an existential crisis over Russia, and Kallas herself has repeatedly framed Moscow as the primary enemy whose very existence threatens the entire continent. That position has dominated EU policy for years, with enormous political, military, and financial capital already committed to Ukraine and the confrontation with Russia. In that light, her warning that “the region does not need a new war” if tensions with Iran escalate is less about humanitarian restraint and more about geopolitical prioritization.

Europe has been pouring funding, weapons, and political capital into the Ukrainian conflict, and the last thing Brussels wants is the United States shifting military attention to the Middle East. If Washington becomes consumed by Iran, the burden of confronting Russia shifts back onto Europe, which is economically and militarily unprepared to handle it alone. Europe has been scheming ways to defend itself without the US, but the truth of the matter is that US protection has been embedded in every defense mechanism since the end of World War II.

Kallas even acknowledged that Iran is currently in a weakened position and that this moment should be used for diplomacy rather than escalation. “We should really be using this time to find a diplomatic solution,” Kallas commented, yet, simultaneously refuses to acknowledge any possibility of peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.

EU Neocons do not want their top financier to stretch its finances and manpower. Worse, the EU certainly does not want to provide its own resources to assist its ally in combating a conflict in the Middle East.

United Nations Moves to Censor the Internet


Posted originally on Feb 25, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

The United Nations is now openly discussing “coordinated global action” to combat what it defines as disinformation and hate speech online, and this should not be dismissed as some abstract policy debate. This is a structural shift toward the internationalization of speech regulation, and that carries profound political and economic implications.

The UN’s recent digital governance initiatives, including its policy briefs tied to the Global Digital Compact, explicitly call for stronger international cooperation to address online misinformation, platform accountability, and content governance across borders. The stated objective is to create safer digital spaces and reduce harmful content, yet the mechanism being proposed is coordinated oversight at a global level.

An unelected international institution proposing frameworks that influence what information is acceptable raises concerns. The UN has no direct democratic mandate over the citizens of individual nations, yet its policy direction increasingly encourages governments and platforms to align with shared global standards for speech moderation and information control. This is being framed as a necessary response to misinformation, extremism, and social instability in the digital age. The globalists want to control our ability to access and process information.

The core issue is not whether misinformation exists. It always has. Every era has dealt with propaganda, rumors, and competing narratives. What is different now is the scale and the proposed solution of centralized digital oversight coordinated at the international level. Why should a select few determine fact from fiction? The power is unimaginable.

What one administration labels misinformation may later prove accurate, and what is defined as harmful speech can shift with political priorities. History is filled with examples where dissenting views were initially censored only to later become accepted truths in matters of war policy, economic forecasting, and public health.

The future regulatory battleground will not be limited to finance, taxation, or energy, but increasingly to information itself. In a digital economy, whoever influences the flow of information indirectly influences public confidence, political legitimacy, and even economic behavior. The real question is no longer whether misinformation exists. The structural question is who defines truth, who enforces that definition, and how far institutions are willing to go to maintain narrative authority in an era of declining global trust.

SOU Surprise – President Trump Awards Trump Awards Medal of Honor to Venezuela Raid Pilot Eric Slover


Posted originally on CTH on February 25, 2026 | Sundance 

During the State of the Union address, President Trump surprised the audience with the introduction of helicopter pilot Eric Slover who was severely wounded in his legs during the successful raid in Venezuela to capture Nicholas Maduro.

Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover was repeatedly struck in the leg and hip by hostile fire as he was preparing to land. As his helicopter approached the target area, Venezuelan defense systems opened fire, and Slover was struck four times in the leg. The Chinook was also hit, but still flyable.

So, he kept flying. “One bullet after another. He absorbed four agonizing shots, shredding his leg into numerous pieces,” President Trump noted. Despite his wounds, Slover brought the aircraft and his team back to safety. Slover maintained control of the aircraft despite his wounds, executed the insertion, and ensured his crew successfully executed their objectives. He then piloted the aircraft back to the USS Iwo Jima. Within three hours, another team of helicopters would exfiltrate the assault team.

Slover is still recovering from his wounds and was standing with the assistance of a walker when he received the award. A total of seven Americans were wounded in the operation.

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President Trump State of the Union Speech – 9:00pm ET Livestream


Posted originally on CTH on February 24, 2026 | Sundance 

Tonight at 9:00pm ET, President Donald Trump will be delivering the first State of the Union speech of his second term in office.  RSBN begins coverage at 7:00pm, with the speech scheduled to broadcast live on all broadcast and cable channels.

RSBN Livestream Link – White House Livestream Link – Alternate Livestream Link

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U.S Court of Appeals – DC Circuit – Rules IRS Can Share Information with DHS for Immigration Enforcement


Posted originally on CTH on February 24, 2026 | Sundance

A win for President Trump and the Dept of Homeland Security.  The DC Court of Appeals has ruled against the plaintiff argument seeking to block the IRS (Treasury Secretary Bessent) from sharing cross-reference information with the Dept of Homeland Security (Secretary Noem).

Bottom line, the IRS can share data with DHS to identify status of illegal aliens.

The only issue that we decide is whether, on the sparse record before us, Appellants have met their heavy burden to make a clear showing that they are entitled to the preliminary injunctive relief sought. For the reasons indicated, we conclude that Appellants have not.”

[SEE Ruling Here]

EU Schedules Permanent Ban on Russian Import Oil for Three Days After Hungarian Election


Posted originally on CTH on February 24, 2026 | Sundance

I guess we can put this in the open admission file surrounding the all-out effort by the European Union to defeat Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

According to a leaked document received by Reuters, the European Union is scheduled to permanently ban all EU nations from importing Russian oil.  They have scheduled the ban to trigger on April 15th, three days after the Hungarian election.

BRUSSELS, Feb 24 (Reuters) – The European Commission will submit a legal proposal to permanently ban Russian oil imports on April 15, three days after Hungary’s parliamentary election, according to EU officials and a document seen by Reuters.

Two EU officials told Reuters the timing was designed to prevent the oil ban becoming a major factor in Hungary’s election campaign. Hungary and Slovakia, still reliant on Russian oil imports, are strongly opposed to any ban.

In the April 12 election, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his nationalist Fidesz party are facing the biggest challenge to their hold on power in 16 years.

The EU has already imposed sanctions on imports of seaborne Russian oil. But it wants to enshrine a full phase-out of Russian oil in legislation that would remain in place, even if a peace deal in the Ukraine war led to the EU lifting sanctions.

The Commission plans to propose the Russian oil ban on April 15, according to a draft agenda seen by Reuters.

Asked about the matter, a Commission spokesperson told Reuters the EU executive’s agendas were provisional and that it did not have a confirmed timeline for submitting the proposal. (read more)