It gets even more interesting (sinister) ...
6 Police Officers arrested him on his 66th birthday - exactly 666 days after the one and only time a Royal King’s Horse was seen running through London covered in blood.
It gets even more interesting (sinister) ...
6 Police Officers arrested him on his 66th birthday - exactly 666 days after the one and only time a Royal King’s Horse was seen running through London covered in blood.
Death of Jalisco New Generation Cartel boss ‘El Mencho’ follows US calls for action against traffickers
Mexican authorities killed the leader of one of the country’s biggest cartels, answering US calls for tougher action against organised crime and setting off a wave of retaliatory violence. Nemesio Oseguera, known as “El Mencho”, the head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, died on Sunday in an operation by Mexican security forces in co-ordination with US authorities in Tapalpa, Jalisco state, Mexico’s defence ministry said. Oseguera, 59, turned the CJNG into one of Mexico’s two most powerful crime groups, alongside the Sinaloa Cartel, expanding its reach across most of the country and taking a lead role in trafficking drugs including fentanyl to the US.
Cartel members responded by unleashing a wave of violence, including roadblocks, car burnings and attacks on businesses across Jalisco state following news of Oseguera’s death. Residents in Guadalajara, Jalisco’s state capital and a host city for the 2026 World Cup, reported at least 30 incidents of shoot-outs and roadblocks on Sunday, according to Mexican newspaper La Jornada. Jalisco and six other states cancelled school classes for Monday as the violence spread. President Claudia Sheinbaum called for calm on Sunday, saying there was “total co-ordination between the governments of all states” and that the “majority of the national territory” was unaffected by the unrest.
Oseguera’s death comes amid intense pressure from US President Donald Trump for Mexico to crack down on cartel leaders. Trump has used the countries’ crucial trade links as leverage and even floated possible US intervention on Mexican soil.
Sheinbaum has dramatically increased operations against the cartels, ending the “hugs not bullets” policy adopted by her predecessor, which experts blame for allowing the expansion of crime groups. “This is one of the biggest achievements in the government’s fight against organised crime in the last 20 years,” said Armando Vargas, leader of the security programme at think-tank México Evalúa. “The timing is strategic, sending a powerful message to the US about the government’s commitment to weakening organised crime,” he added, ahead of a review of the USMCA trade deal between the US, Mexico and Canada. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the US provided intelligence support to Mexico on the operation, adding that Oseguera had been a top target for both countries. “President Trump has been very clear — the United States will ensure narco-terrorists sending deadly drugs to our homeland are forced to face the wrath of justice they have long deserved,” Leavitt said.
Mexico’s defence ministry said Oseguera died from wounds sustained “during air transport to Mexico City”. Six other CJNG members were killed, they added, while weapons including rocket launchers capable of downing aircraft were seized. The US embassy issued a “shelter in place” alert for its citizens in Jalisco and several other parts of Mexico after reports of violence in the western state. Video published by local media showed fires at a Costco store in Puerto Vallarta, a resort town on Jalisco’s coast. Air Canada and United Airlines temporarily suspended flights to the city. Mexican security experts compared the current unrest to violence that followed the 2024 capture of Sinaloa cartel boss Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, which later evolved into an ongoing all-out turf war in Sinaloa state between factions of the group. The US Drug Enforcement Administration had offered $15mn for Oseguera’s capture. His killing is the most important act against a cartel leader since the arrest of Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán in 2014, analysts said.
The CJNG also plays a big role in fuel theft, arms trafficking and extortion. Whether the violence in Jalisco expands will depend on “what kind of succession lines are in place and how much they’re honoured or disregarded”, said Vanda Felbab-Brown, director of Brookings’ initiative on non-state armed actors. “We could see violence really spreading across Mexico, and potentially even beyond,” she added. “Or if it’s pretty quickly announced who is the new leader and everyone kisses the ring, then the extent of the violence and the impact on the criminal landscape can be more limited.” Christopher Landau, the US deputy secretary of state, described Oseguera’s death as “a great development for Mexico, the US, Latin America, and the world”. “The good guys are stronger than the bad guys,” he posted on X. https://www.ft.com/content/55fa278a-6902-43e8-9021-dfd3cb7d26a7
A car bomb struck central Moscow, killing a police officer and wounding two others, in an attack that raises questions about the war reaching Russian soil. The explosion hit a patrol car near Savelovsky Station in the early hours of February twenty fourth. Russia's Interior Ministry confirmed an unidentified individual approached the traffic police vehicle just after midnight and detonated the device. The deceased officer was thirty four-year-old Senior Police Lieutenant Denis Bratushchenko, who had served with the Moscow police since March two thousand nineteen. Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev visited the scene personally. Authorities confirmed the attacker died at the scene, while the identity and motive remain unknown. - News Report.
US military planes have left Andalucia after the Spanish government blocked the use of its bases for strikes on Iran.
Flight tracking websites showed fifteen US aircraft departing Rota and Moron, where they were permanently stationed, after foreign minister Jose Manuel Albares said that the bases could not be used for attacks on Iran.
Rota and Moron, in Cadiz and Sevilla province respectively, are jointly operated by the US – but fall entirely under Spain’s sovereignty.
The development came after senior officials, including Albares and prime minister Pedro Sanchez, decried the US-Israeli strikes on Iran as ‘unjustified’ and ‘dangerous.’
Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez condemned the U.S. and Israel for their military actions in Iran, emphasizing that Spain will not support the conflict despite threats from the U.S. Article: Spain PM Sanchez Says ‘No to War’ in Iran Despite Trump's Trade Threat https://www.timesnownews.com/world/middle-east/spain-pm-sanchez-says-no-to-war-in-iran-despite-trump-trade-threat-article-153751820
Miles Mathis on the case again: https://mileswmathis.com/shan.pdf
Andrew Bridgen reporting live on 9th March 2026. The hearing in Amsterdam has ended. Judgement 9th April. The 9 legal representatives of big pharma and the ‘elites’ are all trying to stand behind ‘we were in a pandemic’ and ‘the vaccines are safe and effective’ neither of which is true. Will justice be done ? Time will tell.
Related: The Netherlands cases v orchestrators of Pandemic for Profit, aka "Project Covid-19 https://substack.com/@sashalatypova/p-189423655
Fuel rationing starts as nuclear war threatens global famine and collapse
Unfortunately the news keeps getting worse each day. Energy lockdowns are now under way and fuel rationing has begun in some countries.
War participants, meanwhile, are escalating toward the user of nuclear weapons, which will set off a chain reaction of nuclear detonations around the world as other conflicts also "light up."
This will lead the dimming of the sun and global crop failures and famine. Extreme food rationing will quickly follow as billions face food scarcity. (edited)
For the first time in decades, astronauts aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission have spoken directly from space — and what they revealed is something you don’t want to miss. Recorded on April 2, this historic moment captures the Artemis II crew answering real questions while orbiting far beyond Earth. From what space actually feels like, to what surprised them the most, their responses give a rare, unfiltered look at human spaceflight beyond low Earth orbit.
Just one more way to steal money from the people and put it into the pockets of corrupt politicians and corporations. Despicable, corrupt and very wrong.
NASA’s Artemis II mission, the first crewed lunar flight in more than 50 years, is part of a programme that has already run into tens of billions of dollars, with costs largely borne by US taxpayers and supplemented by international and private-sector partners. How much does Artemis II cost—and who pays for it? - BusinessToday
I think it’s a great achievement and awesome, and it has to be an amazing experience to be part of it, especially for those four brave and exceptional people. I think it also shows what is possible when people focus their energy and effort on working together towards achieving something great, rather than against. It shows the difference that kind of shift in approach makes. And it can and surely will also inspire many, especially among the youth, to seek to achieve more themselves, because they can see that amazing things are possible when people focus their energy on working together towards a goal, even if it might to many seem like an impossible one. This is likely what many great past explorers have done as well. I get your sentiment, though. However to me, it has always been a much better focus compared to things such as ideological wars, for certain. Great achievements like this also serve to unite people, rather than furthering divisions, as it tends to be inspirational to all, or perhaps most. However, sure - not everyone might think it’s valuable, meanigful or even interesting, which is perfectly ok. I however find it interesting - always have. I think it’s both inspiring and awesome. Hopefully they succeed and all make it back safely as they hope and plan to. Something positive amongst a sea of other events. That is just my opinion though so don’t mind me, I’m just enjoying the moment. ![]()
No worries. I don’t mind.
I do mind where the funding comes from. Let Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin and whomever else (those like yourself) foot the bill then; but, I’ve no interest at all in taking part in such a fraud.
Ha. If only I could, then yes maybe I would? Perhaps this lands better, he is odd for sure but the man does sometimes have his own way with words.
Well, if you live in the U.S. (the land of taxation) where nearly everything / everyone is taxed, then you already are paying for it. That was my point. Artificial Surveillance collects data on a nation’s people for nefarious reasons, but its use could be used for the benefit of the people like determining who doesn’t want to pay for these “projects”. But, no, that would be too fair and actually provide people an option to truly opt out; honestly, even if THEY did provide such an option, I would not trust what THEY would do with the information by “dissidents”. It would have to be monitored by the people and not THEM. Currently, its about stealing the money from the people through taxation to pay for THEIR pet-projects and the heck with everyone else. I do hope I’ve made that point clear at this point as I wish not to rant on.
BTW, why does controlled-op Alex Jones talk soooo loud? He is screaming and I cannot listen to it because I have to cover my ears.
Yes. And I can understand that this may be the way that some would feel about it. ![]()
If you’ve been off the grid for the last 48 hours, you missed a genuinely historic stretch for NASA’s Artemis II mission. Right now, four astronauts are coasting back toward Earth after thoroughly acing the main event. Here is a quick recap of what just went down. Yesterday, on Flight Day 6, the Orion spacecraft successfully completed its highly anticipated lunar flyby—marking the first time human eyes have seen the Moon up close since Apollo 17 in 1972. To be clear, this wasn't an orbital insertion. The spacecraft rode a free-return trajectory that whipped the crew around the far side of the Moon, coming within roughly 4,067 miles of the lunar dirt. Four astronauts — three from NASA and one from the CSA (Canadian Space Agency) — make up the Artemis II crew: NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman, Artemis II commander NASA astronaut Victor Glover, Artemis II pilot NASA astronaut Christina Koch, Artemis II mission specialist Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen, Artemis II mission specialist
Economic models are now showing that the global economic collapse from the current Persian Gulf war will be three times worse than Covid... and that's if things get sorted out quickly.
On the current trajectory, the worldwide economic collapse actually has the potential to be TEN times worse than COVID.
Up to 500 million people will be thrust into extreme poverty worldwide, and this is a "best case" timeline that assumes the war ends soon.
Meanwhile, the White House is talking to U.S. automakers to convert them over to wartime industrial production (like we did in WWII).
They are planning for a long, multi-year world war.