'Right out of the communist playbook': Cuban UFC fighter Jorge Masvidal calls Trump indictment 'utter nonsense'



UFC fighter Jorge Masvidal took to Twitter to express his support for Donald Trump after an indictment of the former president was announced, calling the move by New York's district attorney "BS charges" and "a play right out of the communist playbook."

A grand jury in Manhattan indicted former President Donald Trump on March 30, 2023. The charges are alleged to be related to Trump's alleged hush-money payment to Stormy Daniels, an adult film star who claimed to have an extramarital affair with him.

Masvidal, a fighter from Miami, Florida, is the son of a Cuban man who fled the communist country on a homemade raft made out of tractor tires.

"I just want to talk about something, because my family has lived through it, and history has told us that this is a play right out of the communist playbook," Masvidal posted with a "Make America great again" caption.

"What they're doing to President Trump has never been done before to a president, for the BS charges the DA in New York is bringing up," he continued.

\u201cMake America great again \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 #indivisible\u201d
— BMF.eth (@BMF.eth) 1680226203

"If we let them do this to Trump, they're going to come for you, me, and anybody that opposes him. This has been done before in history, and every time it's happened, it only gets worse. We can't let the left take over," Masvidal warned.

"This is nonsense; we need to all stand together instead of fighting against each other, letting them divide and conquer us," the fighter concluded.

Masvidal has spoken out against communism many times, including when he referred to former NFL player Colin Kaepernick as a "coward" when he praised Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.

"Know ur history and facts cowards like this fool should be sent to live in Cuba see what they say after a day there," Masvidal wrote on Instagram.

Regarding Masvidal's lineage, his father landed on the U.S. Virgin Islands after spending three days at sea at just 14 years old, eating a seagull to survive on the raft.

The fighter's grandfather was a bus driver in Cuba when the communist revolution occurred.

"They were getting by and living fine. Then the whole communism thing came, and the little bit they had got taken away," the fighter nicknamed "gamebred" recalled.

"My dad is one of the craziest dudes," Masvidal said in an interview, telling reporters about an exchange he had with his father.

"I was like, 'Man, what would make you pick up and go at the age of 14?' And he said, 'They were gonna tell me what my favorite color was gonna be, and who and what I was gonna be, so I decided to go.'"

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LEVIN explains why Hillary is the 'queen of dirty politics who just won't go away'



In a recent episode of "LevinTV," host Mark Levin laid into former secretary of state and twice-failed Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. Dubbing her the "queen of dirty politics who just won't go away," Levin addressed her latest nonsensical rant.

Clinton claimed that right-wing extremists and a conservative Supreme Court intend to steal the next presidential election. Her reasoning, Levin said, is delusional. He added that her knowledge of the Constitution is "dim." Mark explained the intricate governmental balance crafted by the Founders and pointed out that Americans would be living in a "Democrat totalitarian tempest" if Hillary had her way. Video below.


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Hillary Clinton pivots from denying past elections to rejecting future results, claiming Republicans plan to 'steal the next presidential election'



Failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has preemptively accused Republicans of stealing the 2024 presidential election. By once again sowing doubt about the legitimacy of American democracy, Clinton hopes to raise money and help Democrats take over strategic state legislatures.

Preemptive election denial

For years, Democrats have expressed concerns about how "planting seeds of doubt" undermines democracy. In fact, Democrats continue to denounce some Republicans as "election deniers" for questioning the legitimacy of the 2020 election, which Clinton had told then-candidate Joe Biden not to concede "under any circumstances."

Notwithstanding the left's apparent sensitivity to so-called election denial, Clinton — who has repeatedly suggested the 2016 election was "stolen" from her despite having lost to former President Donald Trump by 77 electoral votes (304-227) — alleged last week that a "coup" was imminent.

In a video posted to Twitter on Oct. 21 by the radical leftist organization Indivisible, Clinton claimed that "right-wing extremists already have a plan to literally steal the next presidential election. And they're not making a secret of it."

In her fundraising video for Indivisible, an activist group started by former Democrat staffers, Clinton said the "steal" would be achieved by Republican-led state legislatures.

Clinton explained how the alleged steal would be achieved: "The right-wing-controlled Supreme Court may be poised to rule on giving state legislatures, yes, you heard me that correctly, state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections,"

"Just think: If that happens, the 2024 presidential election could be decided, not by the popular vote or even by the anachronistic Electoral College, but by state legislatures, many of them Republican-controlled," she added.

After calling into question the legitimacy of American elections, Clinton revealed the true purpose of her wild claims: "Indivisible has launched Crush the Coup to make sure we're ready to defend democracy in 2024. They have put together a list of critical races in six key states and how you can get involved." Clinton then suggested viewers donate.

\u201c*taps microphone* And now an important message from Secretary @HillaryClinton!\n\nWe're all focused on winning the midterms and defending our congressional majorities. That\u2019s critical. But we also must take the fight to MAGA Republicans at the state level: https://t.co/3JDygMc5T2\u201d
— Indivisible Guide (@Indivisible Guide) 1666369925

Moore v. Harper

Indivisible's Crush the Coup identified "the 29 most critical races in 6 states that we need to win to defeat the MAGA coup." The six battleground states are allegedly Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

CTC named a number of Democrats the group wants bankrolled and elected to power this November. Extra to providing the Democrats with leverage over strategic legislatures, CTC intends for these candidates to mitigate what it perceives would be the fallout of Moore v. Harper, an election redistricting case that will be heard this fall by the Supreme Court.

The case concerns whether "a State's judicial branch may nullify the regulations governing the 'Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives ... prescribed ... by the Legislature thereof,' ... and replace them with regulations of the state courts' own devising."

CTC has restated the claim made by others on the left that by adopting "an extremist and fringe legal doctrine," the court will give states the power to overturn elections.

"The nightmare scenario," according to CTC, "is that a legislature, displeased with how an election official on the ground has interpreted her state's election laws, would invoke the [independent state legislature doctrine] as a pretext to refuse to certify the results of a presidential election and instead select its own slate of electors."

Carrie Campbell Severino, head of the Judicial Crisis Network, recently indicated in National Review that the "alarmism around Moore v. Harper comes from liberals who cherry-pick their grievances in states whose constituents favor Republicans and selectively use liberal activist state courts to give Democrats advantages they cannot democratically."

Whereas Clinton and CTC allege they are fighting to protect democracy, they are, according to Severino, hoping to help Democrats keep undermining it.

"Their rhetoric about democracy is part of a con job, and the Left's disinformation campaign serves as a subterfuge to distract from the reality that their true grievance is not on behalf of the people," wrote Severino. "It is that their strategy of jerry-rigging otherwise lost elections through renegade courts might soon come to an end."

Clinton v. the democratic will of the people

Like Georgia's gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (D), Clinton routinely warns of threats to democracy.

In June, Clinton said that "Donald Trump, his allies, and supporters are a clear and present danger to American democracy." She also tweeted, "The people involved in the criminal conspiracy to overturn the will of America's voters ... must be held accountable."

Despite speaking highly of democracy and the need to defend it, Clinton has repeatedly rejected the results of democratically decided elections.

In 2019, Clinton called Trump an "illegitimate president" and suggested "he knows" he stole the 2016 election.

Hillary Clinton: "Trump knows he's an illegitimate president" youtu.be

In 2020, Clinton said on the Atlantic's "The Ticket" podcast that "There was a widespread understanding that this election [in 2016] was not on the level. ... We still don't know what really happened."

Clinton has not only contested the results of the 2016 election. She claimed that Stacey Abrams would have beaten Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in 2018 "if she'd had a fair election."

In 2002, Clinton publicly claimed former President George W. Bush had been "selected" president, not elected.

Angry activist gets in Ted Cruz's face at Houston restaurant over guns, gets restrained and dragged out. He smiled in photo with Cruz before ambushing him.



An angry activist got in U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz's face at a Houston restaurant after his address Friday at the National Rifle Association convention; the activist had to be restrained before he was dragged out of the establishment.

What are the details?

The activist asked the Texas Republican for a photo, and the two were smiling and arm in arm:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @indivisibleHOU

But the activist — identified by Insider as Benjamin Hernandez — quickly turned the photo op into an ambush and lit into Cruz over Tuesday's massacre of students and teachers at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @indivisibleHOU

Hernandez asked Cruz to talk to him about "background checks," kept speaking when the senator tried to answer, and after Cruz finally was able to say "background checks wouldn't have stopped the shooter," Hernandez got more animated, waving his hands in the air as he said with a raised voice, "We can make it harder for people to get guns in this country!"

Cruz told the activist "you combine ignorance with hatred," and "you don't know what you're talking about." Soon a few men who appeared to be security stepped between Cruz and Hernandez; but the activist began to resist and lunge forward as they slowly dragged him from the eatery.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @indivisibleHOU

It's quite a thing to see how close angry people can get to an elected official like Cruz, especially in times like these. One wonders if Democratic senators like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer would have minded such treatment from a conservative.

As he was dragged away, Hernandez hollered, "Why did you speak tonight? Why did you come here to the convention to take blood money? Why, when 19 children died? Nineteen children died! That's on your hands! That's on your hands!"

Here's the clip:

\u201c#BREAKING: Several hours after #NRAconvention, Indivisible Houston board member @TheBenjaminHdz challenges Ted Cruz to support background checks & other measures during a dinner break at Uptown Sushi.\n#TedCruzHasBloodOnHisHands #TedCruzChildMassacre #TedCruzLovesDeadKids\u201d
— Indivisible Houston (@Indivisible Houston) 1653712416

The activist speaks

Hernandez — an independent who ran for Congress in 2018 — is a board member of Indivisible Houston, a political advocacy group, which posted the Twitter video of him confronting Cruz, Insider reported.

Hernandez told the outlet he was in the restaurant when he saw Cruz walk in and added that he asked Cruz if he would pose for a photo after the senator finished his dinner — but Cruz got up right away.

"As a constituent, you know, he refuses to allow us to engage him in open public forums. So this is one of the ways we can reach him," Hernandez told the outlet. "I'd never done anything like this before."

Hernandez added to Insider, "In that moment, I'm like, 'I have to do this because there are people that are really suffering.' And if it takes ... making Ted Cruz uncomfortable while he's having dinner, I mean, that's just the price of it."

The activist also told the outlet that while confronting Cruz, he was thinking of the parents of the slain children, as well as his own child.

"I'm a new father. I have a child. This hits different. Like, I just want to know what are you doing as a senator? And what things can you support?" Hernandez told Insider. "I'm like, 'Can you just answer the question? Like, where do you stand? What do you bring to the table?"

Hernandez added to the outlet that if politicians continue to avoid action on mass shootings, "we have to confront them."

"The moment is now," Hernandez told Insider. "They're always gonna say, 'Now is not the time'... But you know what, it is the time. Now is the time to stop the next one."

The outlet said a Cruz spokesperson on Saturday didn't immediately respond its request for comment and that an automated message from Cruz's senate office said his voicemail was full.

Remember when?

This wasn't the first time Cruz felt the left's wrath in a restaurant. In September 2018 a leftist mob made headlines by harassing Cruz and his wife in a Washington, D.C., restaurant. Afterward a left-wing group posted video of the incident with a chilling promise to Cruz, then-President Donald Trump, then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, and “right-wing scum” in general: “You are not safe. We will find you.”

Ah, but it was the season of such behavior, as other conservative figures were kicked out of restaurants and heckled and even punched. Then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and his wife were accosted at a restaurant, too, but other patrons stood up for the couple.

Some might conclude that U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters of California got the ball rollling in June 2018 by infamously ranting to supporters to “create a crowd” and “push back on” members of Trump’s cabinet if they’re seen “in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station.” She added in her speech — fueled by anger over Trump's immigration stances — “You tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.”

\u201cMaxine Waters calls for attacks on Trump administration: "If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them, and you tell them they\u2019re not welcome anymore, anywhere."\u201d
— Ryan Saavedra (@Ryan Saavedra) 1529871853