Tim Walz Touted Endorsement From Kremlin Propagandist Who Called 9/11 a ‘False Flag’

Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz, in his last campaign for Minnesota governor, touted an endorsement from a pro-Kremlin conspiracy theorist who called 9/11 a "false flag operation" and allegedly said the Navy SEALs "deserve to lose a few guys" in Iraq.

The post Tim Walz Touted Endorsement From Kremlin Propagandist Who Called 9/11 a ‘False Flag’ appeared first on .

Sean Strickland accepts challenge to complete Navy SEAL 'Hell Week' training against former SEAL David Goggins



UFC contender and fan favorite Sean Strickland accepted a challenge to complete Navy SEAL training against former SEAL and fitness personality David Goggins.

In March 2024, Strickland received praise as well as backlash for saying he didn't think there was one Navy SEAL "who could survive a week [of] training" with him, as opposed to the other way around.

"I'm kind of sick of seeing it 'cause, like, you guys think you're bada**," Strickland said. "Come train with me for a week, I'll show you what's up. I'll f**king break you," he added.

The middleweight followed that by beating up a former SEAL (who is also a fighter) in a brutal sparring session months later.

'The only thing you beat me at in life is f***ing running.'

Enter Goggins: a former SEAL himself who is known for withstanding extreme duress during his fitness regimen, along with being an over-the-top motivational speaker. Goggins also competes in triathlons and ultramarathons (42.195 KM).

Goggins posted a video on TikTok challenging Strickland to a very public fitness challenge.

"This is your opportunity to show the world that you can f*** me up," Goggins said in the video. "I will have camera crews out there. You make sure you bring your f***ing camera crew out there because you're going to want to get this on camera," he added, per TalkSport.

"A 49-year-old, broke-down knee, f***ed-up body guy is gonna put you through a camp that you think you can f*** me up in," the fitness guru went on.

"This is your opportunity, Strickland."

Particularly, Strickland is to complete "Hell Week," which refers to the fourth week of the United States Navy SEAL selection and training program.

According to NavySeals.com, "Hell Week" consists of running over 200 miles with 20 hours of physical training per day. Candidates also sleep for approximately four total hours over a span of five and a half days.

"Hell Week is the ultimate test of a man’s will and the class's teamwork," the site read.

Strickland posted a video on Instagram accepting the challenge and poking fun at some of Goggins' viral videos.

"Goggins, I heard you want a piece," Strickland said. "Challenge accepted."

"Just so you know, man, the only thing you beat me at in life is f***ing running. But guess what, I don't have to f***ing run," he added.

Strickland can expect some other extreme training for SEAL qualifications, according to Navy.com. Under the qualifications and requirements section, the Navy declares that SEAL candidates must be able to complete the following, in succession:

  • Swim 500 yards
  • Perform at least 50 push-ups in two minutes
  • Perform at least 50 curl-ups in two minutes
  • Perform at least 10 pull-ups in two minutes
  • Run 1.5 miles
Strickland noted on his posted that while he admits Goggins could beat him "in a jog," he was willing to accept the challenge simply to occupy his time while he's waiting for a chance to fight for the UFC middleweight championship.

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'You know you're gonna quit': UFC's Sean Strickland brutally beats former Navy SEAL in insane sparring session



UFC contender and former champion Sean Strickland viciously beat up a former Navy SEAL in a video that upset viewers and fans.

Strickland, fresh off a solid victory over fellow contender Paulo Costa at UFC 302, accepted the chance to spar with a Navy SEAL for five rounds in a caged sparring session.

The former SEAL's name is Mitch Aguiar, who actually has MMA experience. Aguiar had 12 amateur bouts between 2013-2017 before turning pro in 2018. He is 2-1 as a professional but hadn't fought since 2020.

"It always seems like a good idea to spar a world champion until you actually [do it]," former UFC fighter Jake Shields wrote on X, as he recorded the fight.

'The only SEAL that said yes … But man … He's one of the real ones.'

"You know you're gonna quit, bitch!" Strickland is heard saying in the video.

However, showing some restraint, the 185-pound fighter said "sorry" after punching the former armed forces member in the face.

"I don't want to knock you out," he added.

Playfulness quickly turned into brutality though, with five punishing rounds of sparring sending Aguiar to the canvas multiple times, although he never gave up.

"Mitch Aguiar is a savage and would beat 99.9 percent of humans in a fight[.] He decided he wanted to spar with Sean Strickland for 25 min," Shields wrote in a subsequent post. "He quickly learned there is a big difference between world champions but regardless he took a brutal beating and didn't quit[,] Sean obviously wasn't looking for a Ko but still dished out a bad beating[.] This is in round 5."

Many fans were upset by Strickland's decision to fight the former military man, perhaps not knowing that he is a professional fighter himself.

It should also be taken into consideration that Aguiar has never reached the ranks of the UFC nor promotions of similar caliber and fights at a weight class beneath Strickland: 170 pounds.

"This was disturbing to watch [not going to lie]," a viewer wrote, per Essentially Sports.

"What's the point of this[,] seriously?" another fan reacted.

Other viewers mocked Strickland for not keeping the same "energy" in fights that he has lost in the UFC.

Strickland was still cordial after the session and later reportedly praised Aguiar for being willing to step into the ring with him.

"The only SEAL that said yes … But man … He's one of the real ones. Probably why he was the only one that said yes," he said on an Instagram story.

Strickland has taken on opponents from many walks of life in recent years, including another beat down of the much smaller YouTuber nicknamed Sneako.

Joe Rogan reacted to that instance negatively, saying it's "not a good look."

"He beat the s*** out of that guy. I don't know why he wanted to do that," Rogan continued. "It's not fair," he added.

Interestingly enough, Aguiar was included in an answer on a Reddit page from 2018 regarding Navy SEALS and whether or not they could beat up a UFC fighter.

"A navy seal would beat a ufc fighter in a street fight," the post read. "They are trained in a number of different fighting styles and can not only break your bones by sheer punching power but also from tackling you," the post claimed.

A reader pointed directly to Aguiar, who was 1-1 at the time, as an example of how different the disciplines are.

He also noted former UFC fighter Brandon Wolff, who finished his career in 2010 with a 7-6 record. Wolff was a SEAL from 1999-2001.

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Blaze News original: Shaping the new 'world order' — former Navy SEAL Admiral Robert Harward says American influence is still needed worldwide



Navy SEAL Admiral Robert Harward says that without a forward and present force of American influence in strategic parts of the globe, the new world order will not be a pleasant one in the coming years.

With four decades of war-fighting experience, Harward has been involved in operations in Bosnia, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yemen. The experienced leader led invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 and served on the National Security Council under President George W. Bush. According to his team, he's never lost a single man under his command.

During the Trump administration, Harward was offered a role as a national security adviser but turned it down. Since then, he has been based in Abu Dhabi serving as executive vice president for international business and strategy at Shield AI. That company, according to Harward's new book, is harnessing artificial intelligence in the field of aerospace and defense technology .

'We've never been better funded; we've never had more capacity and capabilities.'

As a Navy SEAL, Harward has seen the development over time of special forces operations, which he said began in World War II.

"It's changed a lot over the history. We were originally underwater or combat swimmers, to support the landings in Normandy," he told Blaze News. "There were tremendous casualty rates there, and those same skills were needed in the Pacific."

As the years went by with different operations in the Korean War and the Vietnam War, Harward said Special Operations Command was subsequently formed to allow direct funding for special operations.

"It wasn't until the creator of SOCOM operations, which was dictated by Congress on the services, that the special operations community got their own money, got their own command structure, to really build the force."

"All that landscape set the stage for what special operations are today and then showcased by the events of 9/11," he continued.

The admiral explained that special operators were the ones to touch down first in the Middle East in response to the terrorist attack.

With all of that in mind, the war veteran detailed that SEAL training has largely managed to remain the same throughout the unit's existence.

Since the 1950s, the training pipeline "has been infamous for how tough it is, and still today equates to about an 80% attrition rate," Harward said. He added that he has even seen the training firsthand recently and described it as extremely difficult and possibly the hardest and longest it's ever been. New SEALs go through over a year of training, he noted.

The special operations leader said SEALS have an incredibly high retention rate due to their ability to manage physical stress and suffering. That translates to soldiers who are able maintain an impressive amount of toughness throughout an entire career.

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How does Ukraine-Russia end?

With experience in warfare between Western-backed allies and a formidable adversary, the admiral is still — like everyone else — skeptical as to whether there is any simple end to the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

"I don't think anyone can see the end state with this; we have to assume ... that Russia intends to expand and they won't stop until they've subsumed all of Ukraine."

"I don't think either side of the table knows what end state is or how we're going to get there," he added.

After a trip to Finland, Harward said NATO allies feel that the conflict will be ongoing and are preparing for the worst.

"How are we going to reach appeasement? Politically that's becoming a tougher and tougher element. ... I believe what I heard in Europe: that Russia intends not to stop until they've taken all of Ukraine."

'I told the president, "I'm on your bench."'

This led into a discussion of Harward's view on how American influence should be implemented throughout the world as a whole.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Harward spent time backpacking and hitchhiking across the Middle East, something he said wasn't as dangerous as it sounds. In fact, it was quite the opposite, he explained. The West was supported in Afghanistan and Iraq at that time, he recalled, and many Westerners went to these countries to seek enlightenment.

Harward remembered a story about seeing some Irishmen driving through the desert in a Volkswagen van. He noted that Kandahar was referred to as "Small America" at the time, due to the number of USAID programs supporting building irrigation systems.

"There were Americans in Kabul who were running little stores," he said.

You can't do that now, the admiral continued, because America has continued to pull out forces and does not have forward presence in areas of contention.

Ramifications of long-standing policies like this are what he was hoping would be reversed under the Trump administration, but he's seen a regression under the Biden administration.

The shape of the "world order" will be determined in the next four years, he stated.

"That's why this election is so important: What the world order is going to look like going forward is going to be determined in the next four years."

In response to the idea of foreign governments rejecting or not wanting American presence in their countries, Harward referenced the book "Embracing Defeat," which is focused on how Japan changed direction after World War II through American influence.

"Afghanistan is gone," he said. "Let's see how [the Taliban] evolve[s] now that they have to address the people's needs."

"Iraq is another challenge due to Iranian influence."

He claimed that leaving those countries created vacuums and created opportunities for other countries to step in and have influence and therefore guide what they would ultimately become.

Former military member and combat engineer Matthew Harley told Blaze News that he disagreed with the notion that American influence needs to be forced in the region.

"I think someone needs to be in charge, but it shouldn't be the bully with all the cool toys with no real competition," he said. "Those are good points he brings. Does it make them right? Not really."

"Who's living the better life, the person who can create their destiny or the person whose future is determined by the 'influence' of another country?" the former soldier added.

Harward remarked on President Trump's offer to have him as national security adviser during his administration, which he called "an incredible honor and privilege" but admitted it wasn't the right time.

"I told the president 'I'm on your bench.'"

Harward added that he supported the policies Trump was bringing to the table but had not been satisfied with the Obama administration and felt the country needed to shift gears. He says that now that he is in a different place, he would welcome the opportunity from Trump if he wins and if it is offered.

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The state of military funding

"We've never been better funded; we've never had more capacity and capabilities. In my opinion, the forces are the best trained and educated in our history."

Harward described a U.S. military apparatus that is actually the most capable it's ever been. Despite resources having been cut from SOCOM by about 14% to go toward a broader, more existential threat, he said this hasn't changed the fact that funding has been there during the Biden administration.

The massive national debt, however, has caused every arm of the military to be incredibly strategic with its money, he went on. At the same time, however, he reiterated that the Department of Defense has received everything it has wanted over the last two decades.

The real issue is recruitment and retention.

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Harward's book, "The Gouge! How to Be Smarter Than the Situation You Are In," is available on Amazon.

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Naval Special Warfare Command, which includes Navy SEALs, celebrates Pride with rainbow-hued post — and gets excoriated



The United States Naval Special Warfare Command — which includes Navy SEALs —celebrated the first day of Pride Month with rainbow-hued message on its Facebook page.

The June 1 post includes the NSWC logo backed with horizontal bars colored red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple — along with the words "NSW, Dignity, Service, Respect, Equality, Pride." As you might expect, there was a just a little bit of backlash against the post.

'So glad I got out before this bulls**t took over.'

Sara Gonzales — host of BlazeTV's "Sara Gonzales Unfiltered" — told Blaze News that it's "truly terrifying that at a time when our own administration is drumming up conflict across the globe, seemingly chomping at the bit for World War III, they’re also stacking our military with diversity hires. The military is one of the most important places to recruit based on merit and strength, both physically and mentally, rather than who you choose to sleep with. If conflict does come our way, we’re screwed."

A number of commenters on the NSW Facebook post appeared equally disturbed:

  • "So glad I got out before this bulls**t took over," one commenter wrote.
  • "Fix yourself," another user said. "This is a disgrace."
  • "This emboldens our enemies almost as much as a Joe Biden gaffe," another commenter declared.
  • "Someone has lost the plot here," another user observed.
  • "Man this woke sh.. is like a cancer and needs to be handled and [dealt] with as a threat to national security," another commenter stated. "Gone way too far."

Anything else?

The Department of Defense on Saturday night posted the following on X:

— (@)

Fox News said the DoD earlier Saturday "appeared to mix up" Pride Month and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Awareness Month, as a now-deleted X post included the above "Celebrate Pride Month 2024" image with a Progress Pride Flag graphic along with the following message: "June is PTSD Awareness Month, and the DoD is committed to supporting service members and veterans affected by PTSD."

The U.S. government first recognized PTSD Awareness Month in June 2014, one year before June was declared Pride Month, the cable news network added.

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'You guys think you're bada**': Sean Strickland receives hate, support from Navy SEALs after comparing training regimens

'You guys think you're bada**': Sean Strickland receives hate, support from Navy SEALs after comparing training regimens



UFC fighter Sean Strickland elicited strong responses after posting a video in which he said that United States Navy SEALs would not be able to handle his training regimen.

Strickland, a recent UFC middleweight champion, is no stranger to controversial rants. This includes his recent video post comparing his fitness to that of military special operations training.

"I don't think there's one f**king Navy SEAL who could survive a week training with me. I'm kind of sick of seeing it 'cause like you guys think you're bada**," Strickland said in a video from inside a car.

"Come train with me for a week, I'll show you what's up. I'll f**king break you," he added.

Strickland's words garnered a response from actual Navy SEALs, both good and bad.

Former SEAL Jimmy Watson posted a video in direct response to Strickland's, mocking the fighter for comparing the training. Watson stated that while Strickland's training could get people hurt, a SEAL training exercise could result in death.

"Sean, we get it, you're a bada**," Watson began. "Your training partners get millions of dollars, and they actually live. My swim buddies, they die every single year. Do you have any idea what that means? We've already proven that any kind of beatdown will not break us, but our training will simply just end your career, Sean."

"I'm talking about skin grafts on the thigh, Sean. You talk about taking people's souls from their body? Well, me and my boys we've actually taken a lot of real souls from people, you know what I'm saying bro?" Watson continued.

The former SEAL added that Strickland's training "doesn't kill dudes every single year," ending with "advice" for the UFC fighter: "Stay in the Octagon, keep fighting for that next purse and U.S. SEALs, we'll keep fighting for freedom, brother."

Watson's video has been viewed on Instagram approximately 550,000 times.

Another former Navy SEAL, Andy Stumpf, had a different response, however. He said that he spoke directly with Strickland after the video and exchanged professional words. Stumpf said that Strickland even offered to have the former military member attend his training camp or a fight.

Stumpf described that both Strickland and Watson were playing characters.

"He's playing a character. It's part of who he is and what he does inside of the UFC. If you think that the SEAL — or the guy who was a SEAL — that responds to him is also not playing a character, then I don't know what to tell you."

Stumpf wasn't pleased with Watson's depiction of his trade either, calling it "one of the worst representations of the SEAL Community possible."

"That guy ... yeah he needs to shut the f**k up," he added.

Stumpf told Patrick Bet-David that the overall branding from Watson needed to be dialed down in terms of dramatization, and that presenting a Navy SEAL's role in such a manner involved far too much romanticizing.

"Stop being a clown on Instagram," he requested. "The only reason that he is responding in the manner that he is, trying to draw more attention from the video that Sean created."

Stumpf also pointed toward a 2022 SEC ruling, which ordered Watson to pay a "disgorgement of $316,401.48 and prejudgment interest of $59,533.38."

Watson was involved with the late anti-virus creator John McAfee and was accused of concocting a "scheme to profit from a crypto asset security by secretly accumulating a large position in McAfee's accounts, touting that security on Twitter while intending to sell it, and then selling McAfee's holdings as the price rose."

Watson was therefore barred from "participating, directly or indirectly, in the issuance, purchase, offer, or sale of any digital asset security," except for in regard to his own personal assets.

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Meet the Navy SEAL who's boldly taking on the Biden administration over vaccines



We all remember the days during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when the pressure to get vaxxed was increasing by the day. People were threatened, bullied, coerced, and even fired from their jobs if they refused the jab.

It took courage to choose bodily autonomy over blind compliance.

One person who took the bold path of nonconformity is Asa Miller, a former Navy SEAL who was launched into a legal battle with the Biden administration when he refused to get the vaccine.

Steve Deace invites Asa on the show to tell his story.

Growing up in a military family with a father who served 27 years in the Marine Corps, Asa knew from a young age that he would follow a similar path. After high school, he went straight into Navy SEAL training. Unfortunately, his first deployment cycle happened to coincide with the initial hysteria of COVID-19.

“During that time, we were presented with the choice of whether or not to receive the COVID vaccine,” says Asa. “I chose to stand against it, and thankfully, 20 other of my brothers were right there with me.”

However, their “choice” turned out to be rather the illusion of choice.

When a few members of Asa’s team tested positive, despite being asymptomatic or having minor symptoms, officials used it as an opportunity to “force people into solitary confinement.” They even “started a rumor that if you didn’t get the Johnson and Johnson vaccine that had just come out, you’d be stuck in Somalia and would not be able to come home,” Asa recounts.

Despite the coercion, Asa and many of his fellow SEALs continued to refuse the jab.

Asa had “no issues coming home.” However, upon his return, “that’s when the mRNA vaccines started coming out,” which the government immediately began to push. Considering “[his] experience on deployment” and “the early science” behind the new vaccines, Asa stood his ground and refused the jab again.

“I quickly realized that not only was it illegal to mandate these vaccines, but it was also, in my opinion as a Christian, immoral because of their use of aborted fetal cells … so for both legal reasons and my own sincerely held religious beliefs, I decided not to receive these vaccines,” he tells Steve.

That’s when it became abundantly clear that there was never any “choice” at all. When Asa and his fellow nonconformists filed for religious exemptions, “they were all denied.”

“We were all removed from our SEAL team and threatened with punishments ranging from paying back all of our training costs, which reach into the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars,” to “being put in the brig” and even being “dishonorably discharged” – a consequence of the highest caliber that can permanently prevent a veteran from owning firearms, voting, being employed at certain places, and receiving veteran’s benefits.

Even so, Asa and his brothers stood firm in their decision.

Thankfully, others began rallying behind them.

“We actually were able to get ahold of Tucker Carlson, who broke the story for us on Fox News,” which created enough “public awareness” to actually “start the fight,” says Asa.

And that fight is far from over.

While Asa was able to avoid dishonorable discharge, some of his fellow SEAL members weren’t so fortunate.

“I know people who were kicked out early, [people] who had to pay back tens of thousands of dollars in bonus money,” and people who were given “an RE-4 on their discharge,” which places them “in the same category as sexual offenders,” says Asa, adding that “there are also 8,500 service members across all the different branches who were kicked out – some of which received dishonorable discharges, which more or less is the same as having a felony.”

“My goal right now is to be able to tell the story and be a spokesperson for those people who were kicked out and have not received the restitution they deserve, but also to point to the fact that if Congress had not been forced to act, over 250,000 service members would have been kicked out for simply holding to their sincerely held religious beliefs, and I think that's the most important thing,” he says.

“The fight is over fundamental rights; it’s not just vaccines. … Our senior military leadership, our current administration, and the established political order are rejecting our Constitutional laws.”

To hear more of Asa’s story and where he’s at now, watch the clip below.


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