https://thehornnews.com/fbi-raids-dem-leaders-home-in-texas/?customerNumber=000050637381&campaignId=2a666b72-aff1-450b-abf8-bd0ecd37efec&r=eml&experimentId=8552c884-7b6f-59f9-b702-4e9226cf6bd5&vid=F_7kgm&customerId=000050637381-000020502858&utm_campaign=the-horn_220120_editorial_am_180_day&utm_source=blueshift&utm_medium=email&utm_content=the-horn_220120_editorial_am&bsft_clkid=d58e53ec-cfbb-4d66-a991-b9691a3a6721&bsft_uid=8116b14d-1541-4fa0-8148-36d8f7f38ead&bsft_mid=506fe306-b9e0-470c-9c1d-ec78961240a8&bsft_eid=8552c884-7b6f-59f9-b702-4e9226cf6bd5&bsft_utid=8116b14d-1541-4fa0-8148-36d8f7f38ead-HORNNEWS&bsft_mime_type=html&bsft_ek=2022-01-20T15%3A30%3A41Z&bsft_aaid=aea3e268-9699-44e1-966a-66f6731f61a8&bsft_lx=11&bsft_tv=4
Our goal is to have intelligent discussion of the topics of the day. We realize everyone has their opinion and they should be allowed to express it in a discussion forum without calling each other names. We learn from discussion and not from name calling or argument.We use cookies to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners. See details
Contact Form
Thursday, January 20, 2022
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
Monday, January 17, 2022
If This Had Happened During Trumps Time, It Would Be Impeachable
Report: 'Dreadful' Border Error Allowed Suspected Texas Synagogue Terrorist Into US
By Abby Liebing January 17, 2022 at 1:53pmYesterday, in the suburbs of Dallas, a British national named Malik Faisal Akram took four hostages at a synagogue, Congregation Beth Israel. After a 10-hour standoff with the police, Akram was shot and killed.
In the aftermath of the situation, security services in both the U.S. and the U.K. are looking into how Akram was able to enter the United States and carry out the attack on the synagogue, according to the U.K. Daily Mail.
Security services of both countries are being blamed for an “intelligence failure.”
Akram was 44 years old, from Blackburn, Lancashire, and had a criminal record. He had also been branded as a “menace” by the Blackburn magistrates’ court for raving about the 9/11 attacks 20 years ago, according to the Daily Mail.
“The terror suspect was given a rare Exclusion Order at Blackburn’s magistrates’ court – the first in 25 years – for abusing staff about 9/11 on the day after the attack that claimed more than 2,750 lives,” the Daily Mail reported.
This led to questions of how Akram was able to enter the U.S. two weeks ago and whether intelligence agencies in Britain or the U.S. were aware of him.
One Tory Member of Parliament, Bob Seely, told the Daily Mail that there appeared to have been a “dreadful” error at the U.S. and U.K. borders that seems to have been caused by an “intelligence failure.”
“This is clearly a failure of intelligence sharing. It is absolutely dreadful that he has been allowed to go to the States and hurt people. Clearly something has gone wrong somewhere,” Seely said.
Akram entered the synagogue on Saturday by claiming to be a homeless man. He then took hostages and demanded the release of a Pakistani neuroscientist, Aafia Siddiqui, who is serving an 86-year prison sentence in a federal prison in Fort Worth, Texas, Reuters and the BBC reported.
Fort Worth is about 15 miles from Congregation Beth Israel’s town of Colleyville, Texas.
Siddiqui is a female terrorist who was convicted in 2010 for trying kill U.S. military officials in Afghanistan, the BBC reported.
For 10 hours negotiators, officials from both sides of the Atlantic, and his own family members, spoke with Akram.
After his death, Akram’s brother, Gulbar, issued a statement condemning his brother’s actions.
“We would like to say that we as a family do not condone any of his actions and would like to sincerely apologize wholeheartedly to all the victims involved in the unfortunate incident,” Gulbar Akram said, according to the BBC.
“We would also like to add that any attack on any human being, be it a Jew, Christian or Muslim etc. is wrong and should always be condemned,” he added.
Gulbar also demanded to know how Akram had been allowed in the U.S. with his criminal record. Gulbar also said that Akram was mentally ill, according to the Daily Mail.
Yet, on Jan. 2 Akram landed in New York. He somehow traveled to Dallas, where between Jan. 6 and Jan. 13, he spent time at a Christian charity for the homeless in Dallas, according to the Daily Mail. The Daily Mail reported he bought the gun “on the street” at some point in Dallas.
Though Akram died and the hostages survived unharmed there are still questions.
One MP voiced surprise that Akram had been allowed to enter the U.S.
“How did he get into the US?” the MP said. “You get picked up for walking on the cracks in the pavement.”
Another Biden Failure
Report: 'Dreadful' Border Error Allowed Suspected Texas Synagogue Terrorist Into US
By Abby Liebing January 17, 2022 at 1:53pmYesterday, in the suburbs of Dallas, a British national named Malik Faisal Akram took four hostages at a synagogue, Congregation Beth Israel. After a 10-hour standoff with the police, Akram was shot and killed.
In the aftermath of the situation, security services in both the U.S. and the U.K. are looking into how Akram was able to enter the United States and carry out the attack on the synagogue, according to the U.K. Daily Mail.
Security services of both countries are being blamed for an “intelligence failure.”
Akram was 44 years old, from Blackburn, Lancashire, and had a criminal record. He had also been branded as a “menace” by the Blackburn magistrates’ court for raving about the 9/11 attacks 20 years ago, according to the Daily Mail.
“The terror suspect was given a rare Exclusion Order at Blackburn’s magistrates’ court – the first in 25 years – for abusing staff about 9/11 on the day after the attack that claimed more than 2,750 lives,” the Daily Mail reported.
This led to questions of how Akram was able to enter the U.S. two weeks ago and whether intelligence agencies in Britain or the U.S. were aware of him.
One Tory Member of Parliament, Bob Seely, told the Daily Mail that there appeared to have been a “dreadful” error at the U.S. and U.K. borders that seems to have been caused by an “intelligence failure.”
“This is clearly a failure of intelligence sharing. It is absolutely dreadful that he has been allowed to go to the States and hurt people. Clearly something has gone wrong somewhere,” Seely said.
Akram entered the synagogue on Saturday by claiming to be a homeless man. He then took hostages and demanded the release of a Pakistani neuroscientist, Aafia Siddiqui, who is serving an 86-year prison sentence in a federal prison in Fort Worth, Texas, Reuters and the BBC reported.
Fort Worth is about 15 miles from Congregation Beth Israel’s town of Colleyville, Texas.
Siddiqui is a female terrorist who was convicted in 2010 for trying kill U.S. military officials in Afghanistan, the BBC reported.
For 10 hours negotiators, officials from both sides of the Atlantic, and his own family members, spoke with Akram.
After his death, Akram’s brother, Gulbar, issued a statement condemning his brother’s actions.
“We would like to say that we as a family do not condone any of his actions and would like to sincerely apologize wholeheartedly to all the victims involved in the unfortunate incident,” Gulbar Akram said, according to the BBC.
“We would also like to add that any attack on any human being, be it a Jew, Christian or Muslim etc. is wrong and should always be condemned,” he added.
Gulbar also demanded to know how Akram had been allowed in the U.S. with his criminal record. Gulbar also said that Akram was mentally ill, according to the Daily Mail.
Yet, on Jan. 2 Akram landed in New York. He somehow traveled to Dallas, where between Jan. 6 and Jan. 13, he spent time at a Christian charity for the homeless in Dallas, according to the Daily Mail. The Daily Mail reported he bought the gun “on the street” at some point in Dallas.
Though Akram died and the hostages survived unharmed there are still questions.
One MP voiced surprise that Akram had been allowed to enter the U.S.
“How did he get into the US?” the MP said. “You get picked up for walking on the cracks in the pavement.”
These Hospitals Should Be Sued Out Of Existence!
After 28 Days On Ventilator, Family Loses Legal Battle To Try Ivermectin, Other Alternative Treatments, For Dying Father
by Nanette Holt | The Epoch TimesA Florida family fighting to give their loved one on a ventilator alternative treatments for COVID-19 have lost another battle—this time in Florida’s First District Court of Appeal.
The wife and son of Daniel Pisano first squared off against Mayo Clinic Florida at an emergency hearing on Dec. 30 in Florida’s Fourth Judicial Circuit. Before that, they’d been begging the hospital to allow them to try treating Pisano—who’s been on a ventilator now for 28 days—with the controversial drug ivermectin, along with a mix of other drugs and supplements, part of a protocol recommended by the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance (FLCCC).
The family’s request for an emergency injunction to force the Mayo Clinic to allow treatments recommended by an outside doctor was denied by Judge Marianne Aho. They appealed the decision.
On Jan. 14, Aho’s decision was upheld by Florida’s First District Court of Appeal. The three-judge panel deciding the case included Judge Thomas “Bo” Winokur, appointed by then-Gov. Rick Scott in 2015; Judge M. Kemmerly Thomas, appointed in 2016 by Scott; and Judge Robert E. Long, Jr., appointed in 2020, by Gov. Ron DeSantis.
“An opinion of this Court explaining its reasoning will follow,” the judges stated in the order they issued.
“So we wait to see what that looks like, unless it takes too long,” said Jeff Childers, an attorney for the family.
Seventy-year-old Daniel Pisano doesn’t have unlimited time, says Eduardo Balbona, M.D., an independent doctor in Jacksonville who’s been advising the family since they reached out to him while researching other treatments that could potentially help their loved one.
Balbona, who has been monitoring Pisano’s treatment at the Mayo Clinic through an online portal, testified on behalf of the Pisano family in the first hearing.
The Mayo Clinic has argued that the treatment plan doesn’t fit with the hospital’s standard protocol for treating COVID-19 patients and they don’t know what the effects of following Balbona’s recommendations would be. The hospital has told the family that Pisano has a less-than-five percent chance of survival, and all that’s left to do is wait and see if he recovers on the ventilator. The Mayo Clinic has not responded to requests for comment.
The family has begged the Mayo Clinic to simply step aside and let Balbona try what he thinks could work. But the Mayo Clinic doesn’t allow outside doctors to treat patients.
Since media reports mentioned his involvement in the case, particularly his confidence in recommending ivermectin, Balbona has faced a mix of hate-filled criticism and desperate cries for help.
He says he’s used ivermectin along with the rest of the FLCCC protocol successfully with minor modifications, on “dozens and dozens” of seriously ill patients suffering the effects of COVID-19. Some of those patients have come to him from as far away as California.
He’s not alone in his belief in ivermectin and the mix of drugs and supplements he’s suggesting. Different health care professionals across the country have spoken out over the past two years about the efficacy of using ivermectin and the FLCCC protocol to treat COVID-19.
The drug has been used for 40 years and won a Nobel Prize for its creator. While ivermectin is most often used to prevent or kill parasites in animals, it has also been widely and successfully used for years to treat parasites and viruses in humans in the United States and other countries. There is an ever-growing list of peer-reviewed studies showing the drug’s efficacy in treating COVID-19.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) indicates there are ongoing clinical trials investigating the use of the drug in the treatment of COVID-19 on a webpage warning people not to self-medicate with ivermectin. The FDA published a tweet in August mocking those who do. And some politicians and media outlets have railed relentlessly against those claiming ivermectin could be an effective and inexpensive way to combat COVID-19.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) shared this tweet on Aug. 21, 2021, mocking the use of the drug ivermectin in the treatment of COVID-19. (Photo courtesy of FDA via Twitter)
“You should be embarrassed to practice medicine, to sue the Mayo Clinic to get horse medicine to a human being, because of Internet garbage,” one person seethed on a voicemail at Balbona’s office after his court testimony was mentioned in an Epoch Times article.
“Your license should be revoked, you worthless piece of garbage. You are killing people, not helping them, and to harass the Mayo Clinic, because you are not good enough to be their doctor is disgusting. Disgusting. You and doctors like you should all be banned from society. Shame on you. Disgusting. Goodbye and good riddance. I hope you get COVID. Goodbye.”
Balbona says he deletes messages like that and pushes on with his treatment of patients.
It’s “just the intolerance and hatred that takes me by surprise,” he said, about his office communications now getting “flooded by hate.”
“Everything I do treating COVID is directed at lowering the inflammatory response, which is out of control, and improving blood flow to the lungs, and avoiding the complications of clots,” he said.
“Perhaps the biggest change I’ve made from protocols in the hospital and with FLCCC is increasing the dose of dexamethasone. The dose of dexamethasone in FLCCC is relatively low at 6 mg, and I generally increase that to 18 mg daily in more serious cases. That’s a logic change, and I realize the study support is at 6 mg.”
“There’s a reason for every medicine and everything I do treating COVID with my protocol. I have to be able to defend it since I know it will be attacked. Crazy world we’re in.”
Christie DeTrude, of Switzerland, Florida, feels certain that Balbona’s recommendations saved her husband, Dewey. He had just retired last spring at 59 after a long career as a pipe-fitter. At 200 pounds and 6-feet-tall, he was in the peak of health, with strong “country muscles after a lifetime of turning a wrench,” she said.
When he sought treatment for COVID-19 at an urgent-care clinic in July, he was prescribed ivermectin by a doctor there.
“But what we didn’t know at the time was, it wasn’t a high enough dose, because it’s supposed to be weight-based,” Christie DeTrude said. “Theirs was a very low dose, and they discontinued it after five days and said that it would be damaging to his liver and kidneys if they continued, which isn’t true.”
On his eighth day of illness, he had developed pneumonia, and the urgent-care clinic told him to go to the hospital for treatment with convalescent plasma and oxygen. The referring doctor promised he wouldn’t be admitted, Christie DeTrude said.
When she dropped him off at the Mayo Clinic Florida emergency room, she was told to come back and pick him up in 4-5 hours.
“Once he got to Mayo, they just completely took over, and there was no informed consent,” DeTrude said. “There was no giving him information and letting us make a decision. They made all of his decisions for him, and they follow a standard protocol.”
“There were no choices, there was no discussion…they just kept upping the oxygen,” DeTrude said.
The Mayo Clinic did not return requests for comment by The Epoch Times about DeTrude’s case, Pisano’s case, or COVID-19 treatment protocols, in general.
DeTrude said that eventually, her husband had become so weak, he couldn’t get out of the hospital bed. She felt that the hospital’s treatments weren’t working. She wanted to take him home. The hospital wouldn’t agree to discharge him and didn’t allow her to visit, she said.
Days passed. Then, weeks. She says that she could tell from their phone calls that her husband was getting weaker. His 60th birthday came and went. And still, she says the hospital wouldn’t let her visit.
“I was able to get a Catholic priest to come give him Last Rites, and the priest said that my husband’s mental state was like that of a prisoner of war, that he was definitely suffering trauma from the isolation from family, from his faith, from not seeing the sun. He’d lost 35 pounds,” she said.
Part of the problem was that she wasn’t allowed to bring him vegan meals, she said.
“A lot of the food, my husband wasn’t interested in. And when you’re on oxygen, it does affect your appetite, and he needed assistance eating, but they wouldn’t let me be that person,” she said.
After 18 days, Christie DeTrude hired an attorney to help her push the hospital to stabilize her husband so she could take him home. Meanwhile, she searched for an outside doctor who could help.
With that aim, she attended a medical freedom rally in Jacksonville in August, hoping to find something or someone who could advise her. Several doctors spoke about alternative treatments for COVID-19 that hospitals weren’t using, including ivermectin.
The next day, she called them all. Only Dr. Balbona came to the phone to speak with her, she said.
At Christie DeTrude’s request, Balbona promised the hospital that he’d take over her husband’s care. He ordered oxygen, medication, and home-health assistance for the family, she said.
As she waited for Mayo doctors to agree to discharge him, Christie DeTrude prayed every day that her husband could hang on a little longer.
After 46 days at Mayo Clinic, Dewey DeTrude finally was discharged and immediately started following Dr. Balbona’s instructions, taking ivermectin, fluvoxamine to prevent blood clots, and propranolol to treat anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder from his hospital stay. He also took Vitamin C, Vitamin D, and zinc. He ate healthy food and spent time in the sunshine. Within days, it was clear her husband was on the mend, Christie DeTrude said.
Now, four months later, “he’s working part-time, going to the gym,” she said. “He’s completed physical therapy and working on rebuilding his stamina and lung capacity. And if it weren’t for Dr. Balbona, I’m quite sure he would have died in the hospital.”
Gene Bennett, a 77-year-old retired field engineer for IBM, tells a similar story.
He was enjoying life in Bryceville, Florida helping his son clear five acres of land for a homesite when COVID-19 struck in January 2021.
An ambulance transported him to Ascension St. Vincent’s Riverside Hospital in Jacksonville, where he was treated with remdesivir.
“They had to keep getting my oxygen higher and higher,” Bennett said. “I was finally up to the point of seven liters per minute, which is almost pure oxygen. And I knew that I wasn’t getting better. I could tell I was getting weaker and weaker. So when the doctor made his rounds on the Monday morning, I said, ‘This is my last day of remdesivir treatment and I know that I’m not improving. What’s our next step?’
“He looked at me and very calmly said, ‘Mr. Bennett, we don’t have a next step.’ He said, ‘We have done all for you that we can do. There’s nothing else we can do for you.’”
Overnight, Bennett thought a lot about the conversation. The next day, he asked the doctor, “Are you serious? There’s nothing else that this hospital can do for me?”
“He said, ‘No, sir. The next step is for you to go on a ventilator.’”
“Well, I’m not going to do that,” Bennett recalls saying. “I want to be released from this hospital.”
He quickly learned that was no longer a decision he could make for himself.
Ascension St. Vincent’s Riverside Hospital did not respond to a request for comment.
“They weren’t going to release me because I was on a high level of oxygen,” he told The Epoch Times. “So finally, after I raised hell with them, to put it mildly, all day, my son picked me up” that evening.
The next morning, Bennett’s wife drove him to Dr. Balbona, his physician for many years. Balbona came out to the parking lot of his office to help him out of the car.
“I could barely walk with a walker without assistance — that’s how bad off I was,” Bennett said. He says Balbona told him, ” You have the most severe case of COVID that I have seen. But I have a medicine I have been using and I’ve had great success with it.”
Bennett needed no convincing.
“What is it? I’ll take it,” Bennett recalls saying. “I know I’m dying. I just feel it.”
“He told me and my wife, ‘Most people that have COVID as severe as you do not survive. We’re behind the curve, but we’re going to try to get you over the hump. The medicine I’d like to prescribe for you is normally a heartworm medicine for dogs—that’s the most common use.’
“He said, ‘They use it all over the world. It’s been around for 40 years, and it’s dirt cheap, but very effective.’
“He said, ‘I would never, ever give a patient a medicine that I thought would be harmful to them.’ And I totally believed, and just accepted the fact he was doing what he thinks was right.
“I thought, I don’t have any options. I know if I don’t take something to stop this, it’s going to kill me.”
They picked up a $30 supply of ivermectin from a drug store that day. Bennett was so weak, he could barely feed himself. His wife and son later told him that they thought he was going to die.
But after five days on what Dr. Balbona prescribed, including Vitamin C, Vitamin D, zinc, steroids, and a diuretic to get fluid off his lungs, he started to improve.
“I’m a firm believer and I’d swear on the Bible, had I not been prescribed ivermectin, I would have died. Had I not stepped out of St. Vincent’s and checked myself out and gone to him and got the ivermectin, I wouldn’t be talking to you today. It saved my life. And for how much money? Thirty dollars!”
He has since read a lot of research about the efficacy of ivermectin in the treatment of COVID-19.
“I can’t tell you if it is 100 percent effective for everyone, but I can tell you it was for me. I personally cannot understand why the government balks at giving these treatments. Why don’t they make the announcement that it’s available and let it be an individual’s choice?”
Ivermectin has been approved for the treatment of COVID-19 in all or part of 22 countries.
Over the past year, Bennett’s gotten back to full health, almost, regaining about half of the 45 pounds he lost while he was ill.
His wife’s brother died in early January of COVID-19. They begged the hospital to try ivermectin. The hospital declined.
His daughter-in-law’s mother died of COVID-19, too, in a Jacksonville Beach hospital, after the family begged to try ivermectin, and the hospital refused, Bennett said.
An FDA spokeswoman said she would provide the number of reports of patients who had problems after self-medicating with ivermectin. Three days later, that information had not been provided to The Epoch Times.
The FDA Office of Media Affairs said a formal request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) would be required to obtain details about when ivermectin might be approved for use in treating COVID-19, and about bonafide injuries to people who’ve used ivermectin to treat the illness.
“The most effective ways to limit the spread of COVID-19 include getting a COVID-19 vaccine when it is available to you and following current CDC guidance,” the FDA’s website advises.
The Epoch Times spoke to a dozen people who have used ivermectin formulated for humans to treat COVID-19 at home. Most obtained prescriptions for the drug through online medical services. None reported having any side effects, even those who admitted to using ivermectin formulated for animals.
The Left Wing "Pravda" Gets Stronger
Left Declares Victory Pushing OAN Off DirecTV
By Eric Mack | Sunday, 16 January 2022 02:20 PM
DirecTV's announcement it will not renew One America News' (OAN) contract in April has become a political hot-button – with leftists celebrating the move and former President Donald Trump teasing a boycott of AT&T at Saturday night's campaign rally.
"The free market in action," Rep. Ted Liu, D-Calif., tweeted Friday. "DirecTV drops fringe network OAN."
Former TV pundit Lou Dobbs tweeted a reminder earlier this week that President Joe Biden issued a call for media companies to work to silence "dissent."
"Corporate Media is crushing what little dissent remains: DirecTV Cancels OAN after Joe Biden Orders Media Outlets and Tech Giants to Banish Voices that Deviate from the Regime's Official Narrative," Dobbs tweeted.
Activist group Occupy Democrats hailed the move as a victory, while Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, denounced the "purge," asking "who's next" in a tweet:
"The Left's purge continues:
- YouTube demonetizes Dan Bongino.
- DirectTV drops One America News.
- Twitter suspends Dr. Malone.
Who's next?"
Trump blasted the telecommunications and media giant at his rally speech Saturday night in Florence, Arizona.
"The woke executives, I don't know what the hell they're doing, they have so much debt," he told a large crowd, teasing a "boycott" of AT&T.
"I'm not going to use the word boycott! I will not say boycott AT&T."
The OAN news drew strong praise from liberal CNN, which is also owned by AT&T.
CNN's far-left media critics Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy, who were the first to call for Trump to be "deplatformed" from Twitter, have been pushing a complete ban on conservative networks from major cable systems.
"If you don't think Stelter, Darcy, CNN, The New York Times, Harvard, and the rest of the academic and media elites won't go all-out to ban Fox News, Fox Business, and Newsmax next, you're dead wrong," NewsBusters' Curtis Houck tweeted.
Stelter and Darcy pounced on the news of OAN's cancellation, calling it "a significant blow to OAN," which it rebuked as a "fringe network."
CNN's own ratings have taken a dive since Biden took office and in the wake of its own networks' media malpractice and scandals.
For years, CNN embraced and promulgated claims of a Trump-Russian collusion theory, reports that turned out to be with no substantiation.
And, last year, the network fired its lead prime time host Chris Cuomo, after it was disclosed he worked closely advising his brother Andrew Cuomo as he fought several harassment claims by women.
"DirecTV's move will deal a significant blow to OAN," Darcy tweeted. "Not only will the fringe network be removed from the millions of households that use DirecTV as a television provider, it will also suffer a major hit to its revenue."
CNN's activism to censor conservative voices has spawned other left-wing groups to join the fray.
Last November, left-wing media activist group Media Matters was one of 16 organizations that wrote a letter to AT&T CEO John Stankey and DirecTV CEO Bill Morrow.
"We, the undersigned 16 civil-rights, human-rights and media-justice organizations, call on you to end your business relationships with One America News Network (OANN)," a letter read from 16 leftist groups, including Color of Change, Greenpeace USA, Common Cause, and Global Project Against Hate and Extremism.
That letter was just the catalyst in a series of events guided by activism against OAN, targeting its revenue stream from DirecTV and AT&T.
Amid CNN's calls for targeting opposing conservative networks, Reuters published an investigative report claiming AT&T and its subsidiary DirecTV were pivotal to OAN's economic viability.
Just days later, liberal comedian John Oliver called out AT&T, followed by a meeting the company had with the NAACP demanding that they "drop OAN immediately," according to The Hill.