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Def Noodles
This should disturb anyone with a conscience.
The IDF has now confirmed that this image is real—an Israeli soldier in southern Lebanon pulling down a statue of Jesus Christ on the cross and smashing His face. They say it’s being investigated and doesn’t reflect their values, but it happened.
At the same time, Israel has carried out extensive airstrikes in southern Lebanon over the past month, including civilian areas—some of the few remaining Christian-majority towns in the region. Residential buildings have been hit, civilians have been killed, and entire areas have taken serious damage. UN experts and human rights groups have raised concerns about potentially indiscriminate attacks, while Israel says it’s targeting Hezbollah positions embedded in those areas. But when you look at the scale and pattern of destruction, it’s starting to resemble Gaza.
Enough is enough.
4 days ago | [YT] | 29
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Def Noodles
Declaration of Independence from Corporate Party Control
A call to restore the Republican Party to serve Americans first.
When in the course of human events it becomes evident that a political institution has drifted from the people it was meant to represent, substituting genuine representation with managed participation and controlled outcomes, it becomes necessary not merely to observe that change, but to confront it and state, with clarity, the principles that must be restored.
We hold as fundamental that political authority in the United States of America flows from the American people themselves—not from party structures, not from secret unaccountable committees, and not from those who seek to regulate political participation according to ideological preference. The legitimacy of any political body depends on its fidelity to that principle, and when that fidelity weakens, so too does its claim to represent those it purports to serve.
We are Republican candidates, activists, and organizers, speaking from within the party as efforts have been made to marginalize voices that do not conform to an increasingly narrow set of permissible views. What is at issue is not commitment to the party’s principles, but a departure from them. A widening gap has developed between the concerns of Americans and the conduct of those who manage the party’s internal electoral processes. What was once a vehicle for representation now operates as a mechanism of control, where participation is filtered, and outcomes are shaped before voters are given the opportunity to cast a ballot.
This is not an isolated incident, but a pattern: the role of American voters is being diminished in favor of a managed consensus shaped by institutional, financial, and foreign interests. Such a development is incompatible with the principles upon which this nation was founded.
We do not accept that direction, nor do we abandon the institution in which it has taken root. Instead, we assert a different course: restoring the proper relationship between the people and the party, rejecting the idea that participation must be approved by party bureaucrats, and affirming that political legitimacy must be earned directly from the voters themselves.
What follows is not a declaration of departure, but of intent: to build within the Republican Party a coalition committed to restoring its original purpose—placing the interests of the American people first, and ensuring that no individual is excluded or disqualified for holding that view.
This is, therefore, a declaration of independence—not from the party itself, but from the corporate political practices that have come to distort it, and from the assumption that such practices must be accepted as permanent. Institutions can be corrected, representation can be restored, and that responsibility rests with those willing to stand within them and insist upon it.
From the founding of this Republic, it was understood that self-government cannot survive if those in power become responsive to interests beyond the people they serve. The Declaration of Independence itself warned against the manipulation of domestic conditions by external forces, and the Constitution reinforced this principle through safeguards such as the Emoluments Clause, which prohibits officeholders from accepting benefits from foreign states. These were not symbolic gestures, but protections against divided allegiance.
That principle extends beyond formal office into the broader political life of the nation. When financial support, endorsements, and institutional backing are conditioned on adherence to specific foreign policy positions—particularly regarding unconditional support for the Israeli government—it reveals a system no longer functioning as a vehicle for representation, but as a mechanism for enforcing alignment. When candidates are labeled, excluded, or disqualified for questioning whether American interests are being placed first, the line between representation and influence breaks down.
There is a growing recognition that open discussion on matters of foreign policy is being constrained, and that participation is conditioned on conformity to positions insulated from debate. A free people cannot sustain self-government under such conditions.
This concern extends to the structure of political power itself. In Federalist No. 10, James Madison warned that factions arise when power consolidates and begins to serve its own interests rather than those of the people. That warning is reflected in the present moment. The public memo issued by the California Republican Party in February formally defines the boundaries of acceptable political participation, characterizes America First positions as extremist, and calls for the exclusion of those aligned with them. In doing so, it reflects the consolidation of authority Madison cautioned against.
We operate within a party system, but such a system demands vigilance, not submission. When institutional power is used to preempt the judgment of voters, it reflects precisely the conditions Madison warned against—where a concentrated set of ideologically and financially motivated actors distances political outcomes from the will of the people. This does not strengthen a party; it weakens it and undermines self-government.
For that reason, this effort is not a rejection of the Republican Party, but a call to restore its proper role. We stand within it as advocates of a simple principle: that the government of the United States must serve the American people first. We reject a direction in which foreign interests are placed above those of Americans, and we reject a system in which political alignment—particularly regarding support for the Israeli government and its wars—is shaped by forces that do not answer to the American voter.
To demonstrate this, let facts be presented to the American people.
There has arisen within the party a pattern of conduct tending toward the same object: the consolidation of internal control and the removal of meaningful participation from the hands of the people.
It has redefined America First not as a legitimate political principle, but as extremism.
It has treated criticism of the Israeli government as disloyalty, and disagreement on that relationship as grounds for disqualification.
It has narrowed the boundaries of permissible political expression, placing America First positions outside acceptable discourse.
It has encouraged the exclusion of candidates based on their refusal to conform to positions aligned with unconditional support for the Israeli government.
It has allowed labels such as “groyper,” “extremist,” and “antisemitic” to be applied broadly and without precision as instruments of exclusion.
It has conditioned endorsements and institutional support on adherence to specific foreign policy positions rather than the will of constituents.
It has elevated institutionally backed candidates while marginalizing those with genuine grassroots support.
It has replaced transparency with managed process and open participation with controlled access.
In every stage of these proceedings, good faith participation has been met with dismissal, smears, and exclusion.
We, therefore, as Republican candidates, activists, and organizers, speaking from within the party and in fidelity to the principles upon which this nation was founded, declare our intention to restore the proper relationship between the people and the institutions that claim to represent them.
We declare that the Republican Party must remain accountable to the American people.
We declare that America First is not extremism, but a legitimate expression of self-government.
We declare that no candidate should be excluded for placing the interests of Americans above those of foreign governments.
We declare that political legitimacy must be earned from the voters—not manufactured through internal coordination.
We commit to building within this party a coalition that is open, representative, and accountable to the people.
And we invite all who share this conviction to stand with us, and to affirm that America First is not a slogan, but a governing principle rooted in the primacy of the American people.
With a firm reliance on these principles, we commit ourselves to this course—not in opposition to the party, but in restoration of it, firm in conviction and resolved in purpose.
May God guide us in this work.
1 week ago | [YT] | 7
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Def Noodles
A new YouGov poll shows Americans still view illegal immigration as a serious problem—58% say it’s very or somewhat serious, despite nonstop media outrage.
Border Patrol now holds a +3 net favorability rating (45–42), even after weeks of smears. Support is strongest among Republicans, independents, and older voters. The narrative isn’t landing the way activists hoped.
So why does public opinion keep breaking against the media’s framing?
#BorderPatrol #ICE #YouGov #Immigration
1 month ago | [YT] | 19
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Def Noodles
Three activists—Nekima Levy Armstrong, Jaylani Hussein, and Al-Amin Sumar—were arrested after disrupting a Sunday service at Cities Church in St. Paul, chanting and confronting Pastor David Easterwood over his role as an ICE official.
Federal authorities say the protest crossed into intimidation and interference with religious freedom.
Where does protest end, and when does it become coercion?
#Minnesota #StPaul #ICE #AntiICE
3 months ago | [YT] | 72
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Def Noodles
Anti-ICE protesters stormed Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, during Sunday service today, chanting slogans and disrupting worship while alleging a pastor’s ties to federal immigration enforcement.
Video shows the group entering the sanctuary, shouting anti-ICE messages and halting the service as congregants looked on in shock.
The Department of Justice has opened an investigation into the disruption.
What do you think?
#Minnesota #Christian #ICE
3 months ago | [YT] | 28
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Def Noodles
Woman who attempted to kiII ICE agents today in Minneapolis is a liberal, white, lesbian. Renee Good, 37.
Liberal white women are the greatest threat to America.
3 months ago | [YT] | 64
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Def Noodles
Democrats have absolutely lost their minds…
3 months ago | [YT] | 19
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Def Noodles
This dude is such a snowflake…
3 months ago | [YT] | 5
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Def Noodles
Democrats are beyond evil for this…
3 months ago | [YT] | 24
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Def Noodles
Deport her immediately…
3 months ago | [YT] | 52
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