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Amanda Head: Leftists On Twitter Meltdown Over Trump Account Reinstatement

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Twitter CEO Elon Musk has reinstated former President Donald Trump’s access to his infamous Twitter account which was notoriously blocked following the Jan. 6th Capitol riot.

While the former President has yet to make his re-entrance to the Twitter sphere, instead opting for his own TRUTH Social platform, the idea is enough to make liberals’ blood boil over.

Watch Amanda break down the situation below.

Conservative Says โ€˜Eradicateโ€™ Radical Transgender Ideology, Media Claims He Said Eliminate Trans People

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Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

ANALYSIS โ€“ At the recent Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) event,ย Daily Wire host Michael Knowles argued thatย conservatives should not compromise with the left on certain core issues, such as radical transgender ideology, but should reject these leftist ideologies completely.

And this is something I would support wholeheartedly.

Unfortunately, the wording of Knowlesโ€™ statements, made while discussing marriage and gender issues, gave the left an opening to hysterically, and falsely, claim he wants to get rid of all transgender people, which he clearly never said, nor intimated.

And what was the statement that created the contrived firestorm of leftist hysteria?

Knowlesโ€™ said: “For the good of society โ€ฆ transgenderism must be eradicated from public life entirely โ€” the whole preposterous ideology, at every level.”

The Daily Wire Host was clearly referring to the bizarre and dangerous new leftist ideology that insists gender and therefore sex can be changed at will, even among children, usually only with a self-diagnosis under pressure from activist counselors, teachers, and the media.

The truth about his remarks, however, didnโ€™t keep left-leaning media outlets such as the Daily Beastthe Huffington Post, and Rolling Stone from falsely reporting that Knowles had called for the genocidal eradication of all trans people.

Adam Vary, at Variety, tweeted, “Pay attention. This is genocidal. That is not hyperbole or alarmist; this rhetoric is calling for the eradication of a group of people for who they are.”

John Knefel of Media Matters called the speech “[e]liminationist, genocidal rhetoric.”

His remarks were clearly none of these things, and he never called for any actions against trans people whatsoever.

And Knowles fought back against these outlets demanding a retraction, which he partly achieved.

The truth is that this extreme trans movement has permanently damaged countless individuals who have been sterilized and mutilated with the help of pharmaceutical reps and surgeons who, along with politicians and activists, have spawned a giant and lucrative new trans-political-medical industry.

This massive new industry pressures and lobbies people of all ages to believe they are transgender, and then quickly pushes them to initiate the costly, painful, disfiguring, and life-long process of โ€˜transitioningโ€™ to the opposite sex. 

All while making tons of cash from the doubts and insecurities of their victims.

But this movement doesnโ€™t just harm its trans victims, as the Blaze notes, it also severely impacts โ€œwomen and girls whose sex-specific spaces (e.g., prisons, bathrooms, shelters) and events have been infiltrated by biological males masquerading as women.โ€

The Blaze quotes Knowles as noting that conservatives โ€œsuffer from low expectations โ€“ we think the thing we can most hope for is that we halt the left exactly where it is.”

But watch his entire speech here for yourselves:

The Blaze adds:

Rather than accommodate the left, making concessions about the age children must be to undergo sex-change surgeries, Knowles suggested conservatives ought to reject leftist ideology outright, especially when it comes to transsexuality.

Knowles said, “There can be no middle way in dealing with transgenderism. It is all or nothing. If transgenderism is true, if men can really become women, then it is true for everybody of all ages. If transgenderism is false, as it is, if men really can become women, as they cannot, then it is false for everybody too. And if itโ€™s false, then we should not indulge it.”

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

Amanda Head: My Thoughts on the Speaker Votes

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It’s been a long week in the House of Representatives. A tumultuous battle for House Speaker has put Congress on hold indefinitely.

Watch Amanda break down the ongoing situation below:

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

Amanda Head: More Biden Docs…More Biden Corruption?

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President Joe Biden delivers remarks in National Statuary Hall on the one-year anniversary of the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, Thursday, January 6, 2022, in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith)

FBI agents descended on Joe Biden’s beach home in Rehoboth Beach, DE on Wednesday as the Justice Department continues its search for classified documents…

Watch Amanda explain the latest developments below:

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

Amanda Head: Gabrielle Union & Dwyane Wade Give Ridiculous Interview About Kid

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Woke Hollywood has gone too far…

Watch Amanda explain the controversy below:

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

โ€˜City of Angelsโ€™ Dodgers to โ€˜Honorโ€™ Drag Queen Demons

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ANALYSIS โ€“ City of Angels baseball team honors demons. Donโ€™t just sit there – Do something.ย I earlier wrote about the decision by the Los Angeles Dodgers to invite and honor the anti-Christian drag queen group โ€˜Sisters of Perpetual Indulgenceโ€™ (SPI)ย here.

Then, due to the backlash from Catholics and Christians of all stripes, the Major League Baseball (MLB) team dis-invited the offensive hate group made up of cross-dressing men – to their opening game LGBT โ€˜Prideโ€™ festivities.

The teamโ€™s Pride Night is sponsored by Blue Shield of California.

But then, caving to the intense left-wing bullying, MLB and the team from the โ€˜City of Angelsโ€™ quickly chose to re-invite and honor these disgusting โ€˜demonsโ€™ in June with a โ€œCommunity Hero Award.โ€ 

As Iย separately wrote, the focus of โ€˜Prideโ€™ festivities recently has all to do with the โ€˜Tโ€™ in LGBT (transgenderism) and little to do with being gay (LGB โ€“ Lesbian Gay and Bisexual).

Of course, some will say calling the group demonic is too much, or silly. 

But what else do you call a group of skanky men, dressed up like skanky prostitutes, disgustingly mocking Jesus, and all of Christianity with pornographic โ€˜Passion Playsโ€™ of crude sexual depravity?

Or Easter egg hunts for children led by grown men dressed like bizarre caricatures of women.

Their motto โ€“ โ€œgo forth and sin moreโ€ is a call to do evil, and a direct affront to Christโ€™s teaching to โ€œsin no more.โ€ You canโ€™t get more demonic than that. 

Yet, in their May 4 statement, the MLB said it would recognize the group โ€œfor their countless hours of community service, ministry, and outreach to those on the edges, in addition to promoting human rights and respect for diversity and spiritual enlightenment.โ€

Well, that statement is absolutely insane, and deeply offensive to anyone of faith.

Bill Donahue, president of the Catholic League, has called SPI an โ€œobscene anti-Catholic group.โ€ The conservative group CatholicVote called the Dodgers the โ€œBud Lightโ€ of baseball, referring to the brand-damaging boycott over its use of a trans-identified spokesperson.  

Coincidentally, the Christian Post reported that MLB and Anheuser-Busch renewed a deal in early 2022 to make Budweiser the leagueโ€™s co-exclusive beer sponsor.

This is not only deeply offensive but dangerous, considering the rise in anti-Catholic and pro-abortion violence against Christian churches and groups.

As I noted earlier, โ€œIn the past year, there have been at least 255 attacks on Catholic churches, including arson, statues beheaded and gravestones defaced, according to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).โ€

And yes, this demonic drag group is coming for your children:

This should enrage most Christian Americans, especially Catholics. But rather than just get angry, do something. 

For one, if you live in Los Angeles, boycott the Dodgers. You can also contact them directly:

Dodger Stadium
1000 Vin Scully Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90012

866-DODGERS 363-4377
(extension 9)

[email protected]

You can also contact the office of the Commissioner of Major League Baseball expressing your outrage.

The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball
1271 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY, 10020
Phone: 212-931-7800

Then you can put your money where your mouth is andย DONATEย to Catholic Vote to support their advertising campaign calling out the Dodgers for their anti-Christian bigotry.

They needย your help to teach a lesson to every major business in America that supporting anti-Christian hate is not tolerant, not inclusive, and is simply not acceptable.

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

Inside DOGE: Elon Musk’s Bold Move To Rewiring Federal Thinking

Screenshot via X [Credit: @amuse]

In the history of American bureaucracy, few ideas have carried the sting of satire and the force of reform as powerfully as Steve Davisโ€™s $1 credit card limit. It is a solution so blunt, so absurd on its face, that only a government so accustomed to inertia could have missed it for decades. And yet, here it is, at the center of a sprawling audit by theย Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, that has, in just seven weeks, eliminated or disabled 470,000 federal charge cards across thirty agencies. The origin of this initiative reveals more than cleverness or thrift. It reflects a new attitude, one that insists the machinery of government need not be calcified. The federal workforce, long derided as passive and obstructionist, is now being challenged to solve problems, not explain why they cannot be solved. This, more than any tally of dollars saved, may be DOGEโ€™s greatest achievement.

Whenย Elon Muskย assumed control of DOGE under President Trumpโ€™s second administration, he brought with him an instinct for disruption. But disruption, as many reformers have learned, is often easier said than done. Take federal credit cards. There were, as of early 2025, roughly 4.6 million active accounts across the federal government, while the civilian workforce comprised fewer than 3 million employees. Even the most charitable reading suggests gross redundancy. More cynical observers see potential for abuse. DOGE asked the obvious question: why so many cards? The initial impulse was to cancel them outright. But as is often the case in government, legality is not aligned with simplicity.

Enter Steve Davis. Known for his austere management style and history with Musk-led enterprises, Davis encountered legal counsel who informed him that mass cancellation would breach existing contracts, violate administrative rules, and risk judicial entanglement. Most would stop there. But Davis, adhering to Muskโ€™s ethos of first-principles thinking, chose another route. If the cards could not be canceled, could they be rendered functionally useless? Yes. Set their limits to $1.

This workaround achieved in days what years of audits and Inspector General warnings had not. The cards remained technically active, sidestepping the legal landmines of cancellation, but were practically neutered. The act was swift, surgical, and reversible. It allowed agencies to petition for exemptions in cases of genuine operational need, but forced every cardholder and department head to justify the existence of each card. Waste thrives in opacity. The $1 cap turned on the lights.

Naturally, the immediate reaction inside many agencies was panic. At the National Park Service, staff could not process trash removal contracts. At the FDA, scientific research paused as laboratories found themselves unable to order reagents. At the Department of Defense, travel for civilian personnel ground to a halt. Critics likened it to a shutdown, albeit without furloughs. Others, more charitable, described it as a stress test. And indeed, that is precisely what it was: a large-scale audit conducted not by paper trails and desk reviews, but by rendering all purchases impossible and observing who protested, why, and with what justification.

This approach reflects a deeper philosophical question. What is government for? Is it a perpetuator of routine, or a servant of necessity? The DOGE initiative, in its credit card audit, insisted that nothing in government spending ought to be assumed sacred or automatic. Every purchase, every expense, must be rooted in mission-critical need. And for that to happen, a culture shift must occur, not merely in policy, but in mindset. The federal worker must no longer be an apologist for the status quo, but an agent of reform.

Remarkably, this message has found traction. Inside the agencies affected by the freeze, DOGE has reported a surge in what one official described as โ€œconstructive dissent.โ€ Civil servants who once reflexively recited reasons for inaction are now offering alternative mechanisms, revised workflows, and digital solutions. One employee at the Department of Agriculture proposed consolidating regional office supply chains after realizing that over a dozen separate cardholders were purchasing duplicative items within the same week. A NOAA field team discovered it could pool resources for bulk procurement, saving money and reducing redundancy. These are not acts of whistleblowing or radical restructuring. They are small, localized acts of efficiency, and they matter.

Critics argue that these are marginal gains and that the real drivers of federal bloat lie elsewhere: entitlement spending, defense procurement, or healthcare subsidies. And they are not wrong. But they miss the point. DOGEโ€™s $1 limit was not about accounting minutiae, it was about psychology. In a system where inertia reigns, a symbolic shock is often the necessary prelude to substantive reform. The act of asking why, why this card, why this purchase, why this employee, forces a reappraisal that scales. Culture, not just cost, was the target.

There is a danger here, of course. Symbolism can become performance, and austerity can become vanity. If agencies are deprived of necessary tools for the sake of headlines, then reform becomes sabotage. This is why the $1 policy included an appeals process, a mechanism for restoring functionality where needed. In a philosophical sense, this is the principle of proportionality applied to public finance: restrictions should be commensurate with the likelihood of abuse, and reversible upon demonstration of legitimate need.

DOGEโ€™s broader audit, still underway, has now expanded to cover nearly thirty agencies. It is not simply cutting cards. It is classifying them, comparing issuance practices, flagging statistical anomalies, and building a federal dashboard of real-time usage. This is not glamorous work. There are no ribbon-cuttings, no legacy-defining achievements. But it is the marrow of good governance. As Aristotle noted, excellence is not an act, but a habit. The DOGE team has adopted a habit of scrutiny. And that habit, when instilled in the civil service, is a kind of virtue.

Here we arrive at the most profound implication. What if the federal workforce is not inherently wasteful or cynical, but simply trapped in a system that rewards compliance over creativity? What if, when given both the mandate and the moral permission to think, civil servants become problem solvers? The $1 limit policy is, in this light, less a budgetary tool than a pedagogical one. It teaches. It asks employees to imagine how their department might function if every dollar mattered, and to act accordingly.

In a bureaucratic culture where the phrase โ€œwe canโ€™t do thatโ€ serves as both shield and apology, DOGE has introduced a new mantra: try. Try to find the workaround. Try to reimagine procurement. Try to do more with less. This shift may not register on a spreadsheet. It may not win an election. But it rehumanizes the federal workforce. It treats them not as drones executing policy, but as intelligent actors capable of judgment, reform, and even invention.

The future of DOGE will no doubt face resistance. Unions, entrenched bureaucrats, and political opponents will argue it oversteps or misunderstands the delicate machinery of governance. Some of that criticism will be valid. But what cannot be denied is that DOGE has already achieved something rare: it has made federal workers think differently. It has shown that even the most byzantine of systems contains levers for changeโ€”if one is willing to pull them.

The $1 card limit is not a policy; it is a parable. It tells us that in the face of complexity, simplicity is a virtue. That in the face of inertia, audacity has a place. And that in the face of sprawling bureaucracies, sometimes the best way to fix the machine is to unplug it and see who calls to complain. That is when the real work begins.

Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in todayโ€™s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.

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Amanda Head: Cori Bush Is A Moron

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Cori Bush via Wikimedia Commons

Liberal member of “The Squad” Cori Bush is a moron. Plain and simple.

Watch Amanda explain the controversy below:

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

President Trumpโ€™s Memorial Day Messages: A Legacy of Honor and Respect

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Donald Trump via Gage Skidmore Flickr

This Memorial Day, as we gather with family, fire up the grill, or visit our local cemeteries and memorials, it’s worth remembering the leaders who never lost sight of the true meaning behind the day. President Donald J. Trump has always placed Americaโ€™s fallen heroes at the center of his message, offering powerful words and sincere gestures that reflect deep respect for our military and their families.

Throughout his presidency, President Trump used Memorial Day not for politicsโ€”but for patriotism. Year after year, he stood before veterans, Gold Star families, and active-duty troops with one purpose: to honor the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for this nation.

Hereโ€™s a look back at some of his most moving Memorial Day tributes:


2017 โ€“ Arlington National Cemetery

President Trump delivered his first Memorial Day address at Arlington National Cemetery, laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and offering a solemn promise:

โ€œWords cannot measure the depth of their devotion, the purity of their love, or the totality of their courage.โ€

It was a speech that reminded the countryโ€”and the worldโ€”that America remembers.


2018 โ€“ Arlington Again, and a Call for Prayer

Returning to Arlington in 2018, President Trump spoke of sacred ground and permanent peace:

โ€œWe are gathered here on the sacred soil of Arlington National Cemetery to honor the lives and deeds of Americaโ€™s greatest heroes.โ€

That year, he issued a proclamation declaring Memorial Day a Day of Prayer for Permanent Peace, calling on Americans to pause at 11:00 a.m. for a national moment of prayer.


2019 โ€“ Speaking from the USS Wasp in Japan

While abroad visiting troops, President Trump addressed sailors aboard the USS Wasp in Yokosuka, Japan:

โ€œToday, the unbreakable resolve of our great American heroes is inspiring our nation to achieve new heights.โ€

Even halfway around the world, the president made sure Memorial Day was observed with honor, reflection, and gratitude.


2020 โ€“ Fort McHenry Amid Crisis

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, while others canceled public observances, President Trump stood tall at Fort McHenry in Baltimore, honoring the brave and the fallen:

โ€œWe remember the young Americans who never got the chance to grow old, but whose legacy will outlive us all.โ€

He reminded us that even in times of hardship, we must continue to honor the past and those who gave everything for our freedom.


A President Who Never Forgot

In every one of these speeches, President Trump put Americaโ€™s heroes firstโ€”not soundbites, not political spin. His words carried the weight of gratitude and the clarity of purpose. Whether in Arlington, Baltimore, or aboard a Navy vessel, he stood firm in his belief that our nation owes eternal respect to those who served and sacrificed.

This Memorial Day, letโ€™s take a moment to reflectโ€”not only on the brave men and women who gave their livesโ€”but also on the kind of leadership that never forgets them.

President Trump didnโ€™t just speak about honoring our military. He lived it. And millions of Americans still remember.

Amanda Head: Sam Brinton Luggage Thieving Paid For By YOU

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Amanda Head

The Sam Brinton luggage saga seems to be never-ending…New details about the crime are coming to light and are sure to upset taxpayers…

Watch Amanda explain the situation below:

Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.