Saturday, May 9, 2026

Georgia man allegedly threatened to kill Pam Bondi and stab Kristi Noem's eyes out 'with a dull knife'


The man was released on a $10,000 bond.

Aman from Georgia was arrested for allegedly making graphic threats against Kristi Noem, the former head of the Dept. of Homeland Security, and Pam Bondi, former U.S. Attorney General.

Elliott Owen Schroer of Toccoa made the threats on the X social media platform in early April, according to federal prosecutors.

Schroer was ordered to wear an electronic tracking device while out on bond and was banned from using any social media account.

Schroer allegedly said he would kill Bondi, but his threats to Noem were far more graphic:"I will stab your eyes out with a dull knife."
"I will blow your esophagus out the back of your neck with a 12 gauge slug."
"We will put your head on a stake."

The man was arraigned in federal court and released on a $10,000 bond.

Schroer was ordered to wear an electronic tracking device while out on bond and was banned from using any social media account.

He also cannot possess a firearm, drink alcohol, or contact either Bondi or Noem.

President Donald Trump fired Bondi in early April, and Noem was fired from DHS in March. The latter was named the Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas by the president.

The allegations against Schroer are especially alarming as President Donald Trump was allegedly targeted for another assassination attempt during the White House Correspondents' Dinner.

The White House was also briefly placed on lockdown after an armed man fired at Secret Service agents after they spotted him carrying a firearm at the National Mall.

Schroer is scheduled for a pretrial on May 29.

Iran warns the US against attacks on its oil tankers and other ships but ceasefire appears to hold

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard navy has warned of a “heavy assault” on one of the U.S. bases in the region if Iranian oil tankers or commercial vessels are attacked

Iran warns the US against attacks on its oil tankers and other ships but ceasefire appears to holdBy ADAM SCHRECK and SAMY MAGDYAssociated PressThe Associated PressDUBAI, United Arab Emirates

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran’s Revolutionary Guard navy on Saturday warned that any attack on Iranian oil tankers or commercial vessels would be met with a “heavy assault” on one of the U.S. bases in the region and enemy ships, even as a tenuous ceasefire appeared to be holding.

Iranian state TV reported the warning a day after the United States struck two Iranian oil tankers, casting doubt on the month-old ceasefire that the U.S. has insisted is still in effect. The U.S. military said the tankers were trying to breach its blockade of Iran’s ports.

Meanwhile Bahrain, which hosts the U.S. Navy’s regional headquarters, said it arrested dozens of people it alleged had links to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

Washington awaits Iran’s response to its latest proposal for a deal to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz to shipping and roll back Tehran’s disputed nuclear program. And Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow’s proposal to take enriched uranium from Iran to help negotiate a settlement remains on the table.

Bahrain says arrests were linked to Guard funding attempt

Bahrain said it had arrested 41 people it said are part of a group affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard. The interior ministry said investigations confirmed they were in contact with the Guard and collected funds “with the aim of sending them to Iran” to support its “terrorist operations.”

The small Persian Gulf island is led by a Sunni Muslim monarchy but, like Iran, has a majority Shiite population. Rights groups have said the kingdom has used the war between Iran and the U.S., which bases its Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, as an excuse to crack down on dissent.

Iran issued a warning to Bahrain: “Siding with the U.S.-backed resolution will bring severe consequences. The Strait of Hormuz is a vital lifeline; do not risk closing it on yourselves FOREVER,” Ebrahim Azizi, head of the national security commission of Iran’s parliament, said on social media.

Iran has mostly blocked the critical waterway for global energy since the U.S. and Israel launched the war on Feb. 28, causing a global spike in fuel prices and rattling world markets.

The U.S. has imposed its own blockade of Iran’s ports. U.S. Central Command said on Saturday its forces had turned back 58 commercial ships and “disabled” four since the blockade began April 13.

Britain deploys warship to the Middle East

Britain’s defense ministry said it was deploying a warship to the Middle East to join a potential mission to protect commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz once hostilities end.

The ministry said the HMS Dragon will “preposition” in the region, ready to join a U.K.- and French-led security plan. France announced this week it was moving its aircraft carrier strike group into the Red Sea in preparation.

Britain and France have led meetings involving several dozen countries on a coalition to reestablish freedom of navigation in the strait. But they stress it won’t start until there is a sustainable ceasefire and the maritime industry is reassured ships can go through the strait safely.

Diplomacy continues ‘day and night’

U.S. President Donald Trump has reiterated threats to resume full-scale bombing if Iran doesn’t accept an agreement to reopen the strait and roll back its nuclear program. On Friday, Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said the country was not paying attention to “deadlines,” according to state-run IRNA.

Diplomacy continues. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said his country has been in contact with the U.S. and Iran “day and night” in an effort to extend the ceasefire and reach a peace deal.

Russia’s foreign ministry said that it, as well as Saudi Arabia, was calling for diplomatic efforts to reach a “sustainable, long-term agreement” to end the war.

Separately, Putin told reporters in Moscow that taking enriched uranium from Iran to help negotiate a settlement would allow everyone to see “how much of it there is, and where it is located,” and “all of this would be placed under the control of the IAEA,” the U.N. nuclear watchdog.

Egyptian and Qatari top diplomats reiterated that diplomacy is the sole path to a solution, according to a readout of a phone call between the two foreign ministers.

Still publicly unseen and unheard since the war began is Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, fueling speculation about his status.

On Friday, a top Iranian official said Khamenei was in “complete health” and eventually would appear in public. Mazaher Hosseini, affiliated with the office of Iran’s late supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed at the start of the war, made the comment at a pro-government gathering. Hosseini said Mojtaba, Khamenei’s son, had knee and back injuries in the war’s opening attacks but they’ve largely healed.

https://www.breitbart.com/news/a-fragile-ceasefire-holds-as-us-awaits-iran-response-bahrain-detains-dozens/


Princelings of Persia Barack Obama brought the children and cronies of Iran’s ruling elite into the United States. Now they’re being sent back


I used to dismiss what I thought was an urban myth that, to help sell Tehran on the nuke deal, President Barack Obama granted thousands of Iranian spies a backdoor path to residence and ultimately citizenship in the United States. After all, visas and green cards are not like the letters of transit in Casablanca, where you fill in your name and hop on the plane to Lisbon. U.S. consular rules would block such individuals from getting here anyway. Yet in the years after the Iran deal (known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA), this story got traction, even as Obama’s spokesmen naturally denied it.

But this year, this supposed myth was given new credibility with the arrest in Los Angeles of Shamim Mafi, an Iranian arms trafficker who came to California in 2013 and was given permanent residency under the Obama administration three years later. And it turns out Mafi is small potatoes compared to what a recent wave of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrests and deportations has exposed: that upper Iranian terrorist nobility has been prospering all over the United States.

“They have eyes and ears everywhere,” Iranian American author and human-rights activist Elham Yaghoubian told me about the regime. “It peaked under Obama.”

For a prime example, look first to the $2 million five-bedroom, five-bath modern gray-and-white clapboard house in suburban Los Angeles that has been causing firestorms all over Iranian social media. Its most recent occupants have posted a two-and-a-half-minute video online showing off the grand front, the sprawling interior, and the adjoining elm-shaded McMansions. The camera loiters over the kitchen and dining room surfaces laden with an acre of holiday goodies, a great room of flat-screen TVs and speakers blaring performances nearly drowned out by clapping, while breakfronts full of bric-a-brac reflect, through their glass backing, glimpses of the LA woman documenting the vastness of her lavish residence.

The hostess with the iPhone camera is not Britney Spears, but one Maryam Tahmasebi, sneering at the neighbors’ American flag in contrast to the Shia Imam Hussein banner flying on her own house. And those flat-screen TVs are lit up with screeching mullahs, with a clapping mob cheering them in response. She is the daughter-in-law of Masoumeh Ebtekar, the unhinged “Screaming Mary” spokesperson of the student group that occupied the U.S. Embassy for 444 days in 1979, now an ICE detainee.

There is no way a visa applicant listing two U.S. Embassy hostage takers as parents, or those from the Soleimani or Larijani dynasties, were granted entrance to the United States without high-level intervention.

The online haters are the outraged Persians around the globe who are fuming at the latest sign of corrupt aghazadeh, or “princeling decadence,” the effrontery of the Islamic Republic’s elite Gen Zers living it up overseas while Iranians go hungry and get shot dead by the thousand at home. The aghazadeh in question is Ebtekar’s son, Eissa Hashemi. Incredibly enough, this scion of two embassy hostage takers “entered the United States in 2014 in visas issued by the Obama administration,” according to a statement by Secretary of State Marco Rubio on April 11. Even more incredibly, according to the same statement, “in June 2016 – just months after the IRGC [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] seized two U.S. Navy vessels and captured 10 American sailors – the Obama Administration granted all three Iranian nationals lawful permanent resident (LPR) status via the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program.” That would be the same time frame when Mafi, the arms trafficker in Woodland Hills, got her green card. Hashemi is in ICE detention as well, along with the couple’s son.

Americans of a certain age have to pause here to savor the thought of hostage taker Masoumeh, née Nilufar, Ebtekar (the hard-liner Water Lily renamed herself Sinless), watching her revolutionary family members being seized, cuffed, shackled, and hustled into custody for an uncertain but inevitably humiliating fate.

Though Hashemi was Iranian revolutionary aristocracy, he often pleaded to his haters—fellow Iranians—that he was not a fanatic and was not even born when his parents took the American hostages and his mother gloated over her desire to murder them. Not so with Hamideh Soleimani-Afshar, reportedly the niece of Qassem Soleimani, the deceased IRGC-Quds Force chief. Afshar had celebrated attacks on U.S. soldiers and military facilities, praised Iran’s supreme leader, called America the “Great Satan,” and voiced support for the IRGC, a designated terror organization, according to the New York Post, citing the State Department. She and her daughter, Sarinasadat Hosseiny, were detained by ICE, leaving behind a black Tesla—in which the Post glimpsed Hermès cushions, a Miss Dior bag, and a Sephora bag—in front of their home on Plainview Avenue in Tujunga, on the opposite side of the San Fernando Valley from Agoura Hills.

By this time Rubio’s department had revoked the LPR status of Fatemeh Ardeshir-Larijani and her husband, Kalantar Motamedi. Fatemeh, as the daughter of Iran’s Secretary of the Supreme National Council Ali Larijani, had an Islamic regime pedigree comparable to Hashemi’s. She and her husband had already fled the United States after being fired by Emory University. Iraq-born Larijani père had authorized the use of military-grade weaponry against unarmed demonstrators in Iran who were massacred in the thousands earlier this year; he was killed in an Israeli airstrike in mid-March. Husband and wife are now inadmissible to the United States.

Then on April 13, ICE detained Yousof Azizi, a Ph.D. candidate at Virginia Tech, the son of the late Ali Khamenei’s confidante Fereydoun Azizi, and the brother of Touhid Azizi, who led a government-run campaign to identify anti-regime protesters.

Rubio’s green-card-confiscation staffers possess a target-rich environment, as Iranian operatives have been left to roam free in the United States for years. Lawdan Bazargan, the California-based director of AAIRIA, the Alliance Against Islamic Regime of Iran Apologists, estimates that there are 30 to 50 such bad actors who require vetting and dozens more family members of regime leaders who may be engaged in money laundering, propaganda, and industrial espionage and need scrutiny as well. “As the days go by, the number increases,” Ms. Bazargan told me. “People are sending us names and information.


Take Hossein Mousavian, who was forced to retire from his academic post at Princeton University. He was serving as Iran’s ambassador to Germany at the time of the Mykonos café massacre of Iranian dissidents in 1992—which the trial judge, Frithjof Kubsch, found had been ordered directly by Supreme Leader Khamenei. Germany also found that former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani personally authorized the operation along with Khamenei. Rafsanjani wrote the introduction to the Persian-language edition of Mousavian’s garbage dissertation that was published in Iran. Mousavian called the charges a “joke” but was expelled from Germany along with 14 of his embassy colleagues deemed to be intelligence officers. That was fine with Princeton, which hired him in 2009. He then spent about 15 years at the Ivy League school and was privileged to accept three invitations to Obama’s White House to plead Iran’s case during the JCPOA negotiations.

Much of these Iranians’ access, though, was not global but among each other, especially among those who got American educations. Mousavian studied at Sacramento City College and got his bachelor’s degree in engineering from Sacramento State in 1981. Another regime apparatchik is the “cleric” Hojjatolislam Mohammad Jafar Amir Mahallati. He got a master’s degree at the University of Kansas and a Ph.D. from McGill University in Canada (he boasts about his doctorate in “Islamology,” which was improbably granted for a single year of graduate study). Mahallati had as his protégé Mohammad Javad Zarif, eight years his junior, who had gotten in on the ground floor at age 18 as a U.S.-based student serving in Iran’s first postrevolutionary United Nations office in place of military service. Zarif would become foreign minister and give this old scam a name, the Iran Experts Initiative (IEI)—a regime propaganda unit set up in 2014, which tasked Iranian operatives in diaspora communities to promote the Islamic Republic’s interests during negotiations with the United States.

“We want to see more and more” deportations, Yaghoubian told me. “For many of us, this issue has been a long-standing concern. We left Iran seeking safety, freedom, and dignity, and it is deeply troubling to see individuals connected to the regime benefiting from those same freedoms while the people of Iran continue to face repression. It is not only a moral contradiction. It also raises legitimate concerns within our community. Some of these individuals hold influential positions in academic and policy spaces, and in certain cases, there are fears about networks that may serve the regime’s interests.”

She surprises me with an account of being scolded for not wearing a hijab, on Westwood Boulevard—the heart of Tehrangeles, famous for great Persian restaurants and bookstores selling biographies of Queen Farah. While that was a onetime occurrence, she points out the ubiquity of pro-regime elements in universities and think tanks and even in houses of worship in Los Angeles.

I ask Yaghoubian about reports that Obama granted access to the United States to 2,500 Iranians as a sweetener to the JCPOA. “It started in the Iranian media,” she said. “One faction accused the other of getting special privileges from the deal. Remember, the regime is divided—they expose each other, as one faction did by revealing Shamkhani’s daughter’s wedding.” Late senior military adviser Ali Shamkhani had indeed hosted a lavish wedding for his daughter, radiant in a low-cut strapless gown, and a hundred of her unveiled friends in October of last year. Of course, the scandal originated on Iranian social media.

In the case of the visa rumor, it emerged in the Iranian parliament in late 2018 when a clerical member, Mojtaba Zonnour, accused the intelligence minister of seeking favors from Washington. The rumor spread to the point where, according to Radio Farda, “in a tweet addressed to U.S. President Donald Trump, former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wrote on August 1, ‘Mr. Donald Trump; release the list of relatives of Iranian Government officials that (sic) have Green cards and bank accounts in the United States.’”

So while there may not have been a green card equivalent to the pallets of cash that Obama gifted the regime, obviously there was something. Vetting of Iranian visa applications has always been strict, especially per U.S. Code 1182. Over the past 15 years, both the United States and Canada have grappled with the cases of Iranian visa applicants who served in the designated terrorist IRGC and were denied on terrorism-related inadmissibility grounds. Applicants have frequently argued that they were conscripted unwillingly into the IRGC as teenagers and served as drivers, dishwashers, or cooks under duress and, in many cases, before the IRGC was designated in 2019. In late 2025, Canadian courts ruled in Vadiati v. Canada to define membership broadly and duress narrowly, closing that loophole. Even before that, scrutiny of IRGC veterans was such that Iranian Canadian families entering the United States by land from Vancouver saw the wives and children granted entry but not the father. The same kind of families flying from Canada to Mexico were separated and denied in the same pattern. For better or worse, the children, born in North America, are tagged as associates of the supposed terrorists. It may be heavy-handed, but it’s the reality.

Real enough that there is no way a visa applicant listing two U.S. Embassy hostage takers as parents, or those from the notorious Soleimani or Larijani dynasties, were granted entrance to the United States without high-level intervention. Traditionally, most Iranian visa applications to the United States get denied—before the current blanket ban—and none of the decisions lie with the local consular officer. The granting of LPR status removes any doubt that the Obama administration was currying favor with the worst elements of the Islamic Republic regime. Did they do it 2,500 times? Rubio’s department will find out. A U.S. State Department officer from the first Trump administration told me that when the Bureau of Consular Affairs was asked to provide the names of regime-affiliated Iranians who had been granted U.S. visas, it did not provide the ones arrested so far this year. He speculated that there was some consular laxity at work. Laxity is a polite word for the department’s working-level practices before Rubio cleaned house in the first half of 2025.

So who’s next? We could start with the Golden State, where the action has been so far. We have Meysam Zamanabadi of Glendora, another Los Angeles suburb (“Pride of the Foothills”), who has been rumored to control the X account of Iran’s parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. The non-English-speaking Ghalibaf taunts Americans about gasoline prices with witty gibes like “Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called blockade, soon you’ll be nostalgic for $4-$5 gas.” This was accompanied by a Google Maps screenshot of Washington, D.C., displaying gas prices ranging from $4.10 to $4.80 a gallon. (Is Zamanabadi/Ghalibaf trying too hard to distance himself from Glendora? I live a 40-minute drive from every California Iranian mentioned so far, and I am two blocks away from $7 gas.) Zamanabadi has a degree in media psychology from Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara.

But ultimately, the effort should swing back east. The Hashemi and Larijani family members now in ICE custody may have been unsavory and corrupt (have a look at the Tahmasebi video clip from Agoura Hills—how did a teacher afford that?) who made no secret of supporting the Tehran regime, and Hamideh Soleimani-Afshar clearly committed gross fashion and cosmetic surgery abuse (a common offense in LA), but there is worse—and that’s in Washington, D.C.

Two and a half years ago, Lee Smith examined the apparent information operation stemming from the aforementioned Iranian Foreign Ministry’s IEI, which was “funded and supported by an IRGC official, Mostafa Zahrani, who was the point of contact between IEI operatives and Iran’s then-Foreign Minister Javad Zarif.”

During his tenure as U.N. ambassador, Zarif worked with Trita Parsi, cofounder of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), as part of a campaign to influence American public opinion and relieve U.S. pressure on Iran, allowing the Islamic Republic to proceed with its nuclear program. According to email exchanges between the two, in April 2006, Zarif provided Parsi with a copy of the so-called “Iranian 2003 offer for grand bargain,” which Parsi then seeded in the press and used it as the centerpiece of a campaign that painted Iran as a peaceful interlocutor. In addition, as a 2009 article in The Washington Times revealed, the documents showed that Parsi “had helped arrange meetings between members of Congress and Mr. Zarif.”

Under the Obama administration, Parsi and NIAC gained prominence as amplifiers of the 44th president’s realignment with Iran, even as the regime crushed a popular uprising in Iran in 2009-10. Whereas Mousavian got three invites to the Obama White House, Parsi made 33 such visits.

Parsi is not yet a naturalized U.S. citizen, as Secretary of State Rubio’s staff is no doubt aware.

The “experts” linked to disgraced former Obama official Rob Malley included Ariane Tabatabai, Ali Vaez, and Dina Esfandiary. In Iranian government emails published by Semafor and analyzed by Smith, these and other of Tehran’s co-optees addressed Iranian officials with abject servility. They all used their positions to advance the regime’s agenda. None is U.S.-born; Esfandiary’s roots are British and Iranian, and the others were born in Iran. (The AAIRIA plans to add to the list Shiraz-born Mohammad Hossein Mahallati, who is Mohammad Jafar’s brother and for six years was the head of the Alavi Foundation, present in the United States since 1983.) Unlike the unfortunates in ICE detention, all are U.S. citizens. For how long?

Shocking video shows giant black plume of smoke rising from Tennessee plastic recycling facility fire

Henry County Sheriff's Office reportedly issued shelter-in-place order

Dramatic new video showed a massive fire that broke out Friday at a plastic recycling company in Henry County, Tennessee, prompting a shelter-in-place order and a large emergency response.

Video showed a giant black plume of smoke rising from the Sigma Renew 360 facility, part of Sigma Plastics Group.

The cause of the fire has not yet been released, as of Saturday afternoon. Crews remain at the scene battling remaining flames.

fire and black smoke

Emergency crews responded to the area amid air quality warnings.

It is unclear if there were any injuries or fatalities.

The Henry County Sheriff’s Office issued the shelter-in-place order for people in the immediate area, especially those with respiratory issues, according to a report from local outlet WTVF.

A giant plume of black smoke was seen from the sky.

A giant plume of black smoke was seen from the sky.

Sigma Plastics Group did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

Henry County is in the northwestern part of Tennessee, about two hours west of Nashville.

Flames and black smoke could be seen coming from the large building.

Flames and black smoke could be seen coming from the large building.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/shocking-video-shows-giant-black-plume-smoke-rising-tennessee-plastic-recycling-facility-fire

Billionaire Bunkers: The Men Building the Apocalypse Are Buying Tickets Out of It



There is something darkly revealing about a class of men who spend their working hours summoning a technology they privately believe has a one-in-ten chance of destroying civilization, and then spend their evenings designing the bunkers they hope will protect them from it. This is not science fiction. This is the actual business model of Silicon Valley in 2026, and the receipts are in the concrete.

On the northeast shore of Kauai, on land that was once a sugar plantation, Mark Zuckerberg is constructing what may be the most expensive private compound in human history. Koolau Ranch sprawls across 1,400 acres and is projected to cost north of $270 million.

According to planning documents obtained by Wired, the estate will include more than a dozen buildings, two mansions totaling roughly 57,000 square feet, thirty bedrooms, thirty bathrooms, eleven treehouses connected by rope bridges, and an underground tunnel that branches into a 5,000-square-foot shelter with metal-and-concrete blast doors, an escape hatch accessible by ladder, and its own independent food and energy supplies.




Construction crews were forbidden from speaking with one another. Even casual mention of the project on social media was reportedly grounds for termination.

Zuckerberg, when pressed on the matter by Bloomberg, tried to laugh it off asjust like a little shelter— a hurricane refuge, perhaps, that the press had blown out of proportion. The architectural plans tell a different story. Hurricanes do not require blast-resistant doors. They do not require non-disclosure agreements binding every laborer who pours the concrete.
New Zealand as the New Promised Land

Zuckerberg is not the outlier. He is the conformist. Peter Thiel, the PayPal co-founder turned political donor, was granted New Zealand citizenship in 2011 after spending only twelve days in the country, an arrangement so unusual it triggered a national debate over whether the passport had effectively been sold. He purchased a 477-acre estate in Wanaka for roughly $13.5 million and a glass-fronted home in Queenstown known locally as the Plasma House, outfitted with a safe room.



His subsequent plans for a hillside bunker compound, including a 1,082-foot glass-lined guest lodge for 24 people, were rejected by the local council in 2022 on aesthetic grounds. He has not withdrawn the application.

Sam Altman of OpenAI told The New Yorker years ago that his pandemic contingency plan involved flying with Thiel to that very property. He keeps a “go bag” stocked with guns, gold, antibiotics, potassium iodide, batteries, water, and gas masks, and owns retreat acreage in Big Sur. Reid Hoffman, the LinkedIn co-founder, told the same magazine that buying a house in New Zealand has become a kind of code among the tech elite — “apocalypse insurance,” he called it, with a wink.

Larry Page, co-founder of Google, quietly relocated to Fiji during the COVID era and is reported to have purchased at least one private island in the Mamanuca chain. When Fijian media noted his presence, the article was pulled.

Rising S Bunkers, a Texas firm that builds 150-ton steel survival shelters, has confirmed delivering at least seven such units to New Zealand for Silicon Valley clients alone. Vivos, a competitor, installed a 300-person shelter on the South Island. According to the bunker industry itself, roughly one in three billionaires now has a fully funded extraction plan — pilot on standby, Gulfstream fueled, coordinates locked in.


The Confession Hidden in the Concrete

The most damning testimony in this story does not come from the critics of Big Tech. It comes from the architects themselves. Author and NYU professor Scott Galloway recently relayed a secondhand account from an associate of one prominent AI chief executive. The CEO reportedly conceded that there is a 7 to 10 percent probability artificial intelligence triggers a civilizational catastrophe — and that he is going to keep building it anyway, because being the man who summoned the new intelligence is, in his estimation, more historically consequential than whatever consequences follow.

Read that sentence twice. The men nearest to the technology, who understand it best, who have access to the internal benchmarks the rest of us do not, are openly assigning meaningful probability to the end of the world as we know it — and then proceeding, because their personal legacy weighs more heavily on the scale than the lives of everyone else on the planet.

Altman himself has told NPR and the Federal Reserve audience that he worries about humans losing control of a superintelligent system, even as he simultaneously lobbies the federal government to keep the regulatory hand light enough not to slow him down.

If a pharmaceutical company privately believed its new drug had a 7 percent chance of killing the patient, every executive involved would be in handcuffs by morning. When the drug is artificial intelligence and the patient is the human race, the same admission gets you a magazine cover.
The Darth Vader Pipeline

Galloway calls the trajectory the “Darth Vader pipeline.” Every tech founder, he argues, begins as something close to an idealist and ends sequestered behind a wall of private security, concierge medicine, $75,000-a-year academies for the children, and a compound that no ordinary citizen will ever see. The same men who lecture the public about democracy, equity, and the common good have personally exited the common good.

They do not ride in the cars they sell. They do not breathe the air they pollute. They do not send their kids to the schools their algorithms shape. They have, in Galloway’s phrase, “totally dissociated” from the country whose markets and institutions made them rich.



The bunker is not an aberration of this pattern. It is its logical terminus. When you have spent a decade insulating yourself from every shared American experience, the final insulation is from the country itself. New Zealand. Fiji. A reinforced hole in a Hawaiian mountain. The geography is incidental. What matters is that the ordinary people are not invited.
An Old Foolishness in New Concrete

There is nothing especially modern about this delusion. The pharaohs filled tombs with gold, grain, and servants under the impression that the next world would honor the same hierarchies as this one. Medieval lords built fortified keeps and starved out the surrounding peasants when the food ran short.

The Soviet nomenklatura kept dachas and special hospitals while telling everyone else they lived in a workers’ paradise. The bunker billionaire is simply the latest iteration of an ancient temptation: the belief that wealth, properly deployed, can purchase exemption from the human condition.

Scripture is not subtle on the point.Behold, this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fulness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in her daughters, neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy(Ezekiel 16:49).

The judgment that fell on Sodom was not, in the prophet’s reading, an isolated explosion of vice. It was the natural consequence of a society where the people at the top had grown so comfortable, so abundantly fed, so insulated from struggle, that the suffering of the rest had become invisible to them. The bunker is what invisibility looks like when it is poured in concrete.

Or consider the rich fool of Luke 12, who tore down his barns to build greater ones, certain that his stockpile would secure his soul.Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee; then whose shall those things be, which thou hast provided?No blast door has yet been engineered to keep that question out.
The Economic Shoe Yet to Drop

There is a final wrinkle that makes this story more than a moral parable. Roughly 40 percent of the S&P 500’s value is now tethered, directly or indirectly, to the AI boom. The lion’s share of American GDP growth over the last two years has come from AI capital expenditure — chips, data centers, power infrastructure. If even a fraction of corporate America decides that free, open-weight Chinese models are good enough for the work, the financial scaffolding of the entire American market wobbles. Galloway compares it to the Chinese steel dumping of the 1980s. Flood the zone with cheap product, hollow out the domestic producers, and harvest the recession.

The men with the bunkers are betting they will not need to be standing in the rubble when that bill comes due. The rest of the country was never offered a seat on the Gulfstream.
What the Builders Reveal About the Building

If the people closest to a technology are quietly preparing to flee from it, ordinary citizens are entitled to ask why we are being told the technology is safe. If the architects of the digital future have already chosen which corner of the analog past they intend to retreat to, we are entitled to wonder what they actually believe about the future they are selling. And if the moral horizon of the wealthiest men alive narrows to the question of which Pacific island has the best escape jet runway, we are entitled to conclude that something has gone very wrong at the top of the American hierarchy.

The Lord told Isaiah,Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth!(Isaiah 5:8). The prophet did not mean it as a real estate observation. He meant that the man who has gathered everything to himself, who has finally engineered solitude at the summit of his pile, has already lost the only thing worth having. He is alone in the midst of the earth, and the earth knows it.



The bunkers will be finished. The non-disclosure agreements will hold for a while. The Gulfstreams will be fueled. And when the moment finally comes that these men have spent so many millions trying to anticipate, they will discover what every previous generation of would-be escapees has discovered, that no door has yet been built thick enough to keep judgment out, and no island remote enough to outrun the consequences of what was made on the mainland.

The rest of us, lacking the resources for such elaborate cowardice, will have to do what people without bunkers have always done. Stay. Build. Pray. And keep telling the truth about the men who are running.

Southern Poverty Law Center Allegedly Paid Millions to Klansmen and Neo-Nazis It Claimed to Fight

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks at the Justice Department podium

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks at the Justice Department. Image via U.S. Department of Justice video.

The Southern Poverty Law Center pleaded not guilty this week to an 11-count federal indictment alleging the civil rights nonprofit spent years secretly paying millions of dollars to people inside the white supremacist and neo-Nazi networks it publicly raised money to fight.

Interim president and CEO Bryan Fair entered the not-guilty plea on behalf of the organization in federal court in Montgomery, Alabama. No individuals have been charged. Trial is set to begin in October.

That plea does not erase a charge sheet that reads like a betrayal of every donor who ever wrote a check to the SPLC believing it would be used to fight racism.

The charges are allegations, not convictions, and the government still has to prove its case in court. With that said, the indictment is detailed, specific, and full of named extremist organizations, dollar figures, and alleged criminal conduct spanning nearly a decade.

The Justice Department laid out the charge sheet this way:

A federal grand jury in Montgomery, Alabama returned an indictment charging the Southern Poverty Law Center with six counts of wire fraud, four counts of false statements to a federally insured bank, and one count of conspiracy to commit concealment money laundering. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Alabama also filed forfeiture actions to recover alleged proceeds of the fraud scheme. The FBI investigated the case with assistance from IRS Criminal Investigation. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche accused the SPLC of “manufacturing racism to justify its existence” and said donor money allegedly profited Klansmen. FBI Director Kash Patel said the SPLC allegedly deceived donors, concealed operations from the public, promised to dismantle violent extremist groups, then paid leaders of those groups and allegedly used funds to have the groups facilitate state and federal crimes. The department said more than $3 million in donated funds was secretly funneled from 2014 to 2023 to people associated with extremist groups including the Ku Klux Klan, United Klans of America, Unite the Right, National Alliance, National Socialist Movement, Aryan Nations affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club, National Socialist Party of America, and American Front.

Read that list again. The Ku Klux Klan. The National Alliance. Aryan Nations. The National Socialist Movement. American Front. These are not peripheral organizations. They are the headliners of American white supremacy, and prosecutors allege the SPLC was writing checks to people inside their leadership structures while simultaneously using those same groups as fundraising props on its website.

The federal indictment gives specific examples of what prosecutors say donor money allegedly funded:

The indictment alleges SPLC field source F-37 was a member of an online leadership chat group that planned the 2017 Unite the Right event in Charlottesville, Virginia. Prosecutors say F-37 attended at SPLC direction, made racist postings under SPLC supervision, helped coordinate transportation for several attendees, and received more than $270,000 from SPLC between 2015 and 2023. Field source F-9 was allegedly affiliated with the neo-Nazi National Alliance, served as an SPLC field source for more than 20 years, fundraised for the National Alliance, and received more than $1 million between 2014 and 2023. Prosecutors also say F-9 entered a violent extremist group headquarters in 2014, stole 25 boxes of documents, coordinated payment for copying those materials with a high-level SPLC employee who allegedly knew they were stolen, and later returned the originals during a second illegal entry. Another field source, F-39, was allegedly paid about $6,000 to falsely take responsibility for that theft. The indictment also names an alleged Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America, a reported officer in the National Socialist Movement and Aryan Nations affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club who received more than $300,000, a former National Alliance chairman paid more than $140,000 while appearing on an SPLC Extremist File page, a National Socialist Party of America leader and former Ku Klux Klan member paid more than $70,000, and a reported American Front national president with a cross-burning conviction who was paid more than $19,000.

Take the F-37 allegation by itself. Prosecutors are saying the SPLC paid a person more than $270,000 who allegedly helped plan and coordinate the infamous Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, made racist postings online under SPLC supervision, and helped arrange transportation for attendees. That rally ended with one person dead and became a defining moment in American racial politics. The indictment alleges the SPLC had a paid operative involved in organizing it.

Then there is F-9, who prosecutors say received more than $1 million over nearly a decade. That is not pocket change for a confidential informant. According to the indictment, this person actively fundraised for the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi organization, while on the SPLC payroll. Prosecutors also allege F-9 committed burglary at the direction of or in coordination with SPLC personnel, stealing 25 boxes of documents from a violent extremist group’s headquarters, and that a high-level SPLC employee knew the materials were stolen. When that became a problem, the SPLC allegedly paid a different source $6,000 to take the fall.

The alleged financial trail gets worse. One field source was reportedly the Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America. Another, designated F-42, was the former chairman of the National Alliance and was literally featured on an SPLC “Extremist File” page used to solicit donations. The organization allegedly held F-42 out as the face of the threat while writing checks totaling more than $140,000 to the same person.

F-30, who prosecutors say led the National Socialist Party of America and was a former director of an Aryan Nations faction and a former Klan member, also appeared on an SPLC Extremist File page. Prosecutors allege the SPLC paid F-30 more than $70,000 between 2014 and 2016. F-43, alleged to be the national president of American Front with a federal conviction for participating in a cross burning, received more than $19,000 between 2016 and 2019.

Prosecutors allege more than $160,000 was funneled through a fictitious entity to another source, F-11, who then allegedly sent funds to violent extremist group leaders including a former Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

Those fictitious entities are a story in themselves. The federal indictment describes an alleged concealment apparatus designed to hide where the money was going:

The indictment alleges the SPLC used a network of fictitious entities to conceal payments to field sources. Prosecutors list Center Investigative Agency, Fox Photography, North West Technologies, Tech Writers Group, and Rare Books Warehouse as entities tied to bank accounts. The indictment says these entities were never incorporated, had no bona fide employees, and conducted no actual business. Prosecutors say the purpose was to make it appear field sources were receiving money from outside entities rather than from donated SPLC funds. The filing alleges SPLC personnel signed bank documents falsely certifying ownership and control of the entities. After Bank-1 conducted an internal investigation in 2020, an SPLC employee asked the bank to close accounts tied to several fictitious entities and move remaining balances back to an SPLC account. The indictment says the SPLC president and CEO and board chair later confirmed in writing that the accounts were opened for the benefit of SPLC operations and operated under the Center’s authority. Prosecutors further allege that after those accounts closed, SPLC used ACH payments masked with monikers including Rarebooks050 and IPResearchCON050 to keep concealing the source, nature, ownership, and control of donated funds paid to field sources.

Center Investigative Agency. Fox Photography. North West Technologies. Tech Writers Group. Rare Books Warehouse. According to prosecutors, none of these entities were ever incorporated, none had real employees, and none conducted any actual business. Their only alleged purpose was to make it look like field sources were being paid by independent third parties instead of by donor dollars funneled through the SPLC.

When a bank caught on and launched an internal investigation in 2020, the SPLC allegedly asked the bank to close the accounts and move the remaining balances back into an SPLC account. The organization’s own president, CEO, and board chair then allegedly confirmed in writing that the accounts had been opened for the benefit of SPLC operations. Even after those accounts were shut down, prosecutors say the SPLC continued concealing payments by masking ACH transfers with codes like “Rarebooks050” and “IPResearchCON050.”

The Associated Press reported the procedural posture:

Bryan Fair, the interim president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, appeared in federal court in Montgomery and entered a not-guilty plea on behalf of the organization. The charges are against the SPLC as an organization, not against named individuals. The case stems from the April 21 grand jury indictment brought by the Justice Department and includes money laundering conspiracy, wire fraud, and false statements to a bank. Trial is currently set to begin in October.

The procedural posture matters because the allegations remain charges, not convictions. The government must still prove the case in court. At the same time, the indictment itself alleges that at least $3 million went to informants affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, National Socialist Party of America, and other groups between 2014 and 2023. The not-guilty plea does not erase the charge sheet; it moves the case toward litigation, discovery, motions, and trial unless there is a plea agreement, dismissal, or other court resolution before then. For readers, that means the courtroom fight is only beginning.

The SPLC has pleaded not guilty, and these remain allegations. The trial is set for October, and the organization will have every opportunity to mount a defense.

But if even a fraction of what this indictment alleges is true, the SPLC was not fighting hate. It was allegedly subsidizing it, organizing it, and then using the results to scare donors into writing bigger checks. For decades, the SPLC positioned itself as the nation’s foremost authority on extremism, and major corporations, tech platforms, and media organizations relied on its designations to decide who was a hate group and who was not. That authority now sits under an 11-count federal indictment alleging the whole model was built on fraud, shell companies, and secret payments to the very people the SPLC told America it was working to stop.

https://wltreport.com/2026/05/09/southern-poverty-law-center-paid-millions-klansmen-neo/

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