[ CYPHER CODE #923 ]
Political violence stops shocking people once it feels justified.

[ CYPHER CODE #924 ]
Once politics turns people into enemies, compassion ends.

[ CYPHER CODE #925 ]
Does being American still bring us together?

[ CYPHER CODE #926 ]
A country breaks long before it admits it’s at war with itself.

BRIEFING

Jett here. I want to ask a question to all the normies out there. You know, the everyday, ordinary people who aren’t politically radical, chronically online, or deeply embedded in activist or ideological subcultures. When left-wing radicals are injured or killed while fighting ICE in the streets, do you care? Let’s get into it.

This isn’t a flippant question, and it isn’t a trap. It’s an attempt to take the country’s moral temperature at a moment when left-wing violence has become as routine as apple pie.

As it stands now, the lines have been drawn. Americans are openly fighting other Americans over policies the majority of the country voted for and still support.

I'm talking about deportations. And everybody agrees, Americans want illegals removed from the country.

SOURCE

All the polling, as even CNN acknowledges, shows that voters want everyone here illegally deported. You can disagree with that. But we hold elections for a reason. There is no protestors' veto that overrides the will of the American electorate. You don't like it? Take it to the ballot box, not the street.

Following ongoing debates over border security and immigration policy in 2026, do you support stricter enforcement measures?

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But despite the will of the people, your fellow Americans are in the streets, fighting law enforcement, risking lives, including their own, to stop deportations they oppose but that the majority of you support.

How does that make you feel? Angry, fed up, or desensitized to their so-called "suffering"?

I ask because how we react to left-wing violence and the injuries and deaths that follow says a lot about where we are as a country right now.

And this isn’t some personal judgment or a preachy finger-wagging about how “good Christians” are supposed to care about everyone no matter what. The truth is, if I'm totally honest about where I'm at, I don’t feel sadness when I see violent agitators injured or killed while fighting ICE.

As a matter of fact, this left-wing radical lost several of her fingers trying to grab a flash-bang, and I didn't care one iota.

Why?

Well, if you grab a flashbang, what do you think will happen?

SOURCE

I no longer feel the compassion I probably would have in the past for my fellow citizens, and it made me wonder if some of you, especially the “normies,” are starting to feel that shift too.

Speaking of normies, I'm probably way too embedded in online political culture to be considered one. But the truth is, I’m not someone who lives in a perpetual state of political hatred. Yes, I have strong opinions, and I’m probably more “far right” than most of you. But I have a full, rich life outside of politics that includes all kinds of people, including liberals. I’ve never had trouble separating individuals from their political beliefs and still maintaining real friendships. However, watching what’s unfolding in the streets of Minneapolis - seeing everyday Americans, nurses, parents, and business owners all creating this dangerous chaos in order to stop the enforcement of laws that I voted for - changes the game for me.

The agitators I watch in videos, going crazy, attacking law enforcement, and calling for violence, no longer feel like neighbors or members of the community to me. They feel like an enemy force actively fighting against the will of the American people. And if I’m being honest, I think whatever happens during warfare they created - injury, jail, or death - serves them right.

Does that make me a monster?

I don't think so. But if it does, I guess I'm willing to accept that. It's just another consequence of war.

Alex Pretti is the latest American who was killed fighting ICE in the streets. There are debates over what exactly happened in the moments before he was shot, including conflicting accounts about whether he drew his weapon. But I really don't care about any of that. What I’m focused on is this: Mr. Pretti was part of a violent criminal network designed to stop ICE from carrying out the will of the American people.

This criminal network is sophisticated. At some point, you stop seeing neighbors, nurses, poets, and teachers fighting in the streets and start realizing you’re looking at professional sellswords, who are actively at war with American values.

Why do I call them “sell swords”? Because these left-wing “warriors” aren’t acting from organic conviction. They’re recruited, funded, and directed... they're told what to be outraged about and when to start.

Experts agree that what we're seeing isn't a protest. It's an active insurgency - an organized movement using violence and intimidation to undermine or overthrow authority.

SOURCE

I have 20 years of experience in the intelligence community, and yes, what we’re seeing in Minnesota is closer to insurgency than a protest. A protest doesn’t feature thousands of people on comms, tracking law enforcement to sabotage operations, while armed, or using vehicles to ram officers. What we’re seeing is highly dangerous, coordinated, and risks escalating into something deeply damaging to the country. We need de-escalation now, and an immediate investigation into the funders and leaders behind this operation.

But none of this is about illegals, climate change, or trans rights. What keeps these sellswords swinging is the rush of rage, the sense of power, and the permission to turn chaos and violence into a cause.

SOURCE

A coordinated web of encrypted chats, street alerts and tracking of ICE “Abductors” in a sophisticated database reviewed by Fox News Digital shows that agitators were already mobilized at the scene where 37-year-old Alex Pretti was killed minutes before any shots were fired.

ICE and Border Patrol agents were there to arrest an illegal immigrant criminal, and Pretti and others were there, outside a donut shop, to meet them as part of a strategic pattern of organized interference with law enforcement operations.

Over the following hours, a national network of socialist, communist and Marxist-Leninist cells in the United States leveraged the tragic fatality into a nationwide protest operation. While grief and outrage over Pretti’s death is genuine, the network’s real-time rapid response, using short sensational video clips and emojis as weapons of propaganda, offers a window into the disciplined logistics, messaging and coordination of far-left warriors fomenting insurgency-like confrontation with authorities.

I don’t feel sadness for the loss of Mr. Pretti or Ms. Good, the lesbian killed when she tried to mow down an ICE officer with her car. And I don't have empathy for the agitators rioting in their memory.

DEBRIEFING

The media wants me to mourn the loss of life. They want me to grieve because a male nurse and some lesbian poet are suddenly gone. But if I’m being honest, I don’t feel sadness. What I do feel is deep concern that the majority of Americans voted for law and order, and a small but violent minority of sellswords are actively undermining it.

That's what I feel emotional about.

I'd imagine for normies, this is the kind of shift in compassion and thinking that happens when the country starts drifting toward actual internal “war,” instead of just arguing over politics. And I’m not talking about a war with army tanks and grenades, at least not yet. This is a 2026 war of words, information, propaganda, ideology, and yes, left-wing political violence.

NOW YOU KNOW

Death of the enemy no longer feels like a tragedy. It feels more like a consequence of the war they started.