Category: Social

  • Pro-Trump Firebrand Laura Loomer Turns on MAGA Allies

    Pro-Trump Firebrand Laura Loomer Turns on MAGA Allies

    Laura Loomer WEB
    Who Is Laura Loomer? A Look at the Far-Right Figure Linked to Trump’s Campaign. © Getty Images

    WASHINGTON – In the high-stakes arena of President Donald Trump’s second term, where loyalty to the America First agenda is the ultimate litmus test, few voices cut as sharply as Laura Loomer’s. The firebrand conservative activist, once a fringe provocateur chaining herself to Twitter’s headquarters in protest, has evolved into a self-appointed guardian of MAGA purity. With 1.8 million followers on X and her podcast Loomer Unleashed reaching thousands weekly, Loomer wields influence that rivals official advisors – and lately, she’s turning that blade inward, clashing with fellow travelers like Tucker Carlson and even White House picks. What some dismiss as chaotic infighting, however, looks to true believers like the necessary purge of complacency in a movement still under siege from the deep state.

    Loomer’s recent salvos have rattled the administration’s inner circle, where officials whisper about her unchecked access to Trump and speculate on shadowy funding behind her crusades. According to a Wall Street Journal investigation, the 32-year-old has claimed credit for ousting over a dozen national security holdovers she brands as “deep state” saboteurs – including National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, whom she boasted of engineering his firing last month after a White House sit-down with the president. Trump, ever the dealmaker, later downplayed her role, but the timing spoke volumes: Firings followed her accusations like clockwork.

    “They can attack me all they want, I’m more America First than them,” Loomer told the Journal in a defiant interview, framing the backlash as antisemitic targeting – a charge that resonates deeply in a base still smarting from years of media smears. Her collaboration with Israeli-American cyber analyst Yaacov Apelbaum, who fed her opposition research on alleged “Muslim sympathizers” in the administration, underscores her hawkish stance on national security. Apelbaum, who helped amplify Hunter Biden’s laptop scandals pre-2020, defended her to the Journal: “She doesn’t hate Muslims, she’s terrified of Muslims.” Loomer, a self-proclaimed “Islamophobe” banned from platforms like Facebook and Instagram for her unfiltered rhetoric, has long railed against Islamist threats, from 9/11 “inside job” theories to warnings about curry-scented White Houses under Kamala Harris.

    But it’s her intraparty broadsides that have MAGA traditionalists squirming. Loomer dubbed ex-Fox host Tucker Carlson “Tucker Qatarlson,” accusing him of being “bought off by the Muslim Brotherhood” and slamming his son for working with Vice President JD Vance. She piled on Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, calling the Georgia firebrand a “loud-mouthed bitch” for allegedly funneling government cash to her daughter – a claim Greene dismissed as “racist, hateful” and un-MAGA. Even Joe Kent, the counterterrorism chief whose wife perished in a 2019 Syrian suicide bombing, drew her ire for a report framing threats as “violent extremism” rather than “Islamic terrorism.” Kent fired back on X, hinting Loomer was “paid by the side that’s too afraid to come at me directly,” prompting her to demand he delete the post.

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    Tucker Carlson speaks at a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk, September 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. © AP Photo/John Locher

    These aren’t random potshots; they’re a calculated effort to enforce ideological hygiene, Loomer insists. On her podcast earlier this month, she clarified her rogue status: “I’m not working for President Trump. I’m not getting paid by President Trump… And yet, I feel like every single day, it’s a full-time job just to make sure the president is protected.” White House insiders, per the Journal, beg to differ – they’re “tired” of her end-runs around official channels, launching informal probes into her motives and donors. Concerns spiked over her attacks on non-security targets, like a Food and Drug Administration official and a push for Venezuelan drilling licenses, which smelled of ulterior interests to skeptics. Loomer denies pay-for-post schemes, attributing her funding to “ideologically motivated donors” who share her zeal for rooting out anti-Trump elements in intel roles.

    Politico reports paint a similar picture of escalating tensions, highlighting Loomer’s broadsides against Trump’s inner circle. She’s torched Attorney General Pam Bondi for not purging the Justice Department fast enough, decried Surgeon General nominee Casey Means – a wellness guru sans medical license who “talks to trees and spiritual mediums” – as a clownish pick, and howled over Trump’s Mideast diplomacy. When the president lifted Syrian sanctions and inked a Qatar investment deal – a nation she brands a Hamas financier stoking U.S. campus protests – Loomer erupted: “We cannot accept a $400 million ‘gift’ from jihadists in suits,” she posted on X, scorning a potential luxury 747 handover (which Trump clarified would benefit the nation, not him personally). She even swiped at the new Pope Leo XIV as “anti-MAGA” and a Marxist after Trump’s praise, and sparred with Elon Musk over H-1B visas, decrying lax vetting of administration hires.

    Her White House odyssey is a saga of near-misses: She lobbied for a job but got rebuffed, pivoting to press credentials (still pending) and her consulting outfit, Loomered Strategies, which churns out opposition dossiers. Last September’s campaign trail antics – jetting on Air Force One to the Harris debate and 9/11 memorials – irked the inner circle, yet Trump called her a “strong person” and “free spirit.” Steve Bannon, another self-styled MAGA conscience, hailed her on his show as “a warrior in the information war,” even as she dropped a bombshell claiming foreknowledge of Joe Biden’s advanced prostate cancer diagnosis, announced Sunday by his office.

    Critics like Peter Montgomery of the left-leaning People For the American Way call her “dangerous” for having Trump’s ear, but from a right-wing lens, Loomer’s chaos is the antidote to bureaucratic drift. In a town infested with RINOs and globalist whispers, her unfiltered fury keeps the flame alive – exposing cracks before they widen into chasms. The real scandal, conservatives argue, isn’t her volume; it’s the administration’s pearl-clutching over a loyalist who dares question sacred cows. As intraparty sniping escalates – with Carlson and Candace Owens peddling antisemitic fever dreams about Charlie Kirk’s assassination, blaming shadowy Israeli plots in hummus-scented rooms – Loomer’s retorts, like accusing Carlson of Doha payoffs, remind us: True MAGA demands vigilance, not velvet gloves.

    Netanyahu’s dismissal of those theories as “insane” echoes the base’s fatigue with fringe distractions, and Loomer’s pushback – tying it to suppressed Biden dirt via Apelbaum’s analysis – positions her as the movement’s unapologetic defender. Owens shot back that Israel backers like Loomer are “scraping the very bottom of the barrel,” but in the coliseum of conservative media, that’s just blood in the water.

    As Trump navigates his encore, Loomer’s shadow looms large: A credential-less agitator with the president’s nighttime ear, claiming victories from the outside. White House officials insist no further meetings are planned and she’s no advisor, but actions – like Wednesday’s suspension of Army official Nicholas Waytowich over her exposé on the anti-ICE app Red Dot – tell a different tale. “I don’t work for the administration, and I don’t control hiring,” she shrugged to the Journal. “I’m posting facts.”

    In MAGA’s endless war for the soul of America, Loomer isn’t turning against the movement – she’s sharpening its sword. Whether that fortifies Trump or fractures the tent remains the billion-dollar question, but one thing’s clear: In the fight against the swamp, complacency is the real enemy. And Laura Loomer? She’s anything but.

  • X Experiences Temporary Outage Affecting Thousands of Users

    X Experiences Temporary Outage Affecting Thousands of Users

    Social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, was briefly inaccessible for thousands of US users early Saturday, according to Downdetector.com, which tracks internet disruptions.

    The site appears to have resolved the outage, as DownDetector reports are down to 690 as of 11:30 a.m. ET.

    Users in the United States began reporting issues on DownDetector at about 8 a.m. ET on Saturday. By 8:26 a.m. ET, more than 25,000 US users reported issues with the X platform on the mobile app and website. Users also reported issues with the server connection.

    More than 11,000 users in the United Kingdom and hundreds in other countries have also reported issues.

    DownDetector tracks user-reported issues, so the numbers may not reflect the full scale of X’s outage.

    Problems accessing X on Friday stemmed from a data center outage, according to a post by X’s engineering team on Friday at 8:03 p.m. ET. Tech magazine Wired reported there was a fire at a data center leased by X in Hillsboro, Oregon, on Thursday morning.

    According to Downdetector, users began experiencing issues on Thursday at about 2:00 p.m. ET. According to the X developer platform, there was a site-wide outage from Thursday to Friday that has been “resolved.” But logins with X began experiencing “degraded performance” on Friday and the “incident is ongoing.”

    “Our team is working 24/7 to resolve this. Thanks for your patience — updates soon,” X wrote in the post.

    “Back to spending 24/7 at work and sleeping in conference/server/factory rooms. I must be super focused on X/xAI and Tesla (plus Starship launch next week), as we have critical technologies rolling out,” Elon Musk, who acquired the platform in 2022, wrote in response to a post on X Saturday morning which said the outages may stem from the data center fire. “As evidenced by the X uptime issues this week, major operational improvements need to be made. The failover redundancy should have worked, but did not.”

    In late March, X experienced a widespread outage that was due to a “massive cyberattack,” according to Musk.

    X said in 2024 that the site averages about 250 million daily active users. Musk announced on March 28 that he sold X to xAI, his artificial intelligence start-up.

  • Meta appoints Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as new board directors amid a refresh.

    Meta appoints Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as new board directors amid a refresh.

    The tech giant Meta Platforms Inc. continues to refresh its board of directors, naming Dina Powell McCormick and Patrick Collison as board members, effective April 15.

    Collison is the co-founder and CEO of the payments platform Stripe, while Powell McCormick is vice chair, president and head of global client services at the merchant bank BDT & MSD Partners. 

    Powell McCormick also has strong connections in Republican politics, serving as deputy National Security Advisor to President Trump, and as an assistant Secretary of State for Condoleezza Rice. She is also married to Republican Senator Dave McCormick of Pennsylvania.

    The additions of Collison and Powell McCormick to Meta’s board comes just a few months after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced three new board members, including UFC CEO Dana White. The company has now added five new board members in just four months.

    “Patrick and Dina bring a lot of experience supporting businesses and entrepreneurs to our board,” Zuckerberg said in a statement. “Patrick is deeply committed to expanding economic opportunity, and Dina has a long career advocating for economic development and supporting entrepreneurs. Their perspective will be extremely valuable to businesses that rely on our services to grow.”

    “Between WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook, Meta is one of the internet’s most important platforms for businesses. I look forward to helping them navigate the abundant opportunities of the coming years,” said Collison.

    “I’m excited to bring my experience in finance, government and economic development to support the people and entrepreneurs who use Meta’s services,” added Powell McCormick.