We’ve known we’ve been lied to for quite some time now. At least since COVID, which was a wakeup call. But for many of us, we knew well before then.
Now, at last, the Deep State is in the process of collapse,
and the lying media is spiraling earthward.
However, we’re not on the other side yet, where we have a
new system and means to gain truth—if that is something we ever get to before
Christ reigns personally on the earth and rights all the wrongs.
So, for now, we’re “seeing through a glass, darkly” [I Cor. 13:12]. We’re getting only hazy views. I offer three examples today.
Border
Detention Story
I have a friend whom I love, even though I’m learning that her views are much more liberal than mine; she’s been in a state of alarm since the November election, while I see pleasant surprises almost daily as a result of that election. She passed along a story on Facebook. It was detailed, and emotion-inducing. I found the original here.
A woman named Jasmine Mooney, an actress turned entrepreneur from Canada, was renewing her work visa, as she had done multiple times, when she was detained and imprisoned. I had not seen news stories anywhere. I searched. It pops up in mainstream legacy (leftist) media sources. No conservative or independent journalists even mention it—not even to refute it. That may mean it simply isn’t worth the time. But I was curious, just out of respect for my friend who believes it really happened as told; could such a thing be happening, or are there other details?
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Jasmine Mooney, after returning to Canada after her detention, image from here |
Almost all of the news articles reference Mooney as the
source, or people who heard the story from her (parents and friends). That
seemed odd. Eventually I did find one with an additional reference: a Newsweek
story that went so far as to get a statement from an unnamed ICE spokesperson
verifying that ICE had detained the woman, as per rules from the executive
order “Securing Our Borders” of January 21.
The story, in short, is that this woman went to the border
crossing at San Isidro, in southern California, expecting to be able to get her
TN visa application processed there (TN visas are temporary work visas related
to the NAFTA agreement). But instead she was sent to a jail cell, and then,
days later, sent to another holding center in Arizona before getting released
and sent back to her Canada home 10 or so days later.
She was detained March 3 and held until either March 10 or
14, and maybe returned home March 17; the dates seem uncertain to me. She published
her very long story—about 3900 words—March 19. During her detention, her family
and friends contacted media and government officials to make her plight known,
which she says may be the reason for her eventual release.
She had processed work visas before, at that same location, and thought she wouldn’t have a problem. But, instead of just sending
her away or telling her how and where to complete her paperwork, they treated
her like a criminal. And we should all be outraged.
I have questions that maybe all the media who
handled the story didn’t have. And that may be because I don’t believe the
Trump administration is going out of their way to make life miserable for
law-abiding well-intentioned individuals.
So, according to Mooney’s story, she had no reason to
believe she’d have trouble getting this TN visa. But she had had her previous
one revoked. A TN is a is a temporary noncitizen work visa that is granted for
specific jobs and requires a time period with an ending date. Her previous one
got revoked, and she went home to Canada for several months (I don’t know how
long). But this was a new job with a new company, so she thought this wouldn’t
be a problem.
But her story is that she is an entrepreneur. She sells a
tonic called Holy! Water, a company she started—so she isn’t a new hire at a
new company. And it appears the previous company was also her selling a tonic
at a company of her creation. (One question about that previous visa problem
had included the fact that hemp is an ingredient; I don’t know if this new
company also has that possibly problematic ingredient, or whether that was
really an issue, as she suggests.)
So it doesn’t look like she was hired by a new company;
she’s just calling herself a new company.
And she’s in Canada, has had a problem with her previous
visa, but assumes she can easily get a new one—not by getting it in her own
country before traveling to the US, but by traveling to Mexico and coming in at
the southern border without yet having the visa. And she does this just six
weeks after President Trump’s “Secure the Border” executive order, which
changes things significantly.
She says she was familiar with that location, because she
had gotten a visa there before, accompanied by an attorney. This time she did
not get an attorney’s help, even though there had been problems with her visa
in the past.
Then she’s held, she says, in very bad conditions, like a
prisoner, and as though she had been kidnapped.
Or, I’m speculating, not knowing her (even as an actress I
do not recognize her or the things she was known for), but we don’t have anyone
corroborating anything except that she was detained at the border according to
US policy.
She claims growing friendships with other women detained in
these inhumane conditions, all with heartrending stories, about 140 who had
overstayed visas and had tried and failed to reapply. One was a woman from India
who had previously overstayed a 10-year visa by three days before heading home.
Then, later, she got a new valid visa to come to the US to finish her master’s
degree—but when she arrived she was handed over to ICE because of the previous
three-day error. I have a hard time believing that ICE is hunting down people
with valid visas in hand over a previous three-day error. Can anyone
corroborate that story?
Women—who had all their belongings confiscated and were
placed in bare rooms with nothing but a toilet—had access to pen and paper to
send letters with Mooney when she was released, and several of whom had phones,
which were used and shared to get word out.
So, what is true? I don’t know, but, possibly because of my
biases, I look at this story—which I admit, if I had different biases, would
seem plausible and therefore appalling—and I say it doesn’t pass the smell
test. A story that long, in a publication that has to decide on space and
timing issues, is published within days of her release—even though her health
had deteriorated with the bad food and water conditions. And no one follows up
with the questions and corroborations. And only Trump-hating publications
mention the story, either before or after her release. Hmm.
Why would she lie? I don’t know why she personally would.
But possible motives would be attention to her that would lead to attention for
her product; or hatred of the US and/or President Trump and his administration.
Or both or something else.
The point is, you might not be able to trust a story, just
because someone is telling it.
JFK Files
The long-told government version of the Kennedy
assassination is that a lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, shot from a grassy
knoll into the motorcade and killed President Kennedy. End of story. Except,
there are questions.
People are poring over the files released last week,
sometimes with the help of AI. And what we get are more questions than answers.
Glenn Beck covered many of the questions in his Wednesday night special this week. One of the things he did was to experiment, using a gun that is the same make
and model as the Oswald weapon—on a ranch in Oklahoma. The first shot, with
everything stationary, Beck hit the target. Then the firing pin broke. They
came back the next day, with a more modern but similar weapon, and had the
target moving. And the ranch terrain wasn’t as smooth as a Dallas street, so it
was a tougher shot. It was still doable—for a decent shooter, not necessarily a
skilled sniper.
So it could have happened that way.
Except that there were three bullets. But one bullet was
supposed to have gone through Kennedy’s back, turned upward, then exited and
then hit the person next to him. And film shows the body moved as though hit
from the front, at least with one bullet, which has always led to questions.
Oswald had been on CIA radar for a long time. They tracked
his daily actions leading up to the assassination, always knowing where he was—except
on that day. That day, oddly, they didn’t have any idea where he was or what he
was up to.
And the gun—it was built, I believe, by US manufacturers—for Greece, because of help from the CIA. And it required specific ammunition, which would therefore have to have been accessed from Greek sources—or from the CIA.
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Glenn Beck chalkboard referring to JFK assassination theories, screenshot from here |
The newest info was not in the JFK files. Here’s from the
description box of the Glenn Beck video, and then we’ll look at the transcript:
Glenn speaks to Shane Stevens, the grandson of Billie Sol
Estes — a Texas businessman with alleged ties to LBJ. In January, he gave a
digital copy of a secret family audiotape to "The Alex Jones Show."
The conversations alleged that then-Vice President Johnson hired Mac Wallace to
kill JFK. But was the tape real, or an elaborate AI hoax? Glenn’s team asks a
JFK expert to verify its authenticity and for the first time ever, Shane plays
the chilling confession live in-studio.
OK, so what is said on that
audiotape? This is confirmed to be Clifton C. Carter, former executive director of the Democratic
National Committee, speaking to Billie Sol Estes (and, while the online
transcript says Mac Wallace, it sounds to me like “Mike”):
Well, Sol, it’s been a pretty touch-and-go situation. Lyndon
and I have had quite a few unpleasant words here lately over the deal that he
hired Mac Wallace to assassinate the president. It’s been hectic in every way,
but we’ve lived through it this far, and I guess we’ll continue to do so. Lyndon
should have never issued that order to Mac. But we’ve had our differences, and
I’m true blue to Lyndon, as I’ve always been, and tried to carry out every
order that he’s ever given me, but this is one I’ll probably never be able to
forget.
There’s another couple of sentences from the description box
that kind of summarize what we’re looking at:
Glenn argues that the JFK assassination isn’t just history —
it’s a warning. From Benghazi to 9/11, COVID origins to Trump’s Russia probe,
the same patterns of secrecy and deception persist. If the CIA or deep state
got away with a coup in 1963, what’s stopping them now?
Which brings us to our third issue for today, the Signal
chat scandal.
Signal
Chat
There’s a lawsuit going on related to this already. I’m not
sure of the pretext for that. No classified information was shared; no crime
was committed. But maybe someone was hoping there would be, and some people
will believe there was, just because of the gravitas the lawsuit seems to
provide.
So, there was a chat group involving several top
administrative officials on the encrypted platform called Signal. This is a
common app. I’m in three Signal groups, all related to being a precinct chair—not
terribly secret, but quick and easy for handling group chats (much better than
the messy way my phone handles group texts). And, while one complaint is that
text messages can be auto-deleted, mine remain, because that’s the default
setting.
Mike Waltz, National Security Advisor, took the heat for the
“accidental” invitation to join the chat group given to enemy news journalist for
The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg (known for peddling the fake
Russia-gate scandal, among false accusations of that type).
Here’s where things get murky in the world of trying to
learn the truth. I’m looking only at “friendly” sources here, supposed
conservatives, yet there is still plenty of murkiness to be found.
First I hear the general conservative news and commentary
sources. They’re appalled that anyone could be so careless as to let this
happen. But they’re also relieved that the story is a nothing-burger. No state
secrets were shared, and the mission spoken of was successful. After the
mission, Goldberg announces he had been lurking on the chat but wouldn’t want
to share state secrets by sharing—but then he goes ahead and shares. He has, by
this time, removed himself from the chat.
I’m waiting to hear more, because this “accidental” thing doesn’t
ring true. Mike Waltz has never met Goldberg; he did not have his phone number.
He had one staffer who could also have been the accidental inviter, about whom I
see a thing passed along on Facebook, claiming that the staffer, Alex Wong, the Principal Deputy National Security
Advisor, is the culprit who added the enemy journalist. This source is passing
along what Laura Loomer says (there have been so many sensationalist stories
that Loomer has been wrong on that I read with some skepticism). Here’s what I
read:
Alex Wong is Chinese, and he’s married to Candice Chiu Wong,
also Chinese, who was one of the lead prosecutors of J6ers — under both Obama
and Biden.
Candice served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for D.C., led
the Violence Reduction and Trafficking Offenses Section, and was nominated by
Biden to the U.S. Sentencing Commission — where she helped hand down extreme
punishments to political dissidents.
She also clerked for far-left SCOTUS Justice Sonia Sotomayor
— no surprise there.
Alex Wong himself worked for Covington & Burling LLP —
the same firm President Trump stripped of ALL security clearance and federal
contracts on Feb. 25, 2025, for their central role in the weaponization of
government against Americans.
Further down it adds this:
This entire thing smells like a coordinated setup.
A Chinese-connected security advisor.
A DOJ insider wife loyal to Biden.
A disgraced law firm with a history of targeting conservatives.
A hostile journalist embedded in a secure chat.
All in the middle of a military op?
Then it calls for an investigation and for heads to roll.
I’ve never heard of Wong. I didn’t have any context to know
whether this was true. But it seemed more likely than the “accidental”
invitation version.
Alex and Candice Wong, image from KeyWiki |
But then, in the comments, there’s a link to this Substack piece by @Amuse. It details Wong’s actual family history:
Born in New York to Chinese immigrants who fled communism,
Wong is a product of the American meritocracy. His parents, Grace and Robert
Wong, were among the thousands who left Hong Kong in the waning days of British
rule, uneasy with the prospect of Chinese Communist Party dominance after the
1997 handover. Both were deeply skeptical of the CCP, having witnessed from
afar the slow strangulation of freedom across the mainland. They came to
America in the late 1970s seeking stability, liberty, and opportunity.
Then the piece continues about his wife and her family
history, which was similar, with parents who left Hong Kong because of
Beijing’s encroachment on civil liberties. Then we look at work history, which
is clearly not that of a Chinese asset:
Wong graduated summa cum laude from the University of
Pennsylvania with a degree in literature and French, then earned his law degree
from Harvard, where he served as Managing Editor of the Harvard Law Review. He
clerked for Judge Janice Rogers Brown, a legal icon of the conservative
movement, and later advised Mitt Romney on foreign policy. As a senior advisor
to Senator Tom Cotton and later as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
North Korea in the first Trump administration, Wong crafted some of the
toughest, most clear-eyed policies against Chinese expansionism and North
Korean belligerence….
He helped formulate the Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy,
pressed for maximum pressure sanctions against Pyongyang, and was instrumental
in organizing the Trump-Kim summits.
Then his wife’s work history:
Also a Harvard graduate, Candice clerked for Supreme Court
Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Judge Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit. She
served for nearly a decade as a federal prosecutor, leading efforts against
human trafficking and violent crime. Her lone involvement in a January 6
prosecution? A violent rioter who confronted police and endangered lives—not a
peaceful protester swept up in bureaucratic zealotry. In 2022, she was
nominated to the U.S. Sentencing Commission, earning confirmation with bipartisan
support.
I did a quick online search. Wikipedia shows Alex Wong more like the Substack version, while it does include that his
name was mentioned in relation to the Signal story. A KeyWiki online bio of his wife is also closer to the
Substack version, although, in addition to clerking for Sandra Day O’Connor and
for Kavanaugh when he was a circuit court judge, she did also clerk for
Sotomayor. It may be that, when a young lawyer gets a chance to clerk on the
Supreme Court, you take that job regardless of for which justice. So that
wasn’t a lie, but among the rest of the info, it’s not as damning as implied.
So that leaves me wondering how the name got added, if not
by Waltz or Wong, neither of whom, it seems to me, would do so intentionally
and probably couldn’t have done it accidentally. I was picturing some Deep
State CIA operative getting hold of the phone of one of them, and physically
doing that.
But then, I heard more discussion on Glenn Beck's Thursday radio show (we seem to be thinking along similar lines this week). Apparently Signal is an
app that is government approved—in fact, it comes pre-installed on the devices
of government officials—even though there is already an encrypted secure app
for them to use. Maybe Signal handles group chats more easily. Signal was recommended—pushed?—by CISA during
the Biden administration; CISA is the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency, which reporter Michael Schellenberger showed to have been involved in
censorship projects, including the Trump-Russia collusion hoax, the Hunter
Biden laptop, and the COVID lab leak theory. And we know (confirmed by the JFK files) that the CIA has been spying on
Americans and trying to manipulate policy for many decades—maybe since its
inception, but at least since Eisenhower. And they don’t have to “wiretap”
physically anymore; they can do so much with phones and various devices. So—because
they have been unworthy of trust—we have to ask, did the CIA use a backdoor or
some other tech means to put Goldberg on the group chat, hoping to make the
administration look careless and/or nefarious?
Glenn Beck talks about the history of Signal:
Signal itself has an interesting background. It was developed
by an organization called Open Whisper Systems. They received millions of
dollars in government funds…to create Signal. The funds flowed from—wait for
this one—the Open Technology Fund, a government organization that was created
back in 2012, under the Obama Administration, under Radio Free Asia.
Coincidentally, funding for Radio Free Asia and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty was cut by the Trump administration March 15, as unneeded relics of the Cold War. [However, a judge has stepped in to temporarily bar Kari Lake, President Trump’s senior advisor at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, from moving ahead with shutdown plans there.]
And coincidentally, the Signal issue came up the day
before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence met for hearings, making all
the discussion about this issue, rather than whatever the hearing had been set
to discuss.
So, what is the takeaway from these three stories? When a
story comes out, step back, wait for more information, and think it through
from a couple of additional points of view. We may not get to the truth right
away, maybe not ever in some cases. But we’re less likely to be taken in by
lies. The challenge is to be skeptical without becoming cynical. Cynicism takes
away hope.
We’re in a revolutionary time of taking back our constitutional
republic, and there’s a lot of weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth from
the beasts that are losing power, so that means things look messy for a while. But this is a very hopeful time.
So, I guess, hang on and enjoy the ride—like you might “enjoy”
a roller coaster that’s a couple of levels too intense for you.