by TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter follow (9)
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Embattled Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband’s venture capital firm quietly scrubbed key officer details — including former Obama officials — as scrutiny grows over the family’s skyrocketing wealth, The Post has learned.
Omar (D-MN) went from nearly broke to being worth up to $30 million in just a year — as a massive, up to $9 billion fraud scheme involving the Somali community in her district unfolded right under her nose in Minnesota.
stereotomy says
I wonder how many fraudulent autism diagnoses it takes to create an autism "epidemic?"
More likely the autism epidemic made the fraud believable and easier to pull off.
Tuqar's financiers just released a "All of us don't like the idea of Somaliland" memo
I mean, what news editor yanks a 60 Minutes episode for being one-sided against Bukele's prison? That's kinda censorship, and censorship is bad.
It is not censorship if you pull your own story. She wanted a more balanced story rather than put out such a biased screed. She is trying to take CBS out of the lefty propaganda machine and more toward actual news.


Never has the disconnect been more stark between social media’s town hall and corporate media’s ivory tower. As I’ve previously reported, the Minnesota Somali Fraud story continues surging online, while all references in the top legacy platforms have been scrubbed from home pages. For instance, on the New York Times’ overlong website this morning, the word “Minnesota” appeared only once in a story headlined, “Winter Storm Batters Minnesota, Bringing ‘Potentially Life-Threatening Travel Conditions.’” Some kind of storm is battering Minnesota; that much is true. Meanwhile, on X, YouTuber Nick Shirley’s homespun investigative video exposing empty day care centers has shot past 108 million views:
https://x.com/nickshirleyy/status/2004642794862961123
... This studious disinterest is at least partly due to being in the fog of an extended hot-takes phase. Media can craft clever excuse narratives, but they may not hold up as new information emerges. Just yesterday, for example, a viral TikTok made the rounds, appearing to show that one of the suspicious ‘day care centers’ from Nick’s video —Sweet Angel Child Care— lists an official phone number on Google that sweetly rings through to Governor Tim Walz’s office.
Ruh roh. ...
Reuters’ ostrich-like progressive reporters could have squashed the story like a bug. It would have taken just one live daycare owner to go on record explaining how their operation was totally legit and why “for security” they refused to answer Nick Shirley’s questions. Oddly, Reuters seems to have avoided any confirmation calling. They didn’t even say they sought statements.
I mean, if random TikTokers can find the daycare centers’ phone numbers and squeeze out a few minutes to call them, what’s stopping Reuters and the other massively funded corporate news operations? If a TikToker can dial a number and get the governor’s voicemail, why can’t a multi-billion-dollar newsroom?
What does it say that TikTokers are being forced to take these obvious first steps?
Notice he doesn't have the bug eyed drug eyed typical look. Has MKUltra cut him off of his drugs? Of course, they have the Bolshie Frankist Mayor in the wings trained and prepped to take his place. From the pan into the fire?
Walz is the 'ludicrous sociopath'. He's the one who can't stop lying even if a truth may favor him.
A series of social media videos released in recent days by independent journalist Nick Shirley has focused scrutiny on Minnesota’s taxpayer funded child care assistance programs.
The videos allege widespread fraud involving empty child care facilities that have collectively received tens of millions in taxpayer dollars.
But potential fraud surrounding Somali-owned day care centers dates back years.
In the new videos, Shirley is accompanied by a longtime local investigator identified as David – who says he has monitored these sites for years noticing no children (but sometimes adults outside smoking).
Shirley and David visit several Minneapolis daycare centers during business hours, finding locked doors, blacked-out windows, and no signs of children despite licenses for dozens or even hundreds of kids.
The investigation comes as federal prosecutors describe “industrial-scale” fraud across Minnesota’s social services, potentially exceeding $1 billion, much of it linked to the state’s large Somali community.
At the center of the allegations are funds from the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). This is a mix of federal and state taxpayer money designed to help low-income families.
Shirley claims his team documented over $110 million in questionable payments in a single day of visits.
David, who says has faced threats including a stabbing during his own prior inquiries, told Shirley he began suspecting fraud after repeatedly driving by these locations and seeing no activity.
“I would drive by these childcare centers in the middle of the day and there were never any kids there,” he said in one video. “That’s when I started asking, where are these children?”


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