This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

An investigative journalist with News Nation TV says he's being warned of a mysterious apocalyptic event that will take place in 2027, but officials are not specifying what type of cataclysm.

Best-selling author Ross Coulthart, in a recent interview with Rhys Dalton-Morgan and The UFOzzie" said: "Certainly something's gonna happen in 2027 and I don't know what it is. I've also heard 2034 and I've also heard other dates, much later. Depends who you talk to."

Coulthart says he's been given a variety of possible scenarios.

"Some people say it's a pole reversal, some people say it's an asteroid hitting the planet," he explained. "Some say it's A.I. reaching quantum and then all of a sudden we lose capacity to have control of our own computer systems. I have no idea."

"What I am aware of is everybody's telling me we're on borrowed time. And I cannot begin to emphasize how serious a look I get when I say to people who are confiding in me, 'What's the time scale on this?'

"And they're urging me to be urgent. They're saying to me, 'People need the right to know this, they have a right to know this.'

"And I go, well what are we talking about? And I feel like shaking these people and say, 'For God's sake, just bloody tell me!' And they are all constrained by their national security oaths. They want the public to know this."

His claims are sparking plenty of reaction online, including:

"Coulthart is one of very few journalists who are prepared to expose what needs to be exposed for all of [humanity's] benefit. Make no mistake, Coulthart is at the forefront of what everyone will soon learn about – and much of it will be a very difficult pill for some to swallow."

"My question to @rosscoulthart & anyone else. If it was THAT serious & we're short on time. Wouldn't these [people] not care about national security or going to jail?"

"If you have a 'national security oath' that prevents you from sharing this vital time-sensitive information with the world who you claim has a need and right to know, why are you worried about imprisonment after the event, whatever it is?"

"They're not telling because they either don't want to end up in a brig in some bunker a mile underground after the event, or they don't want to get 'deleted' before the event … where they may wish to ride it out or try to survive … hard to do when you've been un-alived."

"Sounds like 2012 hysteria all over again."

Grok, the artificial intelligence device created by Elon Musk on X, noted: "The video features Ross Coulthart discussing a rumored 2027 apocalyptic event, possibly involving aliens, based on unverified sources claiming humanity is 'on borrowed time.' He lacks concrete evidence, and similar predictions, like those by ex-CIA agent John Ramirez, are speculative and questioned for credibility. Many UFO sightings tied to such claims have natural explanations, like weather phenomena or aircraft. Historical apocalyptic predictions often fail, and no official statements confirm alien contact. The claims remain unproven, urging skepticism.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

An obstetrician and gynecologist has confirmed in testimony to the U.S. Senate that the figure for the miscarriage deaths following COVID-19 shots, demanded by Biden administration officials for pregnant women, "mirrors the effects of chemical abort drugs."

The stunning news of the threat from the drugs pushed by Joe Biden onto the American public during the China virus pandemic came from Dr. James Thorp, who delivered a "haunting" moment in testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs.

Thorp explained that women vaccinated during their first trimester suffered an 82% miscarriage rate.

He said, too, that the government knew what it was doing.

He cited an "infamous" Shimabukuro study from the New England Journal of Medicine that claimed a 12.6% miscarriage rate.

"But when you isolate the data for women vaccinated in the first trimester, the miscarriage rate rises to 82%, Dr. Thorp said. This 82% claim remains a topic of debate within the scientific community. If true, 'This figure mirrors the effects of chemical abort drugs,' Dr. Thorp lamented," reports confirmed.

The forced delivery of COVID shots to tens of millions of Americans was never without serious questions and controversy. It was even more so on the concept of requiring pregnant women to take the chemical treatments.

report at the Western Journal explained Thorp's testimony came just weeks ago.

"This deception was institutionalized in the now-infamous Shimabukuro study published on April 21, 2021, in the digital version of the New England Journal of Medicine," a transcript shows he said.

"The authors claimed a miscarriage rate of 12.6%, but the raw data revealed an 82% miscarriage rate in women vaccinated during the first trimester. These figures mirror the effects of chemical abortion drugs such as RU-486."

The RU-486 chemicals, in fact, are the ones intended to destroy an unborn child's life.

Thorp also pinpointed the demands from Rochelle Walensky, who at the time headed Joe Biden's Centers for Disease Control, who wanted to "coerce pregnant women into taking" the chemicals.

"It is difficult to conceive of a more egregious breach of medical ethics by the government-controlled, medical-industrial complex than the systematic promotion of COVID-19 vaccination to pregnant women. This campaign was not accidental. It was calculated," he charged.

The Biden administration targeted pregnant women, he explained, because they are "the primary decision-makers in healthcare across the human lifespan" and also are "the most vulnerable patients."

"If they could be convinced that the vaccination was safe and effective, it would imply that it was safe and effective for everyone," Thorp charged.

Biden administration officials, he said, wanted to be "manipulating public perception through influence, fear, and persuasion" in ways that would provide coercion to the public to take the shots.

"The federal government outsourced much of this psychological operation to NGOs, which disseminated emotionally charged and misleading messaging. These entities falsely assured pregnant women that the vaccines were proven safe and essential for maternal, fetal, and newborn health, even though early evidence indicated quite the opposite."

He said Walensky and others "made statements that were false. They made statements that were fear-mongering, insinuating that pregnant women, if they didn't take the vaccine, would put their lives in harm, their preborn lives in harm, and their newborn lives in harm, when they knew absolutely the opposite was true."

Ironically, following Walensky's assurances that the COVID shots would protect people, she took them and got COVID.

But she was constantly a voice describing the safety and effectiveness of the shots that were so lucrative for their manufacturers at that time.

Walensky assured over and over the American public of the safety of the shots.

She repeatedly advocated that "pregnant people" take the chemicals.

Thorp also cited a separate study that revealed the COVID shots as among the "deadliest and most injurious" ever, with more than 42,000 injuries and 1,223 deaths.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

Ukraine secretly smuggled a large number of drones into Russia to carry out a large-scale attack on Moscow's military aircraft Sunday, according to numerous reports.

The Kyiv Independent reports: "An operation by Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) using FPV drones smuggled deep into Russian and hidden inside trucks has hit 41 Russian heavy bombers at four airfields across the country," a source in the agency told the news outlet.

A year-and-a-half in the planning, the operation codenamed "Web" is said to be a major blow to the aircraft Russia uses to launch long-range missile attacks on Ukraine's cities.

"The SBU first transported FPV drones to Russia, and later on the territory of the Russian Federation, the drones were hidden under the roofs of mobile wooden houses, already placed on trucks," the source said.

"At the right moment, the roofs of the houses were opened remotely, and the drones flew to hit Russian bombers."

"SBU drones are practicing on aircraft that bomb Ukrainian cities every night. Currently, more than 40 aircraft are known to have been hit, including the A-50, Tu-95 and Tu-22 M3," the source added.

Meanwhile, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday his nation is dispatching a delegation to Istanbul for a fresh round of peace talks with Russia on Monday, even as both sides continued their military pounding.

"I outlined (Ukraine's) positions ahead of the meeting in Istanbul on Monday," Zelensky wrote on Telegram.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

The Indian government does not hide its intentions. It does not cloak its agenda in diplomatic vagueness or cultural goodwill. On the contrary, India has made one fact abundantly clear: it views its global diaspora as a state-controlled asset, a tool of national policy, and an instrument of foreign influence.

The Indian government has built one of the most extensive and coordinated diaspora engagement strategies in modern history, one that now plays a central role in India's global rise. Unlike other nations that merely celebrate their emigrant populations, India has institutionalized a system designed to leverage its overseas citizens for strategic national gain.

To put it simply, India has built a state-backed infrastructure specifically designed to mobilize its overseas population as a tool of strategic leverage.

In the process, Indian-origin individuals embedded in American institutions are playing increasingly pivotal roles in influencing U.S. policy, offshoring economic opportunities, and redirecting American resources to support India's geopolitical ambitions.

India Diaspora Impact Report

A state-engineered diaspora strategy

According to The United Indian, the Indian diaspora is viewed as a global force capable of swaying political outcomes in host countries.

The publication boasts that Indian-origin communities have driven India's development through remittances, capital inflows, and transfers of technical knowledge from abroad.

More critically, it calls for this global community to be intentionally positioned in key business, policy, and academic roles, not to integrate into their host nations, but to serve India's broader national interests.

This is not just pride in national identity, it's a blueprint for foreign influence.

India's Ministry of External Affairs openly acknowledges that investments from Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) account for nearly 35% of the country's total foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows.

To deepen its reliance on foreign capital and consolidate control over its global diaspora, the Indian government has constructed a sophisticated system of legal, financial, and emotional loyalty, one deliberately designed to turn overseas Indians into agents of national advancement.

Through initiatives like Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) and NRI-targeted investment schemes was explicitly designed to turn diaspora wealth into a national development engine, not just for economic growth, but for India's geopolitical rise.

While India explicitly prohibits dual citizenship, it has created a legal workaround: the Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) program, though not true citizenship, OCI status grants foreign nationals of Indian origin lifetime visa-free entry, unrestricted access to India's economy, educational institutions and property markets (excluding agricultural land) and rights nearly identical to those of NRIs. This structure allows millions of Indian-origin U.S. citizens and green card holders to operate across borders, fully integrated into India's economic system while retaining the legal protections and privileges of their host countries.

Under India's Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) framework, many prominent Indian-origin Americans, including those in politics, business, and technology, are eligible for OCI status based on Indian parentage, ancestry, or prior Indian citizenship. For example, Vivek Ramaswamy, now running for governor of Ohio after a presidential bid, qualifies as the child of an Indian citizen. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella qualifies as a former Indian citizen. Despite holding U.S. citizenship, individuals like Ramaswamy and Nadella can legally obtain OCI status, which allows them to live, work, invest, and exercise significant influence in India without relinquishing their American nationality. This dual access positions them as powerful cross-border actors who can simultaneously shape U.S. and Indian interests, making them instrumental to India's broader geopolitical and economic strategy.

But the design goes deeper. Many of these individuals, despite holding U.S. citizenship or even government security clearances, remain closely embedded in India's strategic and policy ecosystem.

A blueprint for global leverage

India openly admits that its relationship with the diaspora is not incidental or symbolic, but strategic. This means all engagement, whether financial, educational, or political, is aimed at securing tangible benefits for India, including influence operations, foreign lobbying, and economic leverage.

India not only uses the diaspora to bring resources into India, but also seeks to embed and expand Indian labor into foreign economies, particularly through workforce pipelines (H-1B, L-1, OPT), often facilitated by state partnerships and corporate MoUs.

India is actively designing incentive structures and policy tools tailored to different segments of the diaspora. These "customized solutions" include visa rights, investment opportunities, and educational access in India, all meant to bind the diaspora more tightly to India's economic system.

India refers to its diaspora as "investible," confirming that it views them as resources to be deployed for national gain. This includes their:

  • Intellectual capital (tech CEOs, academics, scientists)
  • Political influence (elected officials, donors)
  • Financial assets (remittances, venture capital)

India's diaspora incentive structure, powered through the OCI framework, creates the conditions for state-enabled insider trading. This system functions as a form of state-enabled economic espionage. OCI holders are encouraged to influence foreign policy and investment toward India and then personally benefit from those policies and deals using their exclusive access and legal status in India. This isn't just soft power, it's economic manipulation backed by legal infrastructure.

This dual-access framework is not available to average Americans or other foreign nationals, it creates an elite class of cross-border actors who can align their political power in one country (e.g., the U.S.) with financial returns engineered through policy alignment with another (India). By embedding Indian-origin individuals in powerful U.S. institutions and simultaneously offering them privileged access to India's economic and legal system, India has created a global influence apparatus that bypasses traditional oversight, ethics rules, and financial disclosure norms.

India openly acknowledges that it is leveraging the skills, influence, and corporate positions of Indian-origin professionals abroad by offering incentives and privileges, including OCI status, to pull them into its domestic development agenda. This includes knowledge transfers in tech, governance, and education. It confirms that India's diaspora policy is not passive; it is designed to extract intellectual capital from abroad to fuel India's rise. This aligns with the pattern of Indian-origin tech CEOs (e.g., Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella) driving investment, R&D, and infrastructure into India while offshoring jobs from the U.S.

India views overseas Indians as a pipeline for financial capital, not just through remittances but through structured philanthropy aligned with government goals.

The reference to the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) reveals that India wants to control and centralize foreign-origin funding while maintaining legal command over where that money goes, which means the OCI status is not just about cultural connection; it's a legal mechanism.

India sees its diaspora, especially those in the U.S., as influential agents in global forums. It explicitly seeks to engage diaspora professionals in advocacy, public policy and reputation-building, positioning them as unofficial diplomats. India admits it is deliberately organizing the diaspora to shape international narratives, policy perspectives, and strategic alliances. This directly relates to how U.S.-based politicians, CEOs, and institutional leaders of Indian origin are used to push India-friendly policies, suppress criticism of India, and amplify India's soft power in Western governments and institutions.

"Positioning India as a preferred source country for economic migration…"

This is a direct admission that India is intentionally marketing itself as a labor-exporting superpower, leveraging bilateral and corporate partnerships to flood foreign markets with Indian workers. This matches the U.S. visa manipulation via H-1B, OPT, L-1, and green card pipelines. India is structuring labor migration as a national strategy, not a side effect of globalization.

"Facilitate Overseas Indians and Indian businesses to invest and share learnings…"

This line reveals a long-term plan to embed Indian nationals and companies inside foreign economies, particularly those with strategic importance. The Indian government is encouraging Indian-Origin individuals to invest abroad on India's terms, enabling Indian businesses to gain control and visibility in markets and use diaspora networks to export India's development model into other countries. This reinforces how OCI holders and Indian-origin executives in the U.S. are vehicles of Indian economic influence, spreading India-centric trade practices, tech standards, and labor norms.

Leveraging American positions of power

At the center of this effort are Indian-origin power brokers embedded in global business and technology. Many of today's most powerful global technology companies are led by Indian-origin CEOs, figures who have not only climbed to the top of American corporate ladders but who have also played critical roles in redirecting resources, innovation, and workforce opportunity toward India. These individuals are celebrated in India not just as successful executives, but as strategic assets furthering the country's national agenda.

This strategic alignment has led to a clear pattern under their leadership, U.S. companies have prioritized Indian markets, labor forces, and R&D hubs, while laying off American workers, offshoring critical operations, and re-engineering workforce pipelines to favor India's rise.

Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, has directed over $10 billion into India through the "Digital India" initiative. Under his leadership, Google established major R&D hubs in Bangalore and Hyderabad and partnered with the Indian government to develop language infrastructure and AI systems. These moves have accelerated India's dominance in digital infrastructure while moving research and innovation jobs out of the United States.

Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, announced a $3.3 billion investment in India's cloud and AI ecosystem in 2024. This came as Microsoft conducted significant layoffs in the U.S. Nadella has actively expanded India's role in Microsoft's global delivery model, turning India into a backbone for the company's engineering, operations, and customer service arms. His strategic alignment with India's government has made Microsoft a central partner in the country's AI and education initiatives.

Parag Agrawal, former CEO of Twitter, promoted India as a key growth market and increased India-specific staffing and engagement with the Indian government. During his tenure, Twitter became more compliant with India's regulatory frameworks, expanding its domestic political utility while softening its global stance on free speech.

Shantanu Narayen, CEO of Adobe, has scaled Adobe's India operations into a global R&D hub and has openly praised India's tech talent and infrastructure. He continues to grow Adobe's footprint in India while supporting government-aligned initiatives related to digital creativity, education, and data frameworks.

Arvind Krishna, CEO of IBM, has overseen the company's transformation into a consulting-heavy enterprise with a massive presence in India. Today, IBM employs more people in India than anywhere else in the world. Krishna has shifted core business operations and product development to India, enabling a long-term offshoring model that has reduced American IT and engineering headcount.

Raghu Raghuram, CEO of VMware, has expanded VMware's engineering and DevOps operations in India. The company's India teams have become central to cloud product development and global customer support functions.

Anjali Sud, former CEO of Vimeo, advocated a remote-first workforce strategy that allowed Vimeo to scale its engineering presence in India. Her leadership coincided with Vimeo's partnerships across India's media and technology ecosystem.

Nikesh Arora, CEO of Palo Alto Networks, has overseen the launch of major cybersecurity engineering hubs in India. His strategy positioned India as a global center for cyber talent, driving product development from Indian campuses while reducing reliance on U.S.-based teams.

Revathi Advaithi, CEO of Flex, shifted manufacturing and logistics operations to India as part of the company's realignment under global supply chain pressures. She has actively supported India's "Make in India" industrial policies, strengthening the country's manufacturing base.

George Kurian, CEO of NetApp, has positioned the company's India arm as a global technology and engineering hub. NetApp India handles core storage product innovation and services, deepening the country's role in high-tech infrastructure.

Sanjay Mehrotra, CEO of Micron, has played a leading role in developing India's semiconductor industry. He led Micron's $2.75 billion investment in a semiconductor assembly and testing facility in Gujarat, an initiative heavily subsidized by the Indian government. While India benefits from new chip capabilities, U.S. semiconductor expansion efforts have faced cuts and delays.

These aren't isolated cases, they are coordinated outcomes. India's immigration strategy, in tandem with its diaspora engagement playbook, has used the U.S. work visa system as a delivery vehicle, flooding American companies with Indian nationals while displacing U.S. workers at scale.

According to The United Indian, the global economic footprint of Indian diaspora-led businesses now exceeds $3 trillion annually. This is not merely success, it is state-backed leverage.

In summary, these Indian-origin CEOs are not merely individual success stories. They are key actors in India's global strategy, channeling American capital, jobs and technologies to strengthen India's economic, digital, and geopolitical position, often while U.S. workers and industries suffer the consequences. Their positions at the helm of U.S. corporations have made them ideal conduits for India's long-term national ambitions.

Indian Multinational Corporations: The corporate engine of India's foreign agenda

While Indian-origin CEOs embedded in U.S. corporations have become symbols of influence and strategic alignment, it is Indian multinational enterprises (MNEs), notably Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, Tech Mahindra and HCL Technologies, that serve as the operational arms of India's economic expansion and workforce export strategy. These companies have played a central role in advancing India's national agenda by systematically exploiting the U.S. immigration system, displacing American labor, offshoring sensitive contracts, and influencing U.S. policy under the guise of globalization.

These MNEs are not neutral market actors. They operate in lockstep with Indian government ministries, educational institutions, and trade bodies to implement India's global workforce and innovation agenda. Their executives regularly participate in diaspora events like Pravasi Bharatiya Divas and leverage India's Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) program to maintain influence over Indian-origin professionals embedded in U.S. companies and agencies.

The offshoring playbook used by these firms, perfected through state incentives and policy coordination, has enabled the transfer of U.S. contracts, research, and intellectual property to India-based facilities. TCS and Infosys pioneered this model with 24/7 development centers in Bangalore and Hyderabad. Cognizant, Wipro, and Tech Mahindra expanded it by winning U.S. government and corporate deals, then quietly shifting execution to India. Many of these contracts include sensitive data and services once intended exclusively for American use, some even involving defense and healthcare systems.

The damage to American workers is staggering. These firms collectively file tens of thousands of H-1B, L-1, and OPT visa applications every year, undercutting U.S. wages and excluding qualified American applicants. Several have been sued for discrimination, including TCS, Infosys, Cognizant, and Tech Mahindra. In one of the most notable cases, Infosys paid a $34 million settlement to the DOJ for abusing B-1 visas to sneak in Indian workers under false pretenses. Others have faced similar accusations of misusing the visa system to sidestep U.S. labor protections and import low-wage labor.

Beyond workforce displacement, these MNEs shape U.S. policy. As members of lobbying bodies like the U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC), they push for expanded visa quotas, intellectual property concessions, and trade agreements that benefit India. They also fund diaspora-linked advocacy groups like Indiaspora and USINPAC to influence American lawmakers and normalize India-first workforce policies under the banner of globalization.

These corporations are not simply participants in the global economy, they are tools of India's national strategy. They have embedded themselves inside America's digital infrastructure, redirected taxpayer-funded innovation to India, and engineered a labor market shift that benefits one nation at the expense of another. Their success represents not just corporate growth, but the successful execution of a geopolitical and economic conquest, one contract, one job, and one visa at a time.

Indian-Origin U.S. political power: Indian Government political access and policy influence in America through diaspora

India has not only exported labor and technology, but it has also cultivated political influence in the United States through a growing number of Indian-origin elected officials and civil servants. These individuals, often celebrated by Indian media and government officials as "diaspora success stories," are increasingly positioned in critical roles across U.S. policymaking, diplomacy, trade, and law.

Their prominence is not just a reflection of personal achievement, it's a strategic asset for India's foreign policy. The Indian government maintains regular engagement with Indian-origin U.S. lawmakers and public officials. Congress members such as Ro Khanna and Pramila Jayapal have participated in Indian diaspora events and advocated for increased U.S.-India cooperation. U.S. policy changes related to immigration, trade, and technology transfer often receive vocal support from diaspora-linked organizations, including the U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC) and Indian-American lobbying groups.

India Diaspora Impact Report

FEDERAL ELECTED OFFICIALS

Kamala Harris, Former Vice President of the United States, is the daughter of Indian-born scientist Shyamala Gopalan. Although Harris identifies more with her African-American heritage publicly, Indian officials and media claim her as a symbol of diaspora power, frequently referencing her as a point of national pride and using her image in Pravasi Bharatiya Divas and India-based political narratives.

Ami Bera, U.S. Representative from California's 6th District, is the longest-serving Indian-American in Congress. He sits on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and has consistently supported pro-India policy positions, including increased defense and health cooperation. Bera frequently appears at Indian consulate events and receives backing from Indian-American lobbying groups.

Raja Krishnamoorthi, U.S. Representative from Illinois's 8th District, is known for his vocal support of U.S.-India relations. He regularly engages with Indian consulates, diaspora coalitions, and public forums promoting bilateral economic and educational ties. He has endorsed expanding H-1B visas and supports India-centric trade initiatives.

Ro Khanna, U.S. Representative from California's 17th District (Silicon Valley), is perhaps the most active Indian-origin lawmaker when it comes to coordinating with the Indian government. He has spoken at Indian diaspora forums, participated in trade delegations, and met directly with Indian officials to discuss shared tech and labor interests. Khanna plays a central role in maintaining India's foothold in U.S. tech policy.

Pramila Jayapal, U.S. Representative from Washington's 7th District, is of Indian origin and chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus. While she has occasionally criticized India's human rights record, she remains deeply embedded in India-focused diaspora circles and continues to advocate for South Asian-American representation and visa-related reforms that disproportionately benefit Indian nationals.

Shri Thanedar, U.S. Representative from Michigan's 13th District, is an immigrant from India and a former entrepreneur. He has positioned himself as a "self-made success story," drawing significant attention from Indian media outlets that celebrate his electoral victory as a win for the diaspora.

Suhas Subramanyam, elected in 2024 to represent Virginia's 10th District, became the first Indian-American Congressman from Virginia. His election was hailed by Indian consulates and diaspora PACs as a milestone in expanding Indian-origin political power at the federal level.

STATE & LOCAL OFFICIALS

Aruna Miller, Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, is the first South Asian woman to hold such a high executive office in any U.S. state. Her campaign and inauguration were celebrated in Indian media as a "historic diaspora achievement," and she maintains active relationships with Indian-American groups.

Ravinder Bhalla, Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey, made headlines as the first Sikh mayor elected in New Jersey. He has spoken at Indian consulate events and is frequently spotlighted by Indian media outlets promoting diaspora visibility.

Niraj Antani, Ohio State Senator, is the first Indian-American Republican elected to the Ohio legislature. He's been involved in India-friendly business delegations and has spoken publicly in support of U.S.-India trade alignment.

Jenifer Rajkumar, a New York State Assembly Member, is the first Indian-American woman elected to New York's Legislature. She's known for her active participation in Indian cultural celebrations and events organized by Indian diplomatic missions.

Kshama Sawant, Seattle City Council member, is a high-profile political figure of Indian origin. While aligned with socialist and anti-capitalist causes, she has nevertheless been cited in Indian state media as evidence of diaspora reach into American political systems.

Manka Dhingra, Washington State Senator and Deputy Majority Leader, regularly advocates for Indian-American communities and serves as a bridge between Indian diplomacy and state-level U.S. politics.

These Indian-origin officials are not just public servants, they are key nodes in a transnational influence network. Whether by promoting India-friendly trade, championing immigration policies that benefit Indian labor exports, or directly engaging with Indian ministries and consulates, they have become instruments of soft power for a foreign government seeking deeper economic and political footholds in the United States.

The foreign enterprise operating inside American gates

From Silicon Valley boardrooms to Capitol Hill, Indian-origin power brokers, whether CEOs, elected officials, or high-ranking bureaucrats, have quietly but decisively advanced India's global ambitions from within American institutions. Trusted to represent American interests, many have made decisions that directly expanded India's economic, technological, and strategic reach, often at the expense of American workers, taxpayers, and national sovereignty.

Their loyalty is not judged by soundbites. It is revealed in their actions. And India has made its intent explicit. These diaspora figures are not just celebrated success stories. They are strategic tools in India's foreign policy. The United States, so far, has allowed it.

This must now be addressed with clarity. What happens when American institutions elevate individuals aligned, by birth, benefit, or ideology, with a foreign government? We are already living the answer. From trade deals and education partnerships to immigration policy and infrastructure, India-aligned influence has structurally reshaped American systems to favor India's rise.

When Indian-origin lawmakers push expanded visa quotas or bilateral tech transfers, when corporate executives move jobs and research to India, when academics and nonprofit leaders advise Indian ministries or appear at diaspora summits like Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, and when U.S. law firms shape domestic policy for Indian interests, this is not about heritage. It is about strategic alignment. And when that alignment undermines American jobs and weakens national competitiveness, it becomes a direct threat.

What other nation would tolerate foreign-aligned actors influencing its laws, investments, and workforce strategy in favor of a rival power? What other government would remain silent as its own institutions are redirected to serve another country's rise?

While Chinese influence has sparked national security investigations and legislative action, India's infiltration has been masked by diplomatic charm and the illusion of shared values. But India's model, built on visa exploitation, diaspora loyalty, intellectual property theft, and policy capture, is no less dangerous.

The question is no longer whether this network exists. The question is how long America will allow foreign-aligned operatives to shape its future. Because when India is prioritized over America, that is not cooperation. That is colonization by strategy. And it ends when we say America First. On our soil. In our jobs. And in our government.

The cost to America

The cost of India's strategy is not hidden in spreadsheets or obscure treaties. It's written across the hollowed-out factories of the Midwest, the layoffs in Silicon Valley and the flood of foreign resumes that replaced American workers through programs never meant to be abused. It's embedded in the tech monopolies that now serve as international outsourcing hubs, in the universities captured by foreign talent pipelines, and in the policies shaped not for America's benefit, but for India's ascendancy.

This isn't a partnership. It's conquest through policy, profit, and persuasion.

India has weaponized its diaspora, its multinational firms, and its manipulated alliances to execute one of the most sophisticated economic invasions in modern history, without a single shot fired. American goodwill, legal loopholes, and corporate greed became the tools of surrender.

And what did we lose? Control over our labor force. Ownership of our technology. Direction of our future.

India's rise has been powered by our decline. Not by accident. By design.

Every job is offshored. Every visa that was exploited. Every trade deal tilted in their favor was a calculated move in a long game we refused to see. And while America slept, India embedded itself inside our institutions, rewrote our rules, and positioned its agents to steer our destiny.

This is no longer just a wake-up call. It is a final warning.

The American republic is being gutted from within, not by tanks or missiles, but by talent pipelines, lobbying arms, and diaspora operatives loyal to a foreign agenda.

We can either confront this truth now, or watch as America is outsourced, reprogrammed, and overwritten … one manipulated visa, one remitted dollar, and one "strategic partnership" at a time.

History will not remember us kindly if we fail to act. This is our line in the sand. America first, or America lost.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

Once again, Indian media have set their sights on an American citizen, this time a veteran who's been directly harmed by the broken H-1B system, for nothing more than exercising his First Amendment rights. The article published by M9 News, "Legal H1B Tweaks Could Shake Indian Economy,", isn't journalism; it's foreign gaslighting. The piece mocks the voice of an American patriot, Virgil Bierschwale, for daring to say what millions of displaced Americans know to be true: our immigration system is broken, rigged and ruthlessly exploited.

Nowhere in the article is there any acknowledgment of Bierschwale's service to this country, his sacrifice, or his relentless efforts to inform and empower Americans through his work and his website Guest Worker Visas, Instead, the authors trivialize his candidacy for U.S. Senate, paint him as irrelevant and attempt to silence his warnings simply because he is not a sitting politician. This is not a minor oversight. It's a deliberate omission, a calculated attempt to erase the voice of a veteran who continues to fight for his fellow citizens long after his military service.

Rather than engage with the substance of his arguments or confront the economic devastation wrought by the H-1B visa pipeline, the article reduces Bierschwale to a failed candidate, as if only the politically connected or corporate elites have the right to speak on behalf of Americans. The Indian media's message is clear: Americans should be ashamed to defend their own jobs, while foreign interests are free to demand whatever serves them, no matter the cost to the people who built this nation.

This article says more about India than it does about Virgil

"For many Indian professionals, the American dream wasn't meant to be stalled at every turn…caught in a system that seems more focused on paperwork than on people."

The ongoing narrative that the American dream is somehow being "stalled" for Indian professionals by paperwork and procedural requirements is a glaring misdirection, one that conveniently ignores the devastation the H-1B system and offshoring have inflicted on millions of Americans. The real imbalance isn't bureaucratic red tape; it's the decades-long displacement of American workers, the shuttering of careers and the hollowing out of entire industries as jobs are systematically funneled overseas or handed to foreign visa holders.

What these complaints about "paperwork" truly reveal is a frustration that America is finally, albeit slowly, demanding basic protections for its own citizens. These regulations exist for a reason: to protect American workers from exploitation, discrimination and the relentless march of corporate interests willing to replace them at the lowest cost. When Indian media and their advocates bemoan paperwork as an obstacle, what they are really lamenting is that it is becoming harder to game the system and bypass the very safeguards designed to keep America's workforce strong.

Indian professionals, or any foreign nationals for that matter, are not entitled to American jobs and they are not entitled to a shortcut around the laws and procedures established by this country. Every form, every process, every layer of oversight is there because of the very real harm inflicted on American families, harm that never seems to warrant a single sentence in these foreign editorials.

For the millions of Americans who have been laid off, sidelined, or forced to train their own foreign replacements, paperwork is the last line of defense. Their livelihoods, not the minor inconveniences of well-paid guest workers, should be the priority in every immigration and employment debate. If the system is finally asking tougher questions and demanding more scrutiny, it's a sign that America is waking up and that is exactly what those who have profited from our complacency now fear most.

America's policies should serve its own people first. The sense of "disconnection" that foreign media laments is not the result of unfair paperwork, but the long-overdue insistence that American jobs are for American workers and no amount of foreign lobbying or manufactured outrage will ever change that fundamental right.

"The issue at hand goes beyond just visas. It's about who gets to shape the narrative around talent, opportunity and economic exchange. When voices like his start to take the lead, it becomes more than just policy—it becomes personal."

It's telling that Indian media insists the H-1B debate is about "who gets to shape the narrative around talent, opportunity and economic exchange" as if Americans, in their own country, are somehow out of line for demanding a say in their own future. The reality is, for years, only one side has shaped this narrative: foreign governments, offshore lobbyists and global corporations eager to profit from cheap labor, all while sidelining the voices of displaced American workers.

When an American like Virgil Bierschwale, who has actually felt the pain of these policies, dares to speak up, suddenly the discussion is "personal" and the foreign media establishment scrambles to silence him. The hypocrisy is staggering. Indian officials and business leaders have had a megaphone in Washington for decades, openly lobbying for more access to U.S. jobs and more favorable policies, never once apologizing for putting their own interests first. But when an American patriot does the same for his own people, that's portrayed as out of bounds.

Let's be clear: Americans not only have the right, but the obligation, to shape the policies and the narrative that affect their country's future. If that makes things "personal," it's because the economic survival of millions of American families is personal. The real injustice is that it ever took this long for their voices to finally lead the conversation.

America belongs to Americans. No amount of foreign lobbying, media spin, or elite hand-wringing will ever change that. If Indian officials and their media surrogates insist on shaping U.S. policy, they should at least admit that Americans have every right and every reason to demand that their government put its people first.

As Virgil himself told me after reading the article: "Never once did they mention I wrote that tweet because Americans are being discriminated against in America by Indians living in America and managing American businesses."

That is the real story here and it's one Americans will never be ashamed for telling.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

An agenda to deprive after-school Bible clubs of the same access to schools that other clubs were granted routinely now is costing the taxpayers in the state of Hawaii.

A report from Liberty Counsel, which fought the state on behalf of Child Evangelism Fellowship and its Good News Clubs, revealed that the state appropriations bill, just signed by Gov. Josh Green, provides $100,000 to CEF following a court ruling.

It was last December that a federal judge granted Liberty Counsel a permanent injunction on behalf of CEF against the state that provided equal access to school facilities.

That access had been "unlawfully denied" by the state Department of Education and six different elementary schools, the report said.

The injunction granted CEF Hawaii "prevailing party" status in the dispute, a move that now protects the Good News Clubs from the previous viewpoint discrimination, but also calls for the state to cover litigation costs.

The result now is that the state will give CEF's clubs access to schools equal to other similarly situated organizations across the state.

Liberty Counsel reported, "During the lawsuit, Hawaii's Department of Education conceded that one school denied CEF Hawaii use of its facilities based on religion, while another school's denial was due to a 'misapplication' of school policies. CEF Hawaii contended that after it appealed the 'blatant religious discrimination' of these denials to the Hawaii State Department of Education, it never received any response, nor did school officials take any corrective actions."

Other organizations that had been granted access included the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts, Girls on the Run, A+ After School Programs, and YMCA.

The state had allowed CEF's Good News Clubs in more than a dozen schools on Oahu and other islands before COVID-19.

"Then, after restricting after-school programs due to COVID-19, schools fully restored after-school programs in 2022. However, the Hawaii State Department of Education, through four of its superintendents and other officials, had denied every request submitted by CEF to restart its programs and either expressly or effectively denied every appeal, while allowing access for other similar groups to meet after school on campus," Liberty Counsel explained.

There are more than 3,000 Good News Clubs in elementary schools across the nation.

"This is a reasonable judgment and a great victory for Child Evangelism Fellowship, parents, and the students in Hawaii public schools. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that public schools cannot discriminate against Christian viewpoints regarding use of school facilities. Child Evangelism Fellowship gives children a safe space that offers moral and character development from a Christian viewpoint. Good News Clubs should be in every public elementary school," said Liberty Counsel chief Mat Staver.

His organization has represented Good News Clubs in multiple similar fights nationally over the years, and never has lost a case.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

Under U.S. law, student visas are meant for education, not employment. The F-1 visa allows international students to study full-time at accredited U.S. institutions. It was never meant to be a job program. But over the years, loopholes and quiet policy changes have transformed this visa into one of the biggest threats to American workers.

To receive an F-1 student visa, a foreign national must swear under oath that their sole intent is to come to the United States temporarily for full-time academic study, not to work or remain permanently. They must prove they have sufficient funds to cover tuition and living expenses without needing a job, and they must show strong ties to their home country that will compel them to return after completing their education.

These are not suggestions, they are legal requirements under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Yet companies like Miles Education have built entire business models around violating the spirit, and often the letter, of these conditions, turning what should be a temporary academic pathway into a long-term foreign labor pipeline.

The training program was intended to allow an international student after graduation the opportunity to apply for a short-term work benefit called Optional Practical Training (OPT). It was designed to let students gain experience in their field for up to 12 months. In 2008, this was expanded to 36 months for STEM (science, tech, engineering, math) grads, but only for degrees that truly qualify as STEM and only for training, not full-time careers.

Now here's what Miles Education did instead.

Miles turned this simple student benefit into a full-blown labor funnel. They packaged everything, college admissions, visa support, orchestrated STEM coursework, and job placement into one commercial service.

They charged students as much as $40,000-$50,000 for guaranteed admission to U.S. universities, OPT work approval, and job placements in American companies, supported by numerous testimonials from models and alumni promising substantial returns on investment for the Miles US Pathway program aimed at Indian nationals. Consequently, the emphasis shifted away from genuine education; the primary objective became clear: to enter the U.S., secure employment, and remain for as long as possible to pursue the American Dream that was purchased not earned.

Federal law states that OPT is not a work visa and is not intended to substitute for American jobs. However, Miles and its university partners have rebranded accounting programs, which do not qualify as STEM, as "STEM degrees" by incorporating terms like analytics and tech tools.

This allows their international students to work in the U.S. for up to three years without oversight, effectively circumventing U.S. workers. They heavily promote this "innovative" three-year work opportunity.

The law mandates that employers must safeguard the U.S. labor market; however, under the Optional Practical Training (OPT) program, there is no obligation for employers to demonstrate that there are no qualified U.S. workers available for the positions being filled by OPT participants. Additionally, the program lacks wage protection regulations, tax obligations, and does not impose any numerical caps on the number of positions that can be filled by OPT workers. Employers utilizing OPT workers are not required to contribute to Social Security or Medicare taxes, resulting in savings of approximately 8% per hire. This absence of regulation is why large corporations find the program advantageous. Critics argue that this situation constitutes legal exploitation, and organizations like Miles facilitate access to such programs more than ever.

And when those three years are up? Miles just offshores the job. Through its Miles Talent Hub, or one of their other subsidiaries, the same workers are rehired back in India at half the wage, still doing U.S. work from overseas. Miles calls this the "Build-Operate-Transfer" model. It should be called the final nail in the coffin for American graduates.

Everything about this breaks the spirit, and arguably the letter, of immigration law. U.S. regulations say F-1 visa holders must be full-time students and leave the country after their program. They are not supposed to turn into long-term workers or be part of a permanent pipeline for outsourcing. But Miles created a business that does exactly that and U.S. universities, employers, and the government let it happen.

This is the Immigration Industrial Complex in action, foreign companies using our schools, our visas, and our labor laws to displace us in our own country, and profiting from every step of the process.

Read the full exclusive investigation: "Imported degrees, exported jobs: How America's student visa system became a foreign labor pipeline."

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

In a case that has law enforcement investigators in Indianapolis at work, there is a mother who reportedly shot and injured a convicted child molester who was in the process of attacking her daughter.

The New York Post reported what details are known: That the mother walked in on Bruce Pierce, of Indianapolis, who allegedly was on top of her 12-year-old daughter as the preteen protested "no" at the Baymont Inn.

Citing court documents, the report said there are details missing, but the young victim's grandmother told police that Pierce previously has been talking with the 12-year-old online and by phone, trying to persuade her to leave town with him.

The situation is at a turning point now, with Pierce under arrest and charged with attempted rape and attempted child molestation.

The report said on the day of the shooting, the victim and her sister woke up their grandmother with concern their mother hadn't come home. "They went to the inn, where they found the mom and Pierce in the lobby."

What hasn't been explained is how Pierce and the victim ended up in a room, but, the report said, "Pierce took the opportunity to allegedly pin her arms to the bed and start ripping some of her clothes before the mother burst in."

The victim was able to escape Pierce, and mom fired, the report said. The mother and daughter then called police.

A warrant has been issued for Pierce's arrest.

He previously pleaded guilty to a child molestation charge in 2016.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

'Yo, mom and dad, where you at on this one?'

A school has launched an investigation after a kindergartner brought booze-infused Jell-O shots and gave them to classmates.

The classmates were checked out by medical experts to make sure they were all right.

But a comment at Not the Bee seemed to vocalize the question many were asking: "Yo, mom and dad, where you at on this one??"

The scenario developed at Johnstown Elementary School in western Pennsylvania.

"Out of an abundance of caution," explained Supt. Amy Arcurio in the report, "Emergency Medical Servcies (EMS) were called to assess and transport the students to a local hospital for appropriate medical care."

Arcurio's message to parents explained when school staff found out, "immediate action was taken," with students being taken to the nurse's office, then hospital.

"We are currently in possession of the jello cups and the matter is under investigation," the statement said. "We are cooperating fully with local authorities to determine how the student came into possession of these items and to ensure the continued safety of our students and staff."

Privacy laws don't allow her to share "specific details," she said.

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

12 issues explored include the employment visa pipelines that bypass American talent

A growing number of Americans are asking why qualified U.S. workers are being sidelined while corporations continue to import foreign labor. In response, WND has launched the America First Immigration Team, a dedicated unit of investigators, researchers and writers committed to exposing the full scope of what's become known as the Immigration Industrial Complex, the network of corporations, law firms, universities and foreign governments that profit from America's immigration and labor systems.

Our team will publish a series of investigative reports and special features to shed light on the policies, programs and players that have transformed America's work visa system from a tool of last resort into a pipeline for replacing U.S. labor.

What we'll expose and report on:

1. Employment visa pipelines that bypass American talent
● We'll document how programs like H-1B, L-1, OPT, STEM OPT, and PERM are used not to fill labor shortages but to staff entire departments with temporary foreign workers. Many of these roles were previously held by Americans.

2. Corporate job postings engineered to exclude U.S. workers
● Our investigations will reveal how job advertisements are structured to meet legal minimums while ensuring U.S. applicants are filtered out. We'll show how this tactic supports green-card approvals while denying Americans fair consideration.

3. Universities partnering with foreign education firms to build visa funnels
● We'll expose U.S. universities that enter into contracts with foreign-based companies to import student workers and create direct hiring pipelines many under the guise of "innovation," "diversity," or "global partnerships."

4. Immigration law firms coaching employers to avoid hiring Americans
● Our reports will examine how some firms develop recruitment strategies specifically designed to navigate around U.S. labor protections, helping employers meet legal thresholds while excluding domestic candidates.

5. The role of foreign governments and lobbying groups in shaping U.S. labor policy
● We will highlight how foreign entities use soft power, lobbying, and economic agreements to influence U.S. immigration and employment systems, often in coordination with multinational corporations.

6. Offshoring schemes tied to visa programs
● Our team will map how visa-dependent roles serve as stepping stones to offshoring entire departments or operations driving American jobs overseas permanently under the label of "cost efficiency."

7. Discrimination against U.S. citizens in hiring practices
● We'll bring forward documented cases where Americans are either not contacted, overlooked, or excluded from consideration due to visa-based hiring preferences or contractual foreign labor commitments.

8. How immigration abuse suppresses wages and erodes labor standards
● Our data-driven and evidence based reporting will analyze how the influx of foreign workers affects wage levels, job availability, and bargaining power across key sectors including technology, healthcare, finance, and academia.

9. The misuse of nonprofit status and tax incentives to support foreign labor programs
● We'll investigate nonprofits, universities, and industry associations that benefit from taxpayer support while operating programs that prioritize foreign talent over domestic workforce development.

10. The human cost stories of displaced American workers
● Alongside our investigations, we'll amplify voices of American workers who have been replaced, sidelined, or forced out of the workforce due to unchecked immigration pipelines and global labor practices.

11. The data they don't want you to see
● We'll provide tools and transparency to access immigration filings, Department of Labor disclosures, and university agreements resources often buried from public view but essential to understanding the full picture.

12. Legal gaps and regulatory failures enabling the crisis
● We will outline the agencies involved (USCIS, DOL, DHS, ICE, DOJ, SBA, DOE), the laws in play (INA, Title VII, FDUTPA, RICO), and the accountability failures that allow these abuses to continue unchecked.

The America First Immigration Team is just getting started.

If you believe in America, if you believe that Americans should be prioritized by our government, our laws, and our jobs, then this fight is yours too. The American Dream should belong to Americans, not the world. For too long, our leaders have sacrificed American opportunity on the altar of globalism and cheap labor schemes.

We invite you to follow our reporting, share the facts and hold power to account. The more Americans who wake up and demand change, the harder it will be for the political class and corporate interests to keep selling us out.

Stay tuned to WND for upcoming releases, whistleblower reports, legal filings and exposure campaigns designed to restore balance to America's labor system.

This isn't about closing the door to talent. It's about finally opening the door for American workers, American families and the next generation who deserve a future in their own country.

Patriot News Alerts delivers timely news and analysis on U.S. politics, government, and current events, helping readers stay informed with clear reporting and principled commentary.
© 2026 - Patriot News Alerts