🗽🕊️ The TL;DR Report #33: Monday, October 27, 2025. Still Writing, Even When They Try to Bury It…
- BRENT MOLNAR
- Oct 27
- 5 min read
Something’s been happening behind the curtain at Facebook, and it isn’t subtle. For the past few weeks, my reach has fallen off a cliff, not because I changed what I post, but because I refused to change who I hold accountable. Independent journalists who criticize Trump or call out authoritarian creep are being quietly pushed down the feed, stripped from recommendations, and left shouting into a void the algorithm pretends doesn’t exist. Meta doesn’t need to ban you when it can make you invisible.

Zuckerberg bent the knee, and the rest of the tech world followed. Corporate media won’t touch half these stories unless they can slap a “both sides” sticker on them. The billionaires who once posed as disruptors now behave like palace guards, protecting the regime’s narrative while pretending it’s just “market forces.” But I’ll say this: no algorithm, no billionaire, and no propaganda machine is going to silence this page. Not now. Not after everything we’ve already built together.
So, as reach plummets and posts vanish into the ether, here’s the latest TL;DR Report…a full recap of the chaos they’d rather you didn’t see.
Brooke Rollins wants to call this era “The Third Revolution,” comparing Trump’s movement to 1776 and 1863. The problem is, revolutions don’t come from the top down. They come from the oppressed demanding freedom. The first broke a monarchy. The second shattered slavery. This one rewrites bureaucracy to look like liberation while concentrating power in the hands of those already holding it.
Meanwhile, nature keeps reminding us that denial has consequences. The remnants of Typhoon Halong slammed into western Alaska, leaving destruction that could have been softened if not for government neglect. Years of defunding infrastructure and delaying adaptation turned an act of nature into a manmade catastrophe. Climate change didn’t hit Alaska alone; policy failure did too.
And as storms rage outside, the circus inside Washington never stops. Donald Trump is once again offering “medical advice,” this time to pregnant women and toddlers, on social media, in all caps, while misspelling “hepatitis.” The man who once told Americans to inject bleach is now lecturing about vaccines. The irony writes itself; the tragedy is that people still listen.
Across the Pacific, South Korea is showing the moral courage America’s leadership forgot. Tens of thousands filled Seoul’s streets shouting “No Trump!” and “Stop the Tariffs!” as the president landed for the APEC summit. These weren’t riots; they were democracy in its purest form, peaceful defiance of authoritarian bullying. The chants weren’t anti-American. They were anti-tyrant.
Back home, the absurdity deepens. Trump took to Truth Social to accuse the NBA of “cheating at cards.” No context, no evidence, just another tantrum in his gilded echo chamber. That same day, a violent incident in Athens, Georgia, forced the country to confront its homegrown ugliness again. A man dressed as a Nazi assaulted a woman at a bar. The story vanished from cable news within hours.
Then came the revelation of Mike Pence’s handwritten notes, the smoking gun from January 6th. “You’ll go down as a wimp,” Trump told him, hours before the mob stormed the Capitol. Pence wrote it down. Those words were set to be used as evidence before the immunity ruling buried the case. History will remember that moment, even if justice won’t.
The corruption isn’t just moral; it’s financial. The Pentagon has now awarded a contract to Unusual Machines Inc., a drone manufacturer tied directly to Donald Trump Jr. No oversight. No transparency. Just the same old pay-to-play politics, this time with a family discount. And as his son cashes in, Trump himself is adding a $300 million ballroom to the White House, paid for by “patriot donors” whose names just happen to match major corporate beneficiaries.
Even the grotesque has become policy. Trump and his allies joke about sex at Mar-a-Lago while preaching “family values.” Russell Vought, the Project 2025 architect, is reportedly the target of Trump’s locker-room mockery, a reminder that this movement’s moral code has always been a smokescreen. And now, House Republicans are threatening to strip Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani of his citizenship because of form omissions on a decades-old application. His real offense? Being brown, Muslim, and progressive.
Elsewhere, a South Carolina father was sentenced to fifty years for torturing his daughter, a story that cut through the political noise to remind us what real evil looks like. It was a rare moment where justice actually matched the crime.
Globally, Trump’s self-delusion continues. Leaders in Thailand and Cambodia finally reached a peace deal in Malaysia, and within hours, Trump declared himself the peacemaker, despite having nothing to do with it. The man has turned parasitic credit-taking into foreign policy. And now he’s spinning a new conspiracy theory called “Operation Arctic Frost,” claiming his political enemies formed a spy ring inside his own administration.
Every headline in this roundup is another thread in the same tapestry: corruption, projection, and the systematic dismantling of accountability. None of this is coincidence. It’s the pattern of authoritarianism tightening its grip while the algorithm turns down the volume on anyone trying to expose it.
It’s exhausting, I know. Every week feels heavier than the last, every truth harder to surface through the noise. But what keeps me going is the fact that you’re still here, reading, questioning, refusing to let cynicism win. That’s what terrifies them most: people who keep paying attention.
The shadow ban might shrink the numbers, but it can’t shrink the message. This is why independent media exists, to say what the networks won’t, to track what the papers won’t print, and to remind the powerful that we’re still watching. If the algorithm wants silence, then sharing this post, reacting, and spreading the work is an act of defiance in itself.
We’ll keep writing. We’ll keep publishing. We’ll keep standing up even when they shove us to the bottom of the feed. Because truth doesn’t disappear when it’s hidden; it just waits for someone stubborn enough to drag it back into the light.
🚨🔥 If you want to help keep this work alive, check the pinned comment below. That’s where you’ll find every way to subscribe, donate, and keep independent journalism standing while Facebook tries to bury it. The platform doesn’t need to ban you outright when it can just make you disappear. It has been quietly shadow banning voices that speak out against Trump, throttling reach, hiding posts, and starving independent media of oxygen. If you’ve noticed my work showing up less in your feed, that’s why.
😇😈 Make Afterlife Great Again asks one simple question: what happens when Donald Trump dies and both Heaven and Hell refuse delivery? It is satire with teeth, a dark comedy through the afterlife that feels all too familiar. The paperback is available directly on my website at BrentMolnar.com , and every post, book, and project you support there helps keep this voice alive when the platforms will not.
Book One: https://a.co/d/i0WgMkl
Book Two: https://a.co/d/cBo321y
🗽🕊️ I’m still here, still writing, and still fighting. This is my full-time mission now. I walked away from the day job to build an independent, reader-powered news platform with no corporate safety net and no permission slip from the algorithm. What they are trying to silence is exactly what I intend to keep publishing: the truth they cannot control.