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Democrat mayor pleads guilty to being Chinese agent; DOJ launch; the NYT contradicts itself on RFK Jr. in a single week; scientists confirm a third circulatory system; Democrats sue over a puddle.
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Good morning, C&C, itβs Tuesday! Your roundup includes: an Los Angeles area (Arcadia) mayor unmasked as a Chinese agent; the swelling prosecutorial floodwaters; the NYT awkwardly admits RFK Jr.βs vaccine probe is the biggest in 40 years or more; scientists confirm a third circulatory system thatβs been hiding in plain sight; and loony Democrats sue to stop the National Mallβs Reflecting Pool from looking like β¦ water.
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Under Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, the pace of resignations, indictments, and arrests is picking up speed. Yesterday, the UK Guardian covered the latest in a sneaky and deceptive story headlined, βMayor of California city resigns over charges of being a foreign agent of China.β The Guardianβs story included all kinds of biographical information, but βforgotβ to mention the mayorβs political affiliation. Can you guess what that means?

Arcadia is a Los Angeles suburb tucked against the rumpled green wall of the San Gabriel Mountains, about 13 miles from downtown. (Pop. 56,000.) Palm-lined boulevards slide past tidy ranch houses and understated mansions, shaded by an βurban forestβ that the city calls its municipal tree canopy. On weekends, the air smells faintly of jasmine, dim sum, and fresh coffee as multigenerational families drift between Asian bakeries, old-school diners, and sleek bubble tea bars, reflecting a population that, over time, has become 59% Asian. The cityβs name, Arcadia, is a Greek word meaning βidyllic rural paradise.β
Well, not all that idyllic. This week, Eileen Wang (D), 58, the mayor of Arcadia since 2022, pleaded guilty to a federal charge of acting as an agent of the Chinese Communist Party and abruptly resigned.
Wang was the councilβs first female member from China and its first βAsian-Americanβ Democrat. (Thanks for nothing, Guardian.) She was elected on a platform of homelessness, βcollaboration and unity,β and βchampioning small business.β Arcadiaβs homeless population grew, and its small businesses shrank, but on the other hand, it got an exciting communist secret agent.
Admittedly, this is not super surprising in the modern Democrat party, in which you practically trip over Chinese spies on your way to the ribbon table. See, e.g., Eric Swalwell.
Prosecutors said Wang was in charge of spreading βpro-PRC propagandaβ in the US. βBy her own admission, Eileen Wang secretly served the interests of the Chinese government,β said Roman Rozhavsky, assistant director of the FBIβs counterintelligence and espionage division. In the plea agreement, which Wang signed,she admitted she βreceived and executed encrypted directives from PRC government officials to post pro-PRC content.β Well, who among us hasnβt received directives from PRC officials from time to time?

Wang faces fines and potentially ten years in federal prison. But more importantly, as a convicted felon, she can no longer hold office or vote.
I mention this βlocal interest storyβ because it is part of the larger pattern of resignations, arrests, and indictments that I covered in more detail in Sundayβs C&C post. Hereβs the summary, in case you missed it. First, just in the last three weeks:
- April 14thΒ βΒ Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA)Β resigns from Congress; he had been the Democratsβ leading candidate, itβs βgreat white hopeβ for California Governor.
- April 20thΒ βΒ the Southern Poverty Law CenterΒ was indicted by a federal grand jury for bank fraud and secretly financing hate groups.
- April 21stΒ βΒ Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (D-FL)Β resigns mid-campaign for her fourth term, with a pending Miami criminal case over $5 million in allegedly stolen covid disaster-relief funds (CNBC: βthird House member to quit this monthβ).
- April 28thΒ βΒ Dr. David Morens, longtime Fauci adviser, indicted by DOJ on covid-related charges.
- May 4thΒ β Michigan AG Dana Nessel files a 41-page criminal affidavit chargingΒ Fay BeydounΒ β a Gretchen Whitmer-appointed βnonprofit business leaderβ β with sixteen felonies for fraud and corruption around a $20 million state grant.
- May 8thΒ βΒ Poul Thorsen, former CDC scientist and lead author of the foundational 2003 NEJM paper used for two decades to βdisproveβ the MMR-autism link, was extradited from Germany and arraigned in Atlanta on two counts of wire fraud and nine counts of money laundering; heβs being held without bail as a flight risk.
- May 8thΒ βΒ Mass. State Rep. Christopher Flanagan (D-Dennis)Β was indicted on eight counts of wire fraud, one count of money laundering, one count of falsification of records, and three counts of filing false tax returns (~$40K, including a psychic).
- May 11thΒ βΒ James ComeyΒ indicted by a federal grand jury for his moronic β86 47β seashell art project. (Also, yesterday, USA Today: βComey says Trump DOJ may seekΒ thirdΒ indictment.β)
- Last weekΒ β FBI raidedΒ Virginia State Sen. Louise Lucas (D)Β β βVirginiaβs most powerful Democratβ and the βarchitectβ of the failed $70M gerrymandering operation β along with her marijuana dispensary, as part of what Acting AG Todd Blanche confirms is an βongoing criminal investigation.β
- YesterdayΒ β Arcadia (Greater LA) MayorΒ Eileen Wang (D)Β resigned and pleaded guilty to being a Chinese spy.
Thatβs just three weeks! All of this wildly gratifying DOJ activity should also be considered in light of the FBIβs Fulton County raid (January 28th) and the FBIβs criminal subpoenas to Maricopa County officials (March), both related to the 2020 Election. This level of politically adjacent prosecution spanning the entire country and involving state and federal levels and deep state actors like the CDC scientists is historically unprecedented. If it werenβt happening right before our astonished eyes, youβd place a Polymarket bet that it couldnever happen.
π₯ Consider the knock-on effects. How might other potentially vulnerable Democrats be feeling right about now? Imagine what kinds of things staffers βpeople who helped paper various kinds of fraud but never got any of the moneyβ might be thinking about. After Watergate, the entire Republican bench thinned for a decade, because potential candidates declined to run, donors got cautious, and political organizations got restructured.
Every Democrat in the country is paying very close attention to stories like Eileen Wangβs. They are panicking and getting hysterical, like a pink-haired gender studies major turning the corner and discovering Ben Shapiro giving a speech on campus. This helps us understand the unhinged things theyβre saying, the increasing levels of violence, and the crazy ideas they are coming up with, like firing Virginiaβs entire Supreme Court.
This is becoming much bigger even than Watergate, at least in its apparent scope. (There were 69 indictments and 48 convictions in the Watergate messβ but all related to each other and to the one alleged βcrime.β)
Keep an eye on the indictments meter. Doomsters who hounded poor Pam Bondi last year with scathing βwhere are the arrestsβ memes owes her an apology. She was teeing all this up on the chopping block so that Todd Blanche could start dropping the axes as we approached the midterm elections.
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Speaking of doomsters owing people apologies, consider this next story. Yesterday the New York Times broke an exclusive story headlined, βRFK Jr. Is Driving a Vast Inquiry Into Vaccines, Despite His Public Silence.β Last week, the Times ran an exclusive report assuring readers that RFK Jr. had quietly abandonedhis vaccine reform efforts under pressure from the White House. This week, it ran a new exclusive report, revealing that RFK Jr. is secretly running the most aggressive vaccine safety investigation in forty years. The Times has not explained how both of these things can be true simultaneously, but to be fair, they were probably very busy writing next weekβs third exclusive about how he has definitely quit again.

The new βexclusiveβ began with a brief nod to last weekβs report. βHealth Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said little publicly about vaccines in recent months,β the Times repeated, βat the behest of a White House worried that his unpopular stance will hurt Republicans in Novemberβs midterm elections.β But the Times missed an important wrinkle: βHe has not abandoned his quest for evidence that they are unsafe.β
βBehind the scenes,β the Times explained, βKennedy is spearheading an intense push to examine his long-held theory that vaccines are helping to fuel an epidemic of chronic disease.β And, βthe wide-ranging inquiry is a top priority for Mr. Kennedy, who sees vaccines as a potential culprit.β
Well, well, well. Since its hit piece last week failed to fracture MAHA, the Times has flipped sides. Now itβs admitting that, in fact, vaccine reform has sped up, if anything. βThe effort is being led by Dr. Martin Kulldorff, a critic of Covid restrictions and vaccine mandates.β
What most alarmed the Times is that the vaccine safety initiative spans the entire federal government. βCareer scientists at the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are conducting the research alongside contractors who provide statistical expertise and access to millions of patient medical records.β
Worse, βKennedy has tasked some government scientists,β the article grimly continued, βwith studying the health status of vaccinated children compared with those who were not vaccinated.β Youβd think the Times would be excited about a scientific study like that. If vaccines are so wonderful, the vaccinated group should crush the unvaccinated kids. I mean, at minimum they should be calling for the study to be well-designed, not trying to shut it down altogether.
The article reported that βvaccine scholarsβ were alarmed that Kennedy might use the results of the new study to βerode confidence in vaccines.β To be clear, the Times described the studies as straightforward comparisons of health outcomes between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, conducted by CDC scientists and Kaiser Permanente officials. The scholars are not worried the study will be rigged. They are worried it wonβt be.
The article reeked with the stench of fear.
π₯ Whenever you hear critics complain about what Secretary Kennedy might or might not be doing on vaccines or MAHA issues, remember two things. First, Kennedy has been litigating against Big Pharma for decades; he did not arrive in Washington fresh-faced, imagining that vaccine reform would be easy. Thereβs no reason whatsoever to think heβll quit just because the press or the bureaucracy push back.
Second, the Trump Administration almost never telegraphs its controversial plans. Its operational security is better than any administration in living memoryβ leaks are rare, thinly sourced, and usually arrive long after the fact. So the public absence of noise is not proof that nothing is happening; in fact, that is practically the thesis of the Times piece itself: nobodyβs talking, which they first tried to weaponize against Kennedy by using the quiet to sow doubt into MAHA.
But MAHA didnβt take the bait. So now the Times is grudgingly admitting that something big is happening anywayβ to alarm the Democrat base, which is terrified that everybody else might not be forced to take the same medicine that it laps up like a thirsty German Shepherd. (Note: no German Shepherds were harmed in the writing of this article. And, if you think about it, βThe Thirsty Germansβ would be a great name for a rock band.)
So there you go. Proof βin the New York Timesβ that last weekβs Kennedy narrative was a lie. Vaccine reform is not being shelved as a political sacrifice for the midterms after all. In fact, reform efforts are not only alive and well, but are bigger and more pervasive than at any time since the 1986 vaccine act was passed.
Kennedy holds the keys to the kingdom. Not only does he now have full access to the entire federal database βaccess heβd have climbed over a mountain of discarded No Kings protest signs for back when he was a lawyerβ but now he also has data analysis tools (like AI) that no previous Health Secretary has ever had access to. I might not bet Michelleβs Tahoe, but if I had to bet, it would be that weβre going to see something huge whenever it does arrive.
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In another fascinating medical story, the NYT published a bizarre article, if you can call it that, headlined βInside the Interstitium, the Human Bodyβs Hidden Pathways.β Iβll file this story under the category of medical innovation of the kind we havenβt seen in the last 25 years. In short, suddenly and unexpectedly, scientists discovered a third circulatory system in the human body that they had never noticed before.

Whatβs most exciting, from a nerdy alt-health perspective, is that the discovery could explain most of the difference between Western and Eastern medicine. For centuries, Western medicine has recognized two major fluid-circulation systems: blood and lymphatic. Turns out they missed one. (In response, the American Medical Association issued a statement saying they are βcautiously optimisticβ that the human body does not contain any more surprises, and that they are βreasonably confidentβ they have now found all the important parts.)
Researchers studying tattoo ink migration in the body found that fluidβfilled βinterstitial spacesβ throughout the bodyβs connective tissue were not just isolated pockets as theyβd supposed, but were in fact one continuous network. They are calling it βthe interstitium.β
There are pretty significant implications. The existence of this major fluid pathway could explain how cancer cells spread after they metastasize. It could explain how inflammation in one part of the body causes inflammation in another. It could explain how acupuncture works.
The story wasnβt exactly βbreaking.β The lead researchers first published their findings in 2018. It has taken eight years for a major media outlet to cover the story, which is actually pretty fast by the standards of heterodox medical discoveries. By comparison, the medical establishment spent roughly forty years confidently telling patients that stomach ulcers were caused by stress before finally admitting they were actually caused by bacteria. The researcher who proved it, Barry Marshall, had to drink a beaker of the bacteria to get anyone to pay attention.
The good news is that scientists studying the interstitium have not yet been required to drink anything.
Still, one detects a lingering whiff of resentment. The Times chose to break this potentially civilization-altering medical discovery not as a written article, but as an interactive multimedia scroll that requires approximately 17 minutes of clicking to read what could have been three pages of text. This is the journalistic equivalent of announcing the discovery of fire by interpretive dance.
Anyway, the discovery of the interstitium is potentially another major challenge to orthodox medicineβs historical certainties. Welcome to 2026βs accelerating medical revolution.
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Does it ever seem to you that Democrats must have an unlimited lawfare budget? Who is paying for all this litigation? Theyβd sue President Trump for stepping off the Rose Gardenβs sidewalks. Yesterday, Politico reported, βLawsuit seeks halt to Trumpβs reflecting pool makeover.β

Our nationβs capital is a city of monuments, memorials, and progressive elites who spend their days searching for things to be outraged about. Usually, they are outraged about tax cuts, redistricting maps, or the fact that some Cabinet member or other was seen eating a Jimmy Johnβs sub sandwich in public.
But this week, the most pressing issue facing Democracyβ’ βthe crisis that has driven Democrats into their latest state of legal frenzyβ is the color of a puddle.
I refer here to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which is essentially a very long, very shallow bathtub situated on the National Mall. For decades, the bottom of this pool has been painted a murky, depressing shade of gray decorated with algae, pond scum, and goose droppings. According to liberalβs latest lawsuit, the dark gray color is wonderful because it βcreates the illusion of greater depth and a more profound reflection.β
In reality, it creates the illusion that you are looking into a drainage ditch in a Soviet industrial park. Call it communist chΓc. But in Washington, if something is sufficiently bleak and bureaucratic, it is considered βhistoric,β and you are not allowed to mess with it.

π₯ Enter Donald John Trump. President Trump, as you may have noticed, is not a big fan of bleak and bureaucratic. He prefers loud and gold-plated. But since he could not gold-plate the Reflecting Pool without causing a massive shortage of bullion reserves, he settled for the next best thing: He ordered the National Park Service to drain the pool, scrub it clean, and paint the bottom bright blue. Specifically, and appropriately, a color his pool supply company called βAmerican flag blue.β
To normal non TDS-afflicted humans, this sounds like a perfectly reasonable idea. If you have a giant pool of water in front of your favorite national monuments, you probably want it to look like water, rather than a concrete culvert filled with lukewarm gravy. Trump even took his motorcade through the drained pool to inspect the work, a detail the new lawsuit seemed particularly aggravated by. It was described as though the President was shouting at workers, βMake it bluer! I want it so blue that astronauts can see it from space!β
But it is 2026. You cannot just go around painting historic gray things blue. That is practically a war crime. Hence, the latest liberal litigation over monument decoration.
An NGO (of course) called the Cultural Landscape Foundation found a retired architect who claims to have suffered, and I am not making this up, an βaesthetic injury.β So he wants an immediate halt to the painting. An βaesthetic injuryβ is a legal term of art meaning βI looked at something and I didnβt like it, so now I am going to sue the Trump Administration.β The damage enters through the eyeballs and penetrates the victimβs frontal lobe, where political grudges are housed.
This is a very serious medical condition, often requiring years of therapy and expensive lawyers funded by USAID grants.

π₯ The lawsuit claimed that painting the pool blue will βfundamentally alter the visual and experiential characterβ of the National Mall. It complained, bitterly, that the new color will make the Reflecting Pool look like βand I am quoting the actual language from the complaint hereβ βa large swimming pool.β
My goodness! Not that! A pool of water looking like β¦ a pool of water! Next thing you know, theyβll be complaining the White House is white, or filing for an injunction against scattering the wrong kind of grass seeds on the lawn outside the Oval Office.
The βpreservationistsβ found a 1999 National Park Service report that explained (probably as an excuse) that the dingy, dark-gray color was an intentional part of the contemplative mindset the pool was intended to cultivate. You see, as you stand before the Lincoln Memorial, you are supposed to look down at the water and feel a profound sense of gray, bureaucratic solemnity. If you look down and see a cheerful, patriotic blue, you might accidentally experience a moment of joy, which is strictly prohibited on federal property.
The NGOβs lawsuit demands that the poolβs historic character be restored immediately. This means they want the government to spend more taxpayer money to scrape off the bright, clean American flag blue paint and replace it with the traditional, historically accurate shade of Ditchwater Gray. Or (and this is probably what theyβre really hoping for) they asked the court to order a halt to the project and to freeze it in an unsightly mid-renovation state for the next two years while the case drags on.
Iβve begun to experience a pang of sympathy for our legal system. Federal judges must now sit in their chambers, wearing their serious black robes, and carefully weigh the delicate constitutional implications of pool paint. The fate of a nation hangs in the balance. Will we be a renewed nation of bright blue optimism, or a moribund nation of dark gray contemplation?
Only the courts can decide. In the meantime, if you visit the National Mall do not look at the Reflecting Pool. You could suffer an aesthetic injury. It hurts. I should know. I just got one the other day looking at Hakeem Jeffries. My lawyers are reviewing the case.
Have a terrific Tuesday! Drive back βround tomorrow for another installment of essential news and caffeinated commentary.
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