
Highway Patrol Officer Asks Pete Hegseth To Carry Out Drone Strikes In Straight Line
ARLINGTON, VA—Saying the defense secretary had recklessly veered out of his lane numerous times, a highway patrol officer reportedly asked Pete Hegseth on Tuesday to carry out drone strikes in a straight line. 'Sir, I'm going to need you to step out of the vehicle and demonstrate to me that you can authorize a straight line of aerial bombardments along the shoulder here,' Marcus Hensley of the Virginia State Police said to a visibly flushed Hegseth, who dabbed sweat from his brow as he was told he would also need to recite the branches of the military in backward alphabetical order. 'I'd like you to call in nine drone strikes, counting each one out loud, and then carry out nine more back toward me. Take a deep breath first, if you need to. Just go ahead and place those AGM-114 Hellfire missiles one in front of the other for me. Keep your eyes on your MQ-9 Reaper drones and begin whenever you're ready.' At press time, sources confirmed Hegseth was sitting in the back of the officer's cruiser after accidentally incinerating a passing Chevy Tahoe.

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Hegseth in Angry Clashes Over Eye-Watering Bill for L.A. Troops
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McCollum blasted the president's decision to deploy 700 Marines and some 4,000 National Guard troops as premature and escalatory. She argued that local law enforcement and the governor calling in the National Guard in her home state of Minnesota in 2020 over the protests over George Floyd's death were able to handle the situation, and the decision to mobilize the Marines put them in a deeply unfair position. The congresswoman asked Hegseth to reveal the cost of the deployment and how it would affect the budget, as well as what training would not take place because of it, but Hegseth would not answer the question directly. The defense secretary instead fired back that in 2020, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz 'abandoned a police precinct and allowed it to be burned to the ground.' He also claimed the National Guard was called in too late. 'President Trump recognizes a situation like that improperly handled by a governor, like it was by Governor Walz, if it gets out of control, is a bad situation for the citizens of any location,' Hegseth claimed. He also declared ICE should be able to operate in any jurisdiction in the country and blasted the previous administration for illegal border crossings. McCollum tried to cut in and point out that she had asked a budget question, but Hegseth kept going. 'We believe ICE agents should be allowed to be safe in doing their operations, and we have deployed National Guard and the Marines to protect them in the execution of their duties,' he insisted. 'We ought to be able to enforce immigration law in this country, unlike what Governor Waltz did in 2020.' Hegseth also claimed the police chief said she was overwhelmed, 'so we helped.' However, the Los Angeles Police Chief called the deployment a 'significant logistical and operational challenge.' As Hegseth continued to evade answering, even the Republican chairman tried to get him to answer the budget question. 'Thankfully, unlike the previous administration, we got a 13 percent increase in our defense budget, and we will have the capability to cover down on contingencies,' the defense secretary claimed. Hegseth called it important to maintain law and order in a major American city, leaving the door open to future domestic military activity. He also said all the units were fully trained. McCollum was not the only Democrat who grilled Hegseth over the deployment. Rep. Pete Aguilar noted images of the troops sleeping on floors and not being provided food or water by the Defense Department, and asked why they were not prepared with basic necessities. On Monday, California Governor Newsom said only 300 of the mobilized National Guard troops were being utilized and those deployed were not provided food or water. 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