JESSE WATTERS: Going after monopolies is dangerous in DC

Jesse Watters discusses how Jeff Bezos has turned on President Biden after more disastrous polling for the president on “Jesse Watters Primetime.”

WASHINGTON POST SET TO LOSE ‘$100 MILLION IN 2023’ ONE DECADE AFTER JEFF BEZOS BOUGHT THE PAPER: REPORT

JESSE WATTERS: Oh, there’s someone sending a message. It’s not just the country. The owner of The Washington Post, Jeff Bezos, is sending a message. The world’s third-richest man has joined the CIA to move the Democrat machine against Biden. But why? Bezos is a Democrat, right? Sure. But this is about business. 

Besides going after the intelligence agencies, going after the monopolies is the most dangerous move in DC. Tomorrow, we expect the Biden administration to file a massive antitrust lawsuit against Jeff Bezos. Biden’s lawsuit against Amazon would bust up Bezos’ $1.3 trillion empire. But Bezos has another reason to put Biden out to pasture. When Amazon workers tried to unionize, the president sided with Amazon workers. 

 That was a declaration of war. And Bezos has gone behind Biden’s back now and formed an alliance with the CIA. You don’t pit the unions against Bezos and try to break up his monopoly without paying a price. Bezos has had the CIA in his back pocket for years. 

Amazon and the intelligence agencies have billions in contracts software, cloud surveillance. Amazon’s board is stacked with former intelligence professionals ready to do Bezos’ bidding, and Bezos wants Biden gone. That poll was a push poll as in push Joe Biden off a cliff and all the billionaires are in on it.

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Dangerous 'fire whirls' add fury to vast wildfire spreading into Nevada from Mojave National Preserve

Crews battled “fire whirls” in California’s Mojave National Preserve this weekend as a massive wildfire crossed into Nevada amid dangerously high temperatures and raging winds.

The York Fire was mapped at roughly 120 square miles on Monday with no containment. The blaze erupted Friday near the remote Caruthers Canyon area of the vast wildland preserve, crossed the state line into Nevada on Sunday and sent smoke further east into the Las Vegas Valley.

Wind-driven flames 20 feet high in some spots charred tens of thousands of acres of desert scrub, juniper and Joshua tree woodland, according to an incident update.

A fire whirl — sometimes called a fire tornado — is a “spinning column of fire” that forms when intense heat and turbulent winds combine, according to the National Park Service.

The vortexes — which can be anywhere from a few feet tall to several hundred feet high, with varying rotational speeds — were spotted Sunday on the north end of the York Fire.

FIREFIGHTERS MAKE PROGRESS AGAINST LARGE WILDFIRE, SMALLER BLAZES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

“While these can be fascinating to observe they are a very dangerous natural phenomena that can occur during wildfires,” the park service wrote.

The blaze was about 20% contained on Monday. Crews expected to face limited visibility due to the fire’s thick smoke. The cause of the York Fire remains under investigation.

To the southwest, the Bonny Fire burned about 3.6 square miles in the rugged hills of Riverside County.

More than 1,300 people were ordered to evacuate their homes Saturday near the community of Aguanga that is home to horse ranches and wineries.

One firefighter was injured in the blaze.

Gusty winds and the chance of thunderstorms into Tuesday will heighten the risk of renewed growth, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said in a statement.