Red Wave Feed
Iran Missiles Hit Israel, Trump Walks Out on Kristen Welker: Top Conservative News

June 7, 2026

Iran Missiles Hit Israel, Trump Walks Out on Kristen Welker: Top Conservative News

Here's what's trending in conservative news on June 7, 2026.

  1. Iran Fires Ballistic Missiles at Israel After Beirut Airstrikes as Regional Tensions Escalate — Score: 95/100

    Iran launched a full ballistic missile barrage at northern Israel, dramatically escalating post-Beirut airstrike tensions across the region.

  2. Watch: Trump Drops Kristen Welker in Fiery Interview, Ends With Him Walking Out — Score: 92/100

    Trump's NBC Meet the Press sit-down with Kristen Welker ended abruptly when the president stood up and walked out.

  3. EXPLOSIVE: Bill O'Reilly Demands Criminal Prosecution of E. Jean Carroll After Bombshell Revelation She Pocketed $7 MILLION in Secret Democrat Dark Money — Score: 89/100

    O'Reilly is calling for Carroll's criminal prosecution after a bombshell report alleged she received $7 million in Democrat dark money.

  4. Dirty LA Times Admits Thousands of Ballots Were Dumped into LA Mayor's Race w/out a Single One for Spencer Pratt – But "It Was a Glitch" — Score: 80/100

    Thousands of suspicious ballots appeared in the LA mayoral race with zero for one candidate — officials are calling it a glitch.

  5. "You're Either Crooked or You're Stupid" — Watch the Exact Moment Trump TORCHES Kristen Welker as She Defends California Election Fraud — Score: 74/100

    Trump issued his sharpest on-air line yet, telling Welker she's "either crooked or stupid" as she defended California's ballot-counting chaos.

  6. Severe Windstorm Moves Through Antifa Camp Outside Newark ICE Detention Center, Sends Rioters Scrambling For Cover — Score: 74/100

    A 70-mph windstorm obliterated the Antifa encampment outside Newark's Delaney Hall ICE detention center, scattering protesters in seconds.

  7. 98-Year-Old Man Beaten with Broomstick and Chair by Democratic Socialists of America Campaign Worker Over Political Pamphlet Argument — Score: 65/100

    A DSA campaign worker allegedly beat a 98-year-old Brooklyn man with a broomstick and chair over a political pamphlet dispute.

  8. HORROR: Innocent College Student Gunned Down in Cold Blood by Youths Outside His Family's Home in Philly — Score: 53/100

    A promising South Philadelphia college student was shot and killed outside his family home in a brazen Saturday morning attack.

  9. Biden-Appointed Judge Dismisses Kennedy Center Lawsuit Against Jazz Musician Who Canceled Christmas Eve Show in Hatred for Trump Name — Score: 53/100

    A Biden-appointed DC judge tossed the Kennedy Center's breach-of-contract suit and ordered it to pay all of the musician's legal fees.

  10. Christians Are Being Hunted Like Sport — Score: 48/100

    Christians in Nigeria are being systematically slaughtered in targeted attacks that the global media continues to largely ignore.


The Day in Review

Two words define June 7, 2026: fire and fraud. Iran is lobbing ballistic missiles at Israel while the American press corps is busy getting walked out on by the President of the United States. These aren't separate stories — they are two sides of the same coin, a world in which American weakness is tested abroad and American institutions are exposed at home.

Start with the biggest story on the board: Iran's ballistic missile barrage at northern Israel following Israeli airstrikes in Beirut. This is not a skirmish. This is Iran making a calculated decision that the moment is right to strike directly at Israel with its most capable offensive weapons. The question nobody in the mainstream press wants to ask plainly is: why now? The answer isn't complicated. Tehran has spent years watching the West wring its hands, impose symbolic sanctions, and deliver carefully worded condemnations. Every time Iran tests a red line and finds it made of paper, it pushes further. Today's missile barrage is the logical endpoint of years of appeasement disguised as diplomacy. The Biden era's obsession with resurrecting the Iran nuclear deal handed Tehran both cash and confidence. The region is now paying the price in real time, and Israel — as it so often has — is absorbing the blow that the rest of the free world refuses to take seriously until it's too late.

On the domestic front, the Trump-Welker walkout is already generating more heat than most international crises, and that tells you something important about where American political energy is concentrated. Trump's line — "You're either crooked or you're stupid" — is destined to live in political lore not because it was outrageous, but because it landed. Welker was, by all accounts, running interference for California's ballot-counting debacle, a subject that is not a conspiracy theory but a documented, days-long systemic failure that has now been compounded by the LA mayoral race's jaw-dropping "glitch" — thousands of ballots materializing without a single one cast for one of the candidates. The establishment response to these anomalies follows a predictable script: deny, minimize, call critics conspiracy theorists, and eventually admit something went wrong while insisting it changed nothing. This cycle has repeated so many times that the script is now visible to anyone paying attention. Trump, whatever one thinks of his delivery, named what was happening on live television and then refused to keep playing along. That, more than the drama of the walkout itself, is the lasting image of the interview.

The E. Jean Carroll story deserves far more attention than it is currently receiving outside conservative media. Bill O'Reilly's demand for criminal prosecution is the headline, but the substance beneath it is the bombshell: allegations that Carroll received $7 million in Democrat dark money in connection with her case against Trump. If that allegation holds up — and the details emerging suggest there is documentary support for scrutinizing it — it reframes the entire Carroll legal saga not as a straightforward accountability moment but as a potentially orchestrated political operation. Perjury and coordination allegations against a plaintiff who successfully sued a sitting president are not minor footnotes. They are the kind of revelation that, in a functioning media environment, would trigger wall-to-wall investigative coverage. Instead, the story is barely registering outside the right-leaning press. The asymmetry of institutional curiosity here is staggering and should trouble anyone who cares about equal application of the law.

Meanwhile, three stories at the bottom of today's list form their own grim pattern: a 98-year-old man beaten with a broomstick by a Democratic Socialists of America campaign worker in Brooklyn, a college student shot dead outside his Philadelphia home, and Nigerian Christians being slaughtered in attacks the global press treats as background noise. Each story is being undercovered relative to its moral weight. The Brooklyn attack is a data point in a broader radicalization trend on the activist left that corporate media refuses to examine with the same rigor it applies to right-wing violence. The Philadelphia murder is another entry in a crime ledger that Democratic-run cities keep failing to balance. And the persecution of Nigerian Christians is a humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in plain sight, ignored because it doesn't fit a convenient narrative about who the world's victims are supposed to be. Watch all three of these threads carefully in the week ahead — the Carroll dark money investigation as congressional Republicans signal they are now formally examining the allegations, the California and LA ballot anomalies as election officials face mounting pressure to produce detailed audit trails, and the Middle East as Israel weighs its response to tonight's missile attack. The next 48 hours in the region could determine whether this escalates into something far larger. Be here tomorrow.