The Power of Truth® has been released for sale and assignment to a conservative pro-American news outlet, cable network, or other media outlet that wants to define and brand its operation as the bearer of the truth, and set itself above the competition.

In every news story the audience hears of censorship, speech, and the truth. The Power of Truth® has significant value to define an outlet, and expand its audience. A growing media outlet may decide to rebrand their operation The Power of Truth®. An established outlet may choose to make it the slogan distinguishing their operation from the competition. You want people to think of your outlet when they hear it, and think of the slogan when they see your company name. It is the thing which answers the consumer's questions: Why should I choose you? Why should I listen to you? Think:

  • What’s in your wallet -- Capital One
  • The most trusted name in news – CNN
  • Fair and balanced - Fox News
  • Where’s the beef -- Wendy’s
  • You’re in good hands -- Allstate
  • The ultimate driving machine -- BMW

The Power of Truth® is registered at the federal trademark level in all applicable trademark classes, and the sale and assignment includes the applicable domain names. The buyer will have both the trademark and the domains so that it will control its business landscape without downrange interference.

Contact: Truth@ThePowerOfTruth.com

'He Was Alive': Doctor Recounts Live Organ HarvestingChina is proposing a deal to fund a nearly $3 billion dam project, located in Silicon Valley’s largest water district. What’s motivating the investment? Land grabs, cyber malware, and spies: a communist threat is operating right under our noses, and it’s known as the Chinese Communist Party. Unlike dangers posed by a real war, Beijing’s “weapon” doesn’t take the form of a swift invasion, but rather, a long-term infiltration. Just how deep does the rabbit hole go? Topics in this episode: China Offers to Fund Silicon Valley Dam China’s More Than 300 Foreign Dams and Why Beijing Is Funding Them China’s Stake in the American Power Grid U.S. Countering Chinese Buy Ups of U.S. Land With Bills Influence at China’s Fingertips: Why the U.S. Wants to Ban TikTok China’s Huawei’s New Phone Triggers Concerns Are Electric Cars a Chinese Hacking Risk? ‘Generation That Doesn’t Know What’s Right or Wrong’: Frances Hui on Hong Kong’s Youth Under CCP Control ...

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Beijing Exerts Influence Overseas Through Three Types of Media Outlets: China AnalystA China analyst says Beijing primarily uses three types of media outlets to exert influence overseas and extend control over the Chinese diaspora. He also raised concerns about repeated meetings between Chinese diplomats in Canada and some media outlets that consistently portray the communist regime in a favourable light in their news reporting. Victor Ho, former chief editor of Sing Tao Daily, delineated the three categories of media: overseas branches of Chinese state media, outlets originally from Hong Kong that have succumbed to Beijing’s influence, and overseas media created by Beijing-aligned Chinese groups. “Bringing media leaders and representatives to the consulate signifies that [the meeting is taking place in] an area under Chinese Communist Party (CCP) control,” Mr. Ho said in an interview....

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Movie Exposes Chinese Cybercrime in BurmaThe crime action movie “No More Bets” has been a hit in Chinese theaters this summer for portraying Chinese cybercrime in Burma. Criminal syndicates reportedly lure and kidnap Chinese citizens and force them to work for cybercrime groups, which allegedly have ties with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), according to a U.S. report. According to data released on Aug. 28 by Maoyan, China’s most prominent movie box office analysis platform, “No More Bets” has consistently topped ticket sales for the fourth consecutive weekend with gross revenue exceeding 3.4 billion yuan (about $467 million). The movie struck a chord with the Chinese audience, as cases of Chinese people being lured out of the country and trafficked to Burma (also known as Myanmar) to work as scammers have been widely reported....

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The company logo on the headquarters of China Evergrande Group in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China, on Sept. 26, 2021. (Aly Song/Reuters)Is the “Chinese miracle” fading to black? The world’s second-largest economy is grappling with a plethora of different challenges. The country is facing below-trend economic growth, a plummeting currency, rising youth unemployment, shrinking manufacturing activity, and a property sector seeped in financial problems. China is wrestling with “huge structural problems” that threaten the overall economic moving forward, says Nicholas Lardy, the non-resident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE), adding that Beijing will unlikely see growth rates of 8 or 9 percent again. “The boom is over,” Mr. Lardy said. Last year, the Chinese economy reported an annual growth rate of 3 percent. In 2021 and 2020, it was 8.4 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively. Since growing more than 14 percent in 2007, GDP growth has been on a downward trajectory....

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