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DataRepublican (small r) @DataRepublican - You aren't going to like this post, but it needs to be said about Vance Bolter.
At first, I assumed Vance Boelter was just another grifter in the NGO/activist space. He built a fake resume, floated around volunteer gigs, and set up shell organizations for clout. His "Red Lion Group" has no real paper trail. His side business in "security services" looks like a cash grab. 
But the more I dug, the more different it looks.
Boelter was a 7/11 manager, but constantly promoted himself as a corporate executive. He claims the title "Dr." based on a Ed.D. in Leadership. He chased every opportunity to get in front of an audience: volunteering for Governor Walz's "Workforce Development" initiatives, speaking at conferences, anything to be seen as a leader.
And in videos of him in African churches, you see him light up. He's performing. He's preaching vague, positive platitudes to foreign audiences. He wanted to be somebody. He wanted to be followed.
There's good reason to believe that @JamesHartline is right... he was remodeling that building below into a church. Not to serve Jesus, but as a stage for an audience that would never come. 
I think he is a man addicted to attention and status, who tried to get it through a lot of means. And when that attention dried up (possibly whoever cut him off his funding in Congo), he snapped.
I believe Vance Boelter committed violence as a last, desperate attempt to be glorified: under the delusion that killing abortion rights activists would make him a martyr or hero.
This is not Christianity. I watched his sermons. They were designed to provoke emotional applause, not spiritual conviction. 
His actions contradict the standard Jesus gave us to recognize false prophets:
"By their fruits you will know them." – Matthew 7:15–20
Boelter bore no good fruit. Just narcissism, manipulation, and ultimately violence. He wasn't an evangelical or MAGA. He was a man who couldn't stand being ordinary.
https://x.com/DataRepublican/status/1934256121394712998

DataRepublican (small r) @DataRepublican - Vince Boelter has an interesting property history in Pierson, Iowa. Separately, he bought a house in Green Isle, MN for $520,000 in 2023 and seems to have a couple other properties there. Unclear if the Minnesota properties were purchased with cash.
https://x.com/DataRepublican/status/1933957110183931985

DataRepublican (small r) @DataRepublican - This is THE database of who's involved in NoKings protests. Download the spreadsheet within.
I'm going to be consuming it today and adding it to my financing flow.
Quote
Asra Nomani @AsraNomani
EXCLUSIVE. Who is funding the anti-Trump #NoKings protests? It's 198 companies with $2.1 billion in revenues. 
WATCH and READ to learn.
I wanted to hear it straight from the source—so on Tuesday, I tuned into a live town hall with @AFTunion ’s @RWeingarten , @TheRevAl Sharpton from @NationalAction, and @LeahGreenbergB of @IndivisibleTeam. 
They proudly laid out the nationwide anti-Trump protests they’ve planned for this Saturday, June 14, under the banner #NoKings.
I recorded the town hall—and I’m sharing the video with you here.
They admit they’re organizing these protests. And they’re not grassroots players. These are top-tier Democratic Party operatives, with enormous influence and funding.
But when I started following the money behind the full list of protest "partners," I realized that these three are just the tip of the iceberg.
According to research by the Pearl Project—a nonprofit journalism initiative I lead, named in honor of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl—the 198 organizations that say they are organizers of the #NoKings protests are not just grassroots citizens. They're all aligned with the Democratic Party, and many claim to be “nonpartisan” despite acting as political operatives.
Together, these groups report more than $2.1 BILLION in total annual revenue.
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