5/30/26
This is another compilation of additional actions that Tore Maras (
@idontexistTore) has highlighted in her recent series which people can take to free humanity. Tore’s articles must be read and understood, this is just a summary. The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.
Most of these don’t take much time to do, and the effect will change the world. From experience, once you take an action such as these, others become easier and you realize that you are having a direct effect on what happens in the world.
All credit goes to Tore, and everyone who wants a future for the next generations should read her articles, and take action.
#SpectatorOrParticipant
Actions from “The Fauci Files” (The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.)
The Fauci Files, Part VII:
toresays.com/2026/05/28/the-…
Read and “form an independent judgment about what the federal scientific apparatus did and did not do during the pandemic.”
Part VII: House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic
Final Report (December 2, 2024): After Action Review of the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Lessons Learned and a Path Forward. 520 pages. Published at
oversight.house.gov.
Subcommittee Memorandum on the Proximal Origin Paper (March 5, 2023): Email exhibits documenting the February 2020 teleconference, draft circulation, and Fauci/Collins/Farrar involvement. Published at
oversight.house.gov.
Fauci Transcribed Interview Transcript (January 8–9, 2024): Fourteen hours of sworn testimony, released June 2024 with accompanying Subcommittee memorandum. Published at
oversight.house.gov.
Morens Public Hearing (May 22, 2024): Hearing transcript and exhibits, including the FOIA-evasion emails and the "Marg Moore" disclosures. Published at
oversight.house.gov.
Tabak Public Hearing (May 16, 2024): Hearing transcript containing the formal gain-of-function admission. Published at
oversight.house.gov.
Wenstrup Press Releases: Sequential public-record statements on the EcoHealth obstruction, the Morens subpoena, the FOIA-evasion findings, and the request for access to Fauci's personal accounts.
Part VII: U.S. Department of Justice
Indictment of David M. Morens (filed April 16, 2026; unsealed April 28, 2026): Five counts — conspiracy against the United States (18 U.S.C. § 371); destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in a federal investigation; concealment, removal, or mutilation of records; aiding and abetting. Published at
justice.gov.
DOJ Office of Public Affairs Press Release (April 28, 2026): Acting AG Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel statements. Published at
justice.gov/opa.
Part VII: Other Primary Records
"The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2," Andersen et al., Nature Medicine, March 17, 2020.
Tabak letter to House Oversight Chairman James Comer (October 20, 2021) regarding NIH-funded gain-of-function-related experiments at WIV.
White House press briefing transcripts (April 17, 2020) documenting Fauci's public citation of the Proximal Origin paper.
Presidential Pardon Proclamation (January 20, 2025): Preemptive pardon of Dr. Anthony Fauci, federal record.
Burdick v. United States, 236 U.S. 79 (1915): Governing Supreme Court precedent on the legal effect of acceptance of a presidential pardon.
Actions from “The Harvest” (The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.)
The Harvest, Part V:
toresays.com/2026/05/25/the-…
Part V: Mandate national guardianship data collection. (Federal)
Part V: Condition federal funds on guardianship due-process protections. (Federal)
Part V: Hold the congressional hearing on for-profit psychiatric commitment. (Federal)
Part V: Enact the Uniform Guardianship Act (UGCOPAA) reforms. (State)
Part V: Require a court order for any reproductive decision affecting a ward. (State)
Part V: Reform involuntary-commitment billing incentives. (State)
Part V: Adopt the "Free Britney" conservatorship-review model. (State)
Part V: Contact your state representative and your member of Congress and ask two questions: How many people are under guardianship in our state, and who counts them? and Does our state allow a guardian to make reproductive or commitment decisions without a court order?
The Harvest, Part VI:
toresays.com/2026/05/26/the-…
Part VI: Raise the civil penalty above the cost of compliance. (Federal)
Part VI: Bring the Smithsonian fully under NAGPRA. (Federal)
Part VI: Fully fund and staff the National NAGPRA Program and Review Committee. (Federal)
Part VI: Hold the named institutions to public account. (Federal)
Part VI: Pass a state repatriation law modeled on Illinois HB 3413. (State)
Part VI: Condition state university and museum funding on inventory completion. (State)
Part VI: Contact your state university and your state museum and ask: How many Native American ancestral remains do you hold, and how many have you returned? The ProPublica Repatriation Database lists nearly every institution by name and number — look up the ones in your state before you call, so you already know the answer when you ask. Then bring both the number and this article to your state representative. The institutions moved in 2024 because they were watched and forced. Watching is something a constituent can do.
The Harvest, Part VII:
toresays.com/2026/05/28/the-…
Part VII: Pass the body-broker regulation that does not yet exist. (Federal)
Part VII: Require informed consent that means what families think it means. (Federal)
Part VII: Close the prosecutorial gap on theft from lawful custody. (Federal)
Part VII: License body brokers the way tissue banks and funeral directors are licensed — and fund the inspectors. (Federal)
Part VII: Mandate an unbroken, auditable chain of custody for every body and part. (Federal)
Part VII: Bring corporate and private-equity ownership of body brokers into the light. (Federal)
Part VII: Regulate and inspect funeral homes — if you are among the states that still barely do. (State)
Part VII: Require notification before a body is declared unclaimed and routed for use. (State)
Part VII: Check the box yourself, and tell your family what "donation" can mean. Whole-body donation can be a genuine gift to medicine. But it is not the same as organ donation for transplant, and the two are constantly confused. If you or a relative consider donating a body, ask the program in writing: Will the body be sold or leased? Shipped where? Used for what? A legitimate program will answer. And when you read the next viral organ-harvesting story, do the one thing the hoaxes count on you not doing — look for the court record before you believe it or dismiss it.
Actions from “Who’s Watching the Water” (The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.)
Who’s Watching the Water:
toresays.com/2026/05/29/whos…
Submit a public comment. File before July 20, 2026 at
regulations.gov under Docket ID EPA-HQ-OW-2025-0654, or register to speak at the July 7 virtual hearing. Comments become part of the legal record.
Pressure your water utility. Ask whether it supports the American Water Works Association and Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies lawsuit — and demand it withdraw that support. Utilities answer to ratepayers.
Check your state, then push it. Roughly a dozen states — including Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin — have their own enforceable limits the federal rollback cannot touch. If yours does not, that is the fight to start at home.
Contact your state attorney general. Dozens are already suing the manufacturers and intervening to defend the federal rule. They work for you; tell them where you stand.
Test and filter your own water. Use a system certified for forever-chemical reduction — reverse osmosis or certified activated carbon. A filter protects your household. It does not fix the system, and it is not a substitute for the standard.
Tell Congress to codify the limits. A statute, unlike a rule, cannot be quietly withdrawn by the next administration. That is the permanent fix.
Actions from “The Province That Pays For The Corridor” (The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.)
The Province That Pays For The Corridor:
toresays.com/2026/05/30/the-…
Stop reading Pakistan attacks as periodic body counts. Every report that lists casualties without naming the strategic context — the corridor, the colonial grievance, the foreign-power competition — is missing the only thing that explains why the attacks recur. Ask the outlets you read why.
Read at least one piece of work by a Baloch writer or organization in the diaspora. The Baloch National Movement, the Human Rights Council of Balochistan, and a small number of independent journalists writing from exile produce the only sustained reporting on enforced disappearances, military operations, and civilian conditions. Their work is in English and freely available. The Pakistani official narrative is not the only one on offer.
Watch the corridor itself. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is the single most consequential geopolitical infrastructure project of the 2020s in South Asia, and its progress, its delays, and its suspensions are the most reliable indicator of how the insurgency is actually faring. Track which Chinese firms are pausing operations and which are expanding them. The corporate filings tell a different story than the press releases.
Distinguish the two insurgencies. The Pakistani Taliban operating in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Baloch separatists operating in Balochistan are not the same thing. They have different ideologies, different patrons, different targets, and different long-term aims. Coverage that conflates them flattens the analysis. Reject it when you see it.
Pay attention to Chinese-language sources where they are available in translation. Chinese state media and Chinese strategic analysts are increasingly forthright about the corridor's vulnerabilities. Their concerns are often more candid than what appears in English-language coverage of the same events.
Hold the United States position to scrutiny. Washington designates the BLA as a foreign terrorist organization while pursuing a strategic competition with China for which the BLA's actions are, in effect, useful. Whether those two positions are consistent is a fair question. Ask your representatives, in writing, what the actual American policy on the Baloch question is. The answers, if any, are worth reading carefully.
Remember the bomber was twenty-five. Bilal Shahwani. Killi Sarde. The Majeed Brigade. Whatever brought a twenty-five-year-old to a train carriage on Eid morning was not built in a week. It was built in a village, by conditions that have been documented for seventy years, and that nearly no Western outlet has been willing to look at. The names matter. The geography matters. The arithmetic of grievance, accumulated over generations, is what produces the arithmetic of the dead.
Actions from “Who’s Catching the Mothers?” (The actions are direct quotes from Tore’s articles.)
Who’s Catching the Mothers?:
toresays.com/2026/05/30/whos…
Find out where your county sits on the map. The March of Dimes maintains a free, searchable maternity-care-desert tool at
marchofdimes.org/peristats. If your county is a desert or low-access area, you already know one of the most important facts about its political future.
Look up your state Medicaid reimbursement rate for maternity care. It is public. Compare it to neighboring states. If yours is below the regional median, that is the single most actionable lever in this entire story, and your state legislators control it directly.
Ask your hospital system who owns it — and what its margins are. If the hospital closing your maternity ward sits inside a large nonprofit system, its tax filings are public on the IRS Form 990 and ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer. Compare executive compensation to the cost of staffing the unit. The numbers tell their own story.
Pressure your employer about its insurance plan. If your company's health plan refuses standby-capacity payments to rural hospitals, that is a benefits decision made by people in your building. Benefits managers respond to questions from employees.
Support the holdouts directly. Many of the rural hospitals still delivering babies are using philanthropic dollars to do it. They publish their giving pages. A small recurring donation to a small hospital is one of the few places where a single individual's money does measurably keep a labor and delivery unit open.
Call your member of Congress about the Medicaid cuts. The federal tax and policy law passed in 2025 is actively accelerating these closures. It can be amended. It is being amended in pieces already. The maternity provisions specifically can be restored.
If you are pregnant in a rural area, build the plan now. Identify the closest delivering hospital. Time the drive in normal traffic and in bad weather. Find a midwife or doula familiar with the route. Ask about postpartum follow-up before the birth, not after. The system is not designed to do this for you anymore; you must do it for yourself.