Friday, September 30, 2022

Time to Investigate the FBI’s Sketchy CHS Program

Confidential human sources serve an important purpose in the modern-day FBI: to advance a political narrative beneficial to the Democratic Party and Biden regime. 


To the surprise of no one paying attention, the Department of Justice recently acknowledged the use of several FBI informants in its investigation of the Oath Keepers, an alleged militia group tied to the events of January 6. 

Prosecutors last week asked for a protective order to conceal from jurors information about confidential human sources (CHS) expected to testify during the seditious conspiracy trial of five members of the Oath Keepers; jury selection is now underway. Not only does the government want to prevent defense attorneys from asking personal questions that could reveal the informants’ identities but prosecutors don’t want the sources to publicly disclose any involvement in past or pending criminal investigations or details of “the FBI’s CHS program and the training and methods used by the FBI as part of their undercover operations.”

That request, of course, is to protect the bureau, not informants, in what appears to be just another corrupt, political, and unaccountable section of the FBI. 

For example, court filings in Special Counsel John Durham’s probe into Russiagate just revealed that Igor Danchenko, a subsource for the infamous Steele dossier now facing perjury charges, was hired by the FBI in March 2017 as an informant to shield the agency from questions about the dossier’s credibility in the early stages of the scandal. “[The] bureau put him on its payroll as a confidential human source, or CHS, making him part of the bureau’s untouchable ‘sources and methods’ sanctum and thereby protecting him and any documents referencing him from congressional and other outside scrutiny,” investigative reporter Paul Sperry wrote this week.

The FBI-hatched plot to “kidnap” Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer involved numerous informants working out of multiple FBI field offices. At trial, informants and agents confessed the rules were broken in the process of engineering the caper; violations included sharing a bed with a target, suggesting “overt acts” to produce incriminating evidence, and initiating the lead informant into a fake militia to advance the plot. Another longtime informant—a convicted felon many times over—committed at least two crimes while working the Whitmer fednapping ruse and was accused by the government of acting as a “double agent.”

None of this is necessarily news inside the department. An investigation by the Justice Department’s watchdog, Inspector General Michael Horowitz, identified “significant weaknesses with certain aspects of the FBI’s CHS program,” and spelled those out in a 2019 report. Oversight of both long-term sources and case-specific informants fell short of department standards, “creating a risk that CHSs are not adequately scrutinized.” FBI handling agents also failed to safeguard highly classified CHS material and often didn’t use secured lines of communication.

All this ineptitude doesn’t come cheap to American taxpayers. Horowitz found that the FBI spent an average of $42 million annually between 2012 and 2018 on informants—and that’s paid out in cash with little to no accountability. 

Dan Chappel, the lead informant in the Whitmer fednapping, received at least $60,000 in cash and personal items for roughly seven months’ work; the bureau even compensated Chappel for a loss after selling his home. Two months after six men were arrested for conspiring to kidnap Whitmer, an FBI agent handed Chappel an envelope with at least $23,000 in cash, presumably for a mission accomplished. (Agents could point would-be informants to financial incentives as a reason to become a source.)

“Some counterterrorism CHSs make hundreds of thousands of dollars,” Kyle Seraphin, an FBI whistleblower who worked in the bureau’s counterrorism division, told American Greatness by phone on Thursday. “Agents give piles of cash to their informants with five and six-figure payouts. And the informants working in criminal cases aren’t always upstanding citizens, Seraphin said. “Most are scumbags, usually. It’s rare you find one with a nine to five job.”

FBI agents are required to keep at least one source on the books, which often leads to problems for long-term informants. “They become needy, they call in the middle of the night, they get arrested,” Seraphin explained. “Sources are a pain in the ass.”

But CHSs serve an important purpose in the modern-day FBI: to advance a political narrative beneficial to the Democratic Party and Biden regime, particularly the existence of “domestic violent extremists,” i.e., Trump supporters. 

“Informants really push to hold together groups that don’t want to be together. The FBI keeps using [informants] as a hub in a wheel,” Seraphin said. Deploying informants also allows for the introduction of FBI undercover agents, which puts in motion a multifaceted effort that ultimately involves U.S. attorneys, FBI supervising agents, intelligence analysts, and main Justice if it’s associated with a suspected domestic terror attack.

The result, more often than not, Seraphin said, is the equivalent of entrapment. “There’s a moral definition that we all feel is entrapment but the legal definition is not the same. It’s predatory. People are building [their] FBI careers on predatory investigations of people who probably just need mental health care. They find the person they don’t like, then find the crime. It’s what they know, and it’s effective.”

This certainly was the case in the Whitmer fednapping scheme. Dozens of supervising agents, undercover employees, and informants stitched together the random group of outliers—the alleged ringleader, Adam Fox, lived alone in the dilapidated cellar of a strip mall vacuum repair shop without running water or a toilet—then organized training and surveillance trips to produce evidence before luring them to an arrest site in Ypsilanti, Michigan on October 7, 2020

But a Grand Rapids jury in April—Seraphin said these investigations rarely get to the prosecution stage—acquitted two men and ended with a hung jury for two others after the defense convinced jurors their clients had been entrapped by the FBI. (A second trial resulted in the conviction of the remaining defendants thanks to interference by the judge.) 

In a scathing closing argument during the first trial, Christopher Gibbons, Fox’s public defender, denounced the FBI’s conduct as “unacceptable in America. That’s not how it works. They don’t make terrorists so we can arrest them.”

Unfortunately, that is precisely what’s happening in America, and it’s beyond unacceptable—it threatens national security as the FBI ignores legitimate dangers and destroys innocent lives. Further, the definition of “domestic terrorism” is statutorily vague so it can apply to minor infractions in the Capitol protest, even for those who had no intention or knowledge that they were committing a crime. Absurd charges such as obstruction, conspiracy, and “parading” in the Capitol, a petty offense, are the equivalent of blowing up a jetliner or federal office building, according to the Biden regime. 

And propping up the phony narrative requires the use of sketchy informants, often working at the direction of equally sketchy FBI handlers. Forcing the government to tell the whole truth in court about the CHS program undoubtedly will expose another crisis-level scandal at the irredeemably corrupt Federal Bureau of Investigation.  




X22, On the Fringe, and more- Sept 30

 



Soooo relieved this month is over! Here's tonight's news:



Will the Conservative Momentum at the Supreme Court Continue This Term?


The U.S. Supreme Court begins hearing cases for its new term, following its customary summer recess, on Monday, Oct. 3. If this Court term is anything like the most recent one, conservatives and constitutionalists will rejoice. This most recent term, conservatives achieved secured massive wins on abortion (Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization), gun rights (New York State Rifle and Pistol Assn. Inc. v. Bruen), and religious liberty (Carson v. Makin and Kennedy v. Bremerton School District), and another key win on rolling back the administrative state (West Virginia v. EPA). 

Now, with such grotesque precedents as Roe v. Wade and Lemon v. Kurtzman properly overturned, will the Court continue to move rightward? Put another way, was the 2021-2022 Supreme Court term a mere blip on the radar, or the beginning of a broader, meaningful conservative legal restoration?

While it is unclear, and there are fewer “culture war”-centric cases on the docket this term than there were last term, there is still reason for cautious optimism in some of the marquee impending cases.

The biggest cases before the Court this term, perhaps by far, are the two cases pertaining to noxious race-conscious affirmative action admissions policies at universities: Students for Fair Admissions Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, which will apply to private universities, and the sister case of Students for Fair Admissions Inc. v. University of North Carolina, which will apply to public universities. The two cases had been “consolidated” together, meaning they were to be decided in unison, before then being “de-consolidated” to permit Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson—who will have to recuse herself from the Harvard case—to participate in at least one of them. But the legal issues are effectively identical, so the two cases should come out the same way.

The Court most recently upheld race-conscious university admissions policies in the 2003 case of Grutter v. Bollinger, in which Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s majority opinion explicitly stated that “race-conscious admissions policies must be limited in time,” and added that the “Court expects that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer be necessary to further the interest approved today.” 

In fact, not only did the Grutter Court presciently telegraph its own ruling’s possible demise in the twin SFFA cases, but affirmative action is also one rare area where even Chief Justice John Roberts has shined as a voice of sanity. After all, Roberts joined Justice Samuel Alito’s anti-affirmative action dissent in 2016’s Fisher v. University of Texas, and earlier penned perhaps his most famous line in the 2007 race-conscious education case of Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

There is thus a very strong chance the Court finally ends vile affirmative action policies—which, contra Black Lives Matter propaganda, represent the genuine last remnants of “systemic racism” in America—this term. The ultimate cherry on top would be if Justice Clarence Thomas, a long-time archfoe of race-conscious admissions policies, writes the majority opinions in the two SFFA cases, formally overturning both Grutter and 1978’s Regents of the University of California v. Bakke and thus sending “systemic racism” to the ash heap of history. Let’s hope he gets that opportunity.

The other big “culture war” case this coming term is a First Amendment, religious liberty-adjacent case out of Colorado: 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis. Sound familiar? It should: The Court ruled on a similar case out of Colorado just five terms ago, in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. But in Masterpiece Cakeshop, the Justice Anthony Kennedy-led Court majority issued an extremely narrow ruling that redounded to Christian cake baker Jack Phillips’ case-specific free exercise interest, but failed to render a constitutionally meaningful judgment about the thorny intersection of nondiscrimination law, freedom of speech, and freedom of religion. 

The fact that the Court granted certiorari in 303 Creative LLC and opted to hear the case, especially coming so soon after Masterpiece Cakeshop and due to the Court’s notable personnel changes since 2018, strongly suggests that the Court is prepared to issue a more sweeping ruling. Here, that would entail ruling in favor of Lorie Smith’s claim that her creation of a wedding planning website is constitutionally tantamount to “pure speech”—and that her website’s commercial activity thus falls under the First Amendment’s strong protective ambit. 

Tenth Circuit Judge Timothy Tymkovich wrote a powerful and inspiring dissent last year when the case reached his appeals court panel; that dissent could, and should, serve as a template for the Supreme Court’s majority opinion. Such a majority opinion in 303 Creative LLC would represent the Court’s long-overdue constitutional validation of religious dissenters’ claim, at least on compelled speech doctrine grounds, from the oppressive forces of “wokeism” and gender ideology. A similarly definitive pro-religious liberty ruling on the intersection of nondiscrimination law and free exercise of religion—in particular, the possible overturning of the contested 1990 case, Employment Division v. Smith—will still wait for another day.

There is less red meat on the docket this Supreme Court term than there was last term, but there is still plenty ahead to look forward to. Above all, the demise of the monstrosity that is modern America’s racist affirmative action regime would be an epochal step in bringing America closer in line with her noble, race-neutral Founding ideals.




Court Delivers Big Decision in FOIA Case Against the FBI Pertaining to Seth Rich


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

People have been using FOIA requests for several years now, going back to 2017, to pursue whatever information that the FBI might have regarding Seth Rich, the young DNC staffer who was murdered in 2016.But for years, the FBI fought those requests.

Now, the FOIA efforts may just have yielded some success, as the lawyer who writes the Techno Fog Substack explained, in a decision delivered in the Eastern District of Texas in the case of Huddleston v. FBI that discussed two different FOIA matters.

In one case, they claimed there were no responsive requests–until it was discovered in another case, asking for basically the same information, that there were, indeed, 1,596 responsive documents. But even then, the FBI tried to withhold 1,469 pages, claiming that various exemptions should apply to the pages so that they wouldn’t have to turn them over–including such things as privacy and national security reasons.

National security reasons? Do tell.

They also said it was “to protect intelligence methods utilized by the FBI for gathering intelligence data,” and that it could cause “serious or exceptionally grave damage” to the national security of the United States for the following reasons:

[D]isclosure would allow hostile entities to discover the current intelligence gathering methods used by the FBI; (2) disclosure would reveal current specific targets of the FBI’s national security investigations; and (3) disclosure would reveal the determination of the criteria used and priorities assigned to current intelligence and counterintelligence investigations” (Fourth Seidel Declaration ¶ 83).

“Unfortunately, the court won’t require the production of this information,” Technofog noted.

But although the Court held for the FBI in most of the issues raised, the Court did find against the FBI when it came to the matter of Seth Rich’s laptop, which the FBI was also fighting not to turn over.

The FBI also withheld the contents of Seth Rich’s personal laptop, which it possesses, in its entirety, alleging the privacy of Rich’s family in “preventing the public release of this information” outweighs the public interest in disclosure.

The court rejected that argument, stating “the FBI has not satisfied its burden of showing more than a de minimis privacy interest that would justify withholding information from Seth Rich’s laptop.”

The Court ordered the FBI to turn over the contents of Rich’s laptop within two weeks.

Now, the FBI will doubtless appeal this order and drag this out a bit further. But why would they give a darn about Rich’s laptop and fight to keep it from being turned over? I don’t know what’s on the laptop, but add this to one more thing that the FBI refuses to be transparent about.




CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC/AP) - Hurricane Ian officially made landfall Friday afternoon just south of Georgetown as a Category 1 storm, the National Hurricane Center said.

 




A hurricane warning that extends across the entire South Carolina coastline from the Savannah River to Little River Inlet was issued on Thursday.

A hurricane watch remains in effect for portions of the Lowcountry in addition to tropical storm warnings and watches already in effect.

The hurricane watch covers the South Carolina coast from the Charleston-Georgetown County line south to the South Carolina-Georgia line. The same area, which includes Charleston, coastal Coastal Colleton, Beaufort and coastal Jasper Counties, is also under a Storm Surge Warning.

 

Charleston, Berkeley, Beaufort, Coastal Colleton and Jasper Counties are now under a tropical storm warning, meaning tropical storm-force winds are expected within 36 hours. Dorchester and inland Colleton Counties were placed under a tropical storm watch Tuesday night as well.

A storm surge watch is also in effect for Charleston, coastal Colleton and Beaufort Counties.

A tropical storm watch is issued when a tropical cyclone containing winds of 39 to 73 mph or higher poses a possible threat, generally within 48 hours. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. The watch does not mean that tropical storm conditions will occur. It only means that these conditions are possible.

The National Hurricane Center says a storm surge watch is defined as the possibility of life-threatening inundation from rising water moving inland from the shoreline somewhere within the specified area, generally within 48 hours, in association with a tropical, subtropical, or post-tropical cyclone.

Preliminary forecasts show that two to four feet of peak storm surge is possible Thursday or Friday.

Ian regained its hurricane status Thursday afternoon

At 11 a.m., the center of Tropical Storm Ian was located near latitude 32.4 North, longitude 79 West, which is about 60 miles away from the coast of Charleston.

Ian is moving toward the north near 14 mph. Ian is forecast to move more quickly toward the north Friday followed by a turn toward the north-northwest by Friday night.

On the forecast track, Ian will approach the coast of South Carolina on Friday. The center will move farther inland across eastern South Carolina and central North Carolina Friday night and Saturday.

Maximum sustained winds remain near 85 mph with higher gusts. Ian is expected to rapid weakening after landfall.

Ian is forecast to become an extratropical low over North Carolina Friday night or on Saturday. The low is then expected to dissipate by Saturday night.  

https://www.live5news.com/2022/09/30/watch-live-first-alert-hurricane-ian-makes-landfall-near-georgetown/ 

GOP Senators Baffled By Mitt Romney’s Ploy To Oust Mike Lee — And Maybe Thwart A Majority

If Democrats could pull off an upset in Utah, it would have profound consequences for the control of the Senate — and the rest of the country.



Republican senators are growing concerned by colleague Mitt Romney’s refusal to help fellow Utah Republican Mike Lee decisively win his re-election campaign — a posture that could potentially keep their party from gaining a majority in the November elections. Unlike every other Republican senator, the 2012 failed Republican presidential candidate is declining to express a preference in Republican Lee’s re-election effort against Democrat-endorsed Evan McMullin.

“I respect [Romney], and I understand that each state has its own dynamics, but I do not understand why he is remaining neutral,” said one Republican senator who asked not to be identified. “Whatever our differences, we all try to support each other around election time.”

Both moderate and conservative senators confirmed the grumbling in the conference. “We should not have to be worried about Utah in any way. I don’t know what he thinks he’s doing, but it’s not going over well, particularly with the [senators] who are up for chairmanships,” said another Republican senator. Neither Lee nor Romney responded to inquiries by press time.

new poll from Deseret News and the Hinckley Institute of Politics claims McMullin is only 2 percentage points behind Lee, with a full 16 percent of respondents unsure who they will vote for. The poll is admittedly somewhat difficult to believe, and not just because it was conducted by a pollster with a history of dramatically overstating the electoral appeal of McMullin. The group’s final 2016 poll, for example, showed McMullin losing Utah’s presidential contest by only 2 points to Donald Trump. The final result was that Trump bested McMullin, who actually came in third behind Hillary Clinton, by 25 points.

Even so, the poll suggests the strategy McMullin shared with left-wing allies at The Washington Post and other corporate media — building a coalition of Democrats, independents, and Romney and his supporters — is working at least somewhat according to plan.

In February, The Washington Post stated the obvious: Romney refusing to endorse fellow Republican Lee would be a “boon” for McMullin and would make it much “harder for Lee to consolidate the votes of moderate Republicans.”

Democrats also joined in the coordinated effort to help their party maintain control of the Senate, declining to nominate their own candidate Kael Weston and instead endorsing independent McMullin.

“It is disappointing to see Senator Romney take a back seat in his in-state colleague’s race as Senator Mike Lee enjoys broad support from voters across Utah and the country,” said Jessica Anderson, president of the Sentinel Action Fund, a political action committee associated with conservative issue group Heritage Action for America. “Conservatives should utilize every tool possible to take back the Senate, starting with supporting incumbent Senators in important races.”

Romney claimed he couldn’t possibly endorse in the race because he is friends with both candidates, though it’s unclear why he thought his previously unannounced friendship with McMullin would be harmed by him supporting Republican incumbents and nominees, as all other Republican politicians do.

The Washington Post’s Henry Olsen scoffed at Romney’s line about friends. “That’s sweet, but party loyalty matters, too. It’s one thing to disagree within one’s own party; that’s what primaries are for. It’s another to say that one is going to stay out of a general election and essentially tell your own state’s voters that there’s no difference between your party’s nominee and someone backed by your party’s adversaries. If that’s friendship, Lee should start finding better friends,” he wrote in March.

Romney’s refusal to support Lee, and support his party’s message that they have better solutions to what ails the country than their Democrat counterparts, is making other Republican senators doubt his loyalty to them, observers say.

“If you’re not going to have the back of your colleague in your state who is a fellow Republican, how will I know you’ll have my back?” said one senior Republican staffer, describing the thinking of the conference. “It creates a certain amount of awkwardness in the conference as a whole.”

When he first publicly announced his decision not to endorse his fellow Republican, Romney might not have imagined that Democrats would join the McMullin effort. Romney is about as popular with Democrats as he is with Republicans in Utah, holding roughly half of each group’s support. His refusal to endorse in a three-way race would have likely had little substantive effect on who won. But a refusal to endorse a two-way race is much more significant.

Romney also might not have realized how vitriolic a campaign would be waged by his friend McMullin, who has called the constitutional conservative Lee a “conman,” pushed conspiracy theories, and supported disinformation campaigns against Republicans.

All of this has Romney’s Republican colleagues concerned, and not just for Lee, but for themselves.

Polls show Republicans on track to do well in November, but with several incredibly tight contests. If Democrats were able to pull off an upset in Utah, it would have profound consequences for the control of the Senate, and the policies facing the country.

If McMullin and other Democrat-endorsed politicians were able to keep control of the Senate, that would mean Bernie Sanders would chair the United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions rather than Rand Paul. Gary Peters would be the chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee instead of James Lankford. The powerful Judiciary Committee would be helmed by Dick Durbin, not Lindsey Graham. And Maria Cantwell, instead of Ted Cruz, would chair the Commerce Committee.

Both moderate and conservative senators expressed disagreement with Romney’s work in support of Democrats. Several noted the potential unexpected consequences of his alleged neutrality in the race. One of Romney’s close friends is fellow moderate Susan Collins of Maine. If Romney’s stunt were successful, two senators highlighted, it would mean that Patty Murray of Washington, rather than Collins, would chair the powerful Appropriations Committee.

A longtime independent, Romney was the Republican governor of Massachusetts and a Republican nominee for president. In that presidential run, beset by doubts from voters about how conservative a Republican he was, he claimed to be “severely conservative” and to have had a change of opinion in favor of protecting unborn lives from abortion.

McMullin was the figurehead of a 2016 coordinated effort to depress Republican votes for the GOP nominee in a bid to elect Hillary Clinton as president. At that time, he claimed to be motivated by concern that Donald Trump was not pro-life enough and would not do enough to overturn Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion on demand. After a report that Trump’s three appointments to the Supreme Court helped overturn Roe, McMullin put out a statement critical of their work.




Congress Passes Funding Stopgap Bill To Avoid Ukrainian Government Shutdown


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WASHINGTON, D.C. — In the nick of time, Congress has passed a bipartisan $12 billion funding bill, narrowly avoiding a Ukrainian government shutdown.

"As elected representatives chosen by the people, it is our solemn duty, as outlined in the Constitution, to fully fund the Ukrainian government at all times," said Senator Chuck Schumer. "We humbly accept this sacred responsibility to send billions to Ukraine, who will send it to Raytheon, who will send it to super PACs, who will help us get elected. It's the right thing to do."

President Zelensky took a few moments in between magazine glamour shoots to thank America for her generosity. "We promise we will put this vast, vast wealth to good use," he said while checking the time on his new Girard-Perregaux Quasar Light Tourbillon wristwatch. "We know that Americans get up and go to work every day hoping that some of their money is used to kill Russians. I'm proud to be making their dreams come true."

Congress estimates the stopgap bill will keep Ukraine funded for at least two weeks, or until their super PACs run out of money.



Where’s Bruce Willis when you need him?

“Watch Me.” – Joe Biden on “60 Minutes” 9/18/22 

Maybe the White House should fire the incompetent press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and replace her with Bruce Willis.

I mean, if anybody would know how to explain why Grandpa Biden thought a woman who died nearly two months ago should have been at a White House function yesterday, it would be Bruce Willis.

At least Bruce Willis has experience dealing with those who see dead people.

Only, instead of “The Sixth Sense,” Bruce’s new assignment would be “The Forty-Sixth Sense.”

I know this is an exercise in futility, but imagine Donald Trump forgetting that a member of Congress was killed in a car accident two months earlier.

Holy smokes, the calls for invoking the 25th Amendment would be coming from every quarter.

But Joe Biden hunts the audience for a woman who was killed weeks before, and the same people who would have demanded Trump be ousted are making excuses for the senile old crock.

When the clip went viral (currently there are over 4 million views), some knob-heads rushed to protect Peepaw.

“There are 435 members of the House. Biden can’t be expected to remember all of them!!!!”

On August 3, the day Jackie Walorski and three others were killed in that car accident, the White House released a statement from the President that began:

“Jill and I are shocked and saddened by the death of Congresswoman Jackie Walorski of Indiana.”

So shocked and saddened by her death that Joe completely forgot about her death.

Speaking of knob-heads, after Biden noted that Jackie was skipping yesterday’s event, those idiots that run the Twitter account “Occupy Democrats,” quickly tweeted:

“Radical Rightwing Republican Jackie Walorski skips White House forum on hunger initiative. She also was unable to be reached for comment about her act of defiance. RT IF YOU ARE TIRED OF THE CONSTANT DISRESPECT OF PRESIDENT BIDEN!!!”

Needless to say, after discovering that she couldn’t be reached for comment BECAUSE SHE IS DEAD, the morons deleted the tweet.

If they wanted her comment, perhaps Occupy Democrats should’ve gotten in touch with Bruce Willis.

Honestly, how do those idiots from Occupy Democrats manage to get through a day without a cartoon anvil dropping on their heads?

But nobody was a bigger idiot than Karine Jean-Pierre.

In a surprising turn of events, the White House reporters actually grilled Jean-Pierre about Biden hunting the crowd for a woman who had been dead for nearly two months. And that in-over-her-head press secretary managed to make the situation a thousand times worse.

Rather than simply admit that the president forgot Jackie Walorski had died and then issue a humble apology, Jean-Pierre made a right mess of things by trying to act as if there is absolutely nothing weird about what Biden did.

Newsbusters’ Curtis Houck chronicled the Q&A from yesterday’s press briefing. And I’ll admit, every clip is agonizing to watch:

Good heavens. Are you cringing? I’m cringing.

Frankly, I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if the White House announces the imminent departure of Karine Jean-Pierre after this.

Her job is to minimize the destruction caused by Joe Biden’s mashed potato brain, not make it worse.

Say, remember what Joe said last weekend when Scott Pelley of “60 Minutes” asked him what he thinks when people say he’s unfit to serve as president?

“Watch me.”

Whelp, we’re watching, Joe.

And the only pudding here is between your ears.