Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Do Democrats Hate Their Families Or Do Their Families Hate Them?


Nancy Pelosi just won’t retire. Why? I have no idea. She’s three years older than dirt and has been in Congress since the planet cooled, yet she’s still there. It can’t be that she wants to feed her husband even more insider stock tips; unless she’s discovered a way to load her Earthly fortune onto a debit card in Hell, she won’t be able to take it with her. So why won’t she, and so many other Democrats, just go away and retire like normal people do?

You really have to assume someone like Pelosi either doesn’t like her family or her family does not like her. Both options seem believable to me. 

But it’s not just Nancy, it’s so many of them. Joe Biden stayed long past his “use by” date because, well, if he’d retired his family would have had absolutely nothing to sell. What do they do for money when their sole reason for employment is no longer in a position that matters? 

The Bidens are in the process of finding out now, with Joe’s kids and siblings having, for the first time, to survive on their merit and abilities. Poor bastards.

Pelosi’s kids are rich – where Joe is dumb, Nancy is smart but evil. She racked up hundreds of millions of dollars through stock trades and options, mere mortals without the power of government and the ability to direct spending would never come close to getting. One of her kids is a marginal “documentary” filmmaker. Still, her movies are nothing special and literally nothing without the access being the daughter of the leader of the Democrats in the House affords her. As for the other kids, who cares? 

Remember Sherrod Brown? Probably not, unless you live in Ohio, and maybe even then, as he was a wildly ineffective Senator from there.

He lost the Senate seat he previously held to Republican Bernie Moreno by 3.5 points in 2024. He’s 72 years old. He’s the father of 2, presumably old enough to have kids of their own, making him a grandfather. Wouldn’t you think he’d like to spend the time he has left enjoying that time with family and friends? After all, he’s been working in Washington since 1993, which is a lot of time away from the people you claim to care about most.

Nope. 

Brown is running again, this time for the Senate seat vacated by Vice President JD Vance. Why? Because why not? What’s he gonna do, be with his wife? Yuck!

He announced he’s running, and just Monday alone, I received six emails from his campaign. Actually, I received six emails from his campaign between 11:26 am and 3:15 pm. He really wants money. 

Brown, who sounds like Cookie Monster, wrote in one of them, “I never planned to run for office again. But when I see what’s happening in Washington, I know I can’t stand on the sidelines. D.C. politicians are raising prices, gutting health care, and rigging the system to benefit their wealthy donors and corporate special interest friends. It’s government for the rich and powerful, always at the expense of workers. That’s why, today, I’m getting back in the fight: I’m announcing my campaign for U.S. Senate. I’m running to be a voice for Ohio families and to take on the billionaires and corporations that make it impossible for everyday folks to get ahead.”

Was there no one else in Ohio on the left to run? As a Michigander, there are no good people in Ohio. But you’d think the people there could cough up someone. 

But everything old is new again. Some people just don’t have the sense to go away.

It’s not just Democrats, Scott Brown is running for Senate (again) in New Hampshire. While he had been a Senator from Massachusetts, he lost and then ran in New Hampshire a few years later. Now he’s back, running anyway. Why? I have no idea.

Maybe these people genuinely believe the world can’t live without them, or maybe they don’t like their families and need a hobby. Whatever the case, we’d all be better off without the elite who are convinced that they and only they are capable of representing people they hire security to keep away from them. 

We don’t need them, they desperately need us. Those are the exact kind of people we should not allow anywhere near the levers of power. 



Ukraine war briefing: Zelenskyy entices Trump with $90bn arms buy in return for security

 

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Tuesday after his Washington meeting with Donald Trump and European leaders that security guarantees for Ukraine will likely be worked out within 10 days. He added that it would include the purchase for Ukraine of a package of US weapons. “There indeed is a package with our proposals worth $90bn,” Zelenskyy said. “And we have agreements with the US president that when our export opens, they will buy Ukrainian drones. This is important for us.”

  • Reports earlier suggested that Ukraine would promise to buy $100bn of US weapons financed by Europe – lucrative for US suppliers – as part of a deal to get guarantees from the US for its security if there is a peace settlement with Russia, according to reports. The Financial Times added that Ukraine and the US would also strike a $50bn deal to produce drones with Ukrainian companies. The drone news may partly repeat recent similar announcements. 

     

     Donald Trump said after talks with Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders on Monday that the US would oversee European security guarantees for Ukraine. “During the meeting we discussed security guarantees for Ukraine, which guarantees would be provided by the various European countries, with a coordination with the United States of America,” the US president posted. 

     

     Trump said he had begun to arrange an initial bilateral meeting between Zelenskyy, the Ukrainian president, and the Russian ruler, Vladimir Putin; to be followed by a trilateral meeting involving Trump as well. 

     

     

  • Friedrich Merz – the German chancellor and part of Zelenskyy’s European “bodyguard” detail in Washington – said Trump in a call with Putin had “agreed that there will be a meeting between the Russian president and the Ukrainian president within the next two weeks” with the venue still to be agreed upon.

  • Russia’s initial response to the idea of direct Putin-Zelenskyy talks was elliptical. Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov told the Tass news agency that Putin told Trump he was open to the “idea” of it. “The idea was discussed that it would be necessary to study the possibility of raising the level of representatives of the Ukrainian and Russian sides.” 

     

  • Zelenskyy told Ukrainian media outside the White House: “I confirmed – and all European leaders supported me – that we are ready for a bilateral meeting with Putin.” Putin has at all stages appeared deeply reluctant to face Zelenskyy personally; whereas Zelenskyy has been saying since Trump took office that he is ready for such a meeting.

  • Merz said Trump “noticed that we Europeans are speaking with one voice”. The Europeans and Americans would need to discuss who participates in the security guarantees and to what extent. “It’s completely clear that the whole of Europe should participate,” Merz said. “This is not just about the territory of Ukraine. It’s about the political order of Europe.”  

     

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/19/ukraine-war-briefing-zelenskyy-entices-trump-with-100bn-arms-deal-in-return-for-security 

     

     

  • Merz said Ukraine must not be forced to surrender its Donbas region to Russia, which “corresponds, to put it bluntly, to a proposal for the United States to have to give up Florida”.

  • France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, said: “President Trump believes we can get an agreement and believes that President Putin also wants a peace accord. But if at the end this process is met by refusal, we are also ready to say that we need to increase sanctions [on Russia].”  

     

     

     

  • Why Are Academics -- and Others -- So Nasty?


    We all know that our universities are the very last place to go if you want a free and open discussion of ideas. Only approved progressive ideas are permitted, and don’t you forget it.

    Nothing new really. I’m reading 1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus at the gym, and author Charles C. Mann is describing wars to the death fought by academics over the decades about various migration theories in the Americas and the all-important question of when modern humans first arrived here. There’s the Clovis theory:

    The "Clovis First" theory posited that the Clovis people, identified by their distinctive stone tools found near Clovis, New Mexico, were the first humans to colonize the Americas, arriving around 13,500 years ago via the Bering Land Bridge.

    The academicians were arguing over whether the Americas were populated by humans before the last Ice Age when the sea level dropped enough for humans to be able to walk across the Bering Strait.

    Divided the academics may be, but they are united in sneering at the efforts of amateurs grubbing around in the dirt on their farms and backyards without the trifecta of formal qualifications, government grants, and approved methods of analysis.

    It’s odd how humans fight to the death over ideas. I get the necessity of fighting to the death on the border against those who would dispossess and despoil us and rape our women. But why do religions all seem to agree upon the necessity of eliminating heretics? Is heresy a life-or-death issue? That goes in spades for our modern secular religions like communism. And why do all political regimes wage war on the opposition? Why do academics insist that all the professors in the university department hew to the same ideology of logic and reason and damn to Hell the professors of another university that profess the heresy of another ideology of logic and reason?

    Here’s Matt Johnson, a devoted regime supporter at Quillette and he’s writing about “Trump and the Necessity of Democratic Struggle.” Democratic struggle is okay when it’s Martin Luther King “demanding equal rights and dignity under the law,” but not when “one group demands special privileges on the basis of race, religion, or some other exclusive tribal characteristic.” You know who he is talking about:

    This is a central feature of Donald Trump’s MAGA movement, which explicitly calls for the elevation of some citizens and the marginalisation of others.

    Now I suppose if I were a college professor and a credentialed grantee of the Grant Industrial Complex, I would be outraged at the very idea of a MAGA movement: who do those far-right racists think they are! But really, does Matt not see that the last 60 years has been a non-stop movement by liberals to call “for the elevation of some citizens” -- regime-approved oppressed peoples -- “and the marginalization of others” -- regime-identified white oppressors? No, he doesn’t.

    Let us advance a theory to explain politics, religion, and academia, in One Big Beautiful Theory.

    Even though Nazi jurist Carl Schmitt differentiates between the political and the moral, writing that the political is about friends vs. enemies, and the moral is about good vs. evil, I think that it is clear that the worlds of politics and religion have usually intermingled down the ages. Let’s face it: friends are good, and enemies are evil. Political leaders always claim the support of God or the gods in their existential fight against the enemy. And religious leaders often need to deploy force in order to protect their church members from the evils of heretics and the eternal problem of the witches.

    Where do our academic friends fit into this witches’ brew? It’s simple, really. Universities down the ages used to be there for the education of priests, and to keep the heretics out. Then, with the rise of the educated class, all good people decided that political leaders needed an education in modern philosophy, and eventually even economics. Then, in the Napoleonic Wars the Prussians decided that, after two centuries of being beaten to a pulp by the French, the German people needed the research university to make Germany strong.

    So, academics have been politics-adjacent and religion-adjacent since olden times. They have adopted the culture of politics and spend all their days fighting ideological enemies, and also the culture of religion, eternally beating the bushes for evil heretics and MAGA witches. They can’t think of anything better to do?

    Now I believe that nothing is absolute. I believe, following Kant, that we cannot know things-in-themselves. But here’s a peculiar thing. Christianity has its Trinity. The first A-bomb was tested at Trinity Site. And quantum mechanics’ notion of quarks is all about the triplet. What is going on here? Is that the secret of the Universe? Three? They told us it was 42.



    The Reception That Putin Deserved


    You may not like him, but Vladimir Putin deserved the high-octane reception that he received in Alaska.

    One of the problems that Democrats and weak-kneed Republicans have is that they are always playing the wrong game. Imagine a baseball game. Team A’s goal is to have more runs at the end of nine innings than other guys have. That has traditionally been the goal of baseball: to win. Team B has a different program. While they also field nine guys and look serious in their uniforms, their goal is to face as many pitches as possible. One guy fouls off nine pitches before striking out. The next guy goes through 12 pitches before grounding out to first. They think they are winning; in fact, they are losing by all traditional metrics and are also losers.

    Let’s assume that Vladimir Putin is all the bad things that his detractors say:

    *He started the war in Ukraine (we’ll ignore why he started it)

    *He mistreats his political opponents, some of whom fall out of sixth-floor windows

    *His election is suspect as to its veracity

    *He is into “that macho thing” as Obama described him riding bareback, etc.

    *He is in cahoots with America’s enemies like Iran and China

    Let’s say it’s all true. He’s no Boy Scout and maybe he is a bona fide enemy of the U.S. With all that, he still deserved the red carpet, the rows of hi-tech planes and attack helicopters, the ride in the Beast, the B-2 flyover and the F-35 escort home. Why? Because improved U.S.-Russian relations benefit the U.S. enormously.

    The meeting that took place this past weekend in Alaska should have taken place in some form eight years ago. With the perfidy of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, there was no way that Donald Trump could make overtures to Vladimir Putin without further strengthening the fake “Russian collusion” narrative. Putin himself said that had Trump been reelected in 2020, there would have been no war. Why? The people in the Biden administration still had Russia on their mind and wanted in any way to get back at her for supposedly electing Orange Man Bad. So they saw bringing Ukraine into NATO and strengthening its military as good ways to get at Putin. I am not justifying the invasion; I only point out that Donald Trump and his people would have understood that there are red lines that Russia—like every country—has that should not be crossed. NATO does not need Ukraine and Trump would have not taken steps to threaten Russia’s border. But Trump was hamstrung in 2016, out in 2020 and now back in the saddle in 2025. He gave Putin the reception he deserved because getting Russia closer to the U.S. is in our interests.

    I wrote in the past about pulling a reverse-Nixon and moving Russia away from China. China is America’s biggest economic and military peer. Anything that one can do to weaken China or at least prevent it from getting stronger is a plus for the U.S. I would rather see a joint U.S.-Russian naval exercise in the Sea of Japan than a Chinese-Russian exercise. I would rather see Russian pressure on Iran over its nuclear ambitions than Russia buying huge numbers of Iranian drones for its war in Ukraine. One does not have to love Putin or even ignore his negatives. But the U.S. today is better served with Russia as a friend rather than an enemy. It’s quite a funny thing when Hillary Clinton brought her silly “Reset” button to the Russians but suddenly hated them when she invented out of thin air a story of Russia getting Trump elected. She repeated the same last week: Trump lost in 2020, won in 2024, and questionably won with Russian help in 2016. Don’t these people ever go away? Don’t they have a sell-off date on their necks when we no longer have to hear from them?

    Donald Trump, though brought up in the world of real estate, has impeccable political instincts. He twice whacked Iran in such a surprising manner that they arranged with him their revenge attacks so as not to further provoke him. He has learned to pick associates and give them the baton to run their offices and departments. Trump understands Putin and knows what he needs. One can pretend to be quite righteous and demand Putin’s removal from office or refuse to deal with him. Will such approaches bring peace? Will they lead to the end of the killing? No. Trump wants an end to the war and that will not happen without Putin. He knows that if you want Putin on board, you have to treat him like an important world actor—and Alaska was a form of honor given to few world leaders.

    The other side of the table is Zelensky and his cabal of European leaders. When you read this, their meeting with Trump will already have taken place. I don’t believe that any of them understands their situation with respect to the current war. There is no question that Russia has not won as in World War II and thus demand unconditional surrender. The situation on the battlefield is opaque with both sides making some progress and losing some land. Zelensky and his European fanboys do not understand that Crimea and much of Ukraine's eastern regions—taken by Russia under Obama—are not coming back. They remind me of Hitler barking out orders to nonexistent army groups from his delirium in the Reichsbunker. The Ukrainians do not have the ability to get Crimea or all of the Donbas back. Donald Trump, if anything, is a realist. He knows that Zelensky will have to certify former parts of Ukraine as Russia and give Putin land that he does not want to give him. Putin apparently is okay with serious security arrangements after he gets what he wants. I can’t predict the way Zelensky and the Seven Dwarfs will behave, but they always seem to be making demands beyond their position on the battlefield. There is nothing better than winning if you want to dictate terms; Ukraine is getting by and running out of soldiers.

    The smart play for Zelensky would be to get the best terms he can that Trump will support in talks with Putin. The two of them and Putin then need to formalize the understandings and stop the war. They can then move to rebuilding and new non-NATO security arrangements between Ukraine and the West. That is the smart play. What I expect is for Zelensky, having his cheerleaders close by, will be intransigent and will demand Crimea and all of his eastern land. Donald Trump is smart enough to shake his hand, wish him good luck and throw him out of the Oval Office. Europe wants to fight Putin and they may be dumb enough to put boots on the ground. Donald Trump knows what a good deal looks like and will not entertain a bad one when he goes back to Putin. Zelensky and his crew should swallow their pride and say yes. My guess is that they don’t have the courage to do so and will soldier on to the utter destruction of Ukraine without further U.S. assistance. 



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    Has America Had Enough of the Race-Baiters?


    RedState 

    There it was. Again. I opened my Monday to more race-raging. Joy Reid on a podcast. Great. Sure, as an individual and as a pundit, Joy Reid no longer matters, but her form of crazy still has currency. She was fired from MSNBC, and for good reason. She now spends her days raging on her own dime and taking her rage to podcasters who, like Wajahat Ali, nod in agreement to the utter racist nonsense she vomits out. Who is Wajahat Ali? 

    Ali writes drivel for the New York Times among other publications. When he's not praising a commie, he’s nodding in agreement and furrowing his brow to feckless drivel from guests on his Substack called “The Left Hook. A political, cultural and intellectual playground for the rest of us.” 

    Bold flex, Waj.  

    Reid ranted on Ali’s program with her usual rage against the machine. She wore a  “FDT” (F*** Donald Trump) hat and asserted that white people can't invent anything.  

    Reid and her comrade in race-rage, Jamele Hill, are obsessed with race. Their race-baiting and demands that white Americans pay for sins no one living committed are wearing thin. They live their rage, 24/7. 

    Slavery and the people who owned humans in America are dead. But slavery didn’t end with the American Civil War and the 13th and 14th Amendments. It continued in other parts of the world. In Africa, slavery wasn’t officially banned until the 1970s. Here in America, slavery was abolished in the 1860s. At the same time, half a world away, Barbary pirates were still enslaving people. Europe was a frequent source of slaves. 

    A few years ago, I wrote about my great-grandfather. He was a Civil War veteran and POW. He was wounded and captured during the war, and spent the better part of two years in Confederate prisons. 

    Crippled for life by his wounds, he spent the last months of the war in the infamous Andersonville prison. I recently learned that a great-grandfather on my mom’s side was an Iowa cavalry volunteer. He was shot in the shoulder and died at the age of 57, due entirely to that wound that never healed. 

    I have multiple ancestors who fought for the Union. Why mention any of that? Because each time a Joy Reid or Jamele Hill reaches a new level of race-baiting or mentions that slavery was a “white man’s crime,” I feel a duty bound to enrage my haters with mentions of my ancestors, who suffered greatly to end slavery. I've blocked all of my usual cadre of haters, so they are screaming at clouds. But I got more hate email and online hate for writing about a Civil War ancestor than anything I have written since. 

    People like Reid and Hill will scream that I can't take credit for what my ancestors did. They are right. I am proud of their heroism, but I didn’t suffer war wounds fighting to end slavery. They did. Not me. 

    Equally, Reid (a first-generation American) has no agency in what happened 160 years ago. Not one living person does. No one who suffered the indignities of American slavery is still living. 

    The death of George Floyd supercharged BLM. His death created myths about his life and death, and equally perpetuated myths about race relations. Race-grifters like authors Nikole Hannah-Jones, Robin DiAngelo and grifter extraordinaire Ibram X. Kendi did nothing to help “heal wounds." They healed their bank accounts with quixotic nonsense and circular pablum. Hannah-Jones said

    I find it hard to believe that any member of the white race can have the audacity and hypocrisy to call any other culture savage. The white race is the biggest murderer, rapist, pillager and thief of the modern world....The crimes they committed were unnecessarily cruel and can only be described as acts of the devil.

    Do you feel the healing?

    Matt Walsh’s “Am I a Racist?” shone a spotlight on DiAngelo’s game. Kendi’s grift continues with books like “Anti-Racist Baby.” The grift is elegant. A white person cannot “un-racist” themselves. That scarlet letter is there for life. There is no “cure," but if you buy their heroin, it will ease the pain of being a racist. There is no cure, but if you buy their book for $29.99 it might help ease the pain. Cults are like that.  

    Fewer now, fortunately. Being called a “racist” used to mean something. Now, grifters have turned it into a meaningless, empty insult. It’s Chicken Little crying that the sky is falling.    

    On Monday, my colleague Katie Jerkovich wrote about another race grifter: Colin Kaepernick. ESPN has apparently determined that his mythology isn’t worth the effort or airtime. Katie’s article informed us that, perhaps, ESPN has lost its appetite for this particular race-baiting revisionist pseudo-historian. 

    Four years ago, Kaepernick threw his white adoptive parents under the bus, casting his mom as a dimwitted dolt and his dad as a clueless clown. Almost every coach got the same treatment. Perhaps ESPN was warned not to offer that storyline again. Perhaps his parents have had enough.  

    Perhaps everyone has had enough. 



    Outline #4 – Key Criminal Conduct in The Russiagate Operation and Beyond, Mary McCord


    I have been asked to recap some of my research into cited formats of what I believe to be criminal conduct, with specific statutes against them. This is the fourth.

    DNI Tulsi Gabbard is not a lawyer. While I may be wrong, I find Tulsi Gabbard to be a patriot. Mrs. Gabbard is focused on providing evidence to the DOJ that essentially forces action. I support Tulsi Gabbard’s efforts.

    If there is one corrupt DC player who has escaped scrutiny for her corrupt endeavors, it would be Mary McCord.

    More than any other Lawfare operative within Main Justice, Mary McCord sits at the center of every table in the manufacturing of cases against Donald Trump. {GO DEEP} Mary McCord’s husband is Sheldon Snook; he was the right hand to the legal counsel of Chief Justice John Roberts.

    When the Carter Page FISA application was originally assembled by the FBI and DOJ, there was initial hesitancy from within the DOJ National Security Division (DOJ-NSD) about submitting the application, because it did not have enough citations in evidence (the infamous ‘Woods File’).  That’s why the Steele Dossier ultimately became important.  It was the Steele Dossier that provided the push, the legal cover needed for the DOJ-NSD to submit the application for a Title-1 surveillance warrant against the campaign of Donald J. Trump.

    When the application was finally assembled for submission to the FISA court, the head of the DOJ-NSD was John Carlin.  Carlin quit working for the DOJ-NSD in late September 2016 just before the final application was submitted (October 21,2016).  John Carlin was replaced by Deputy Asst. Attorney General, Mary McCord.

    ♦ When the FISA application was finally submitted (approved by Sally Yates and James Comey), it was Mary McCord who did the actual process of filing the application and gaining the Title-1 surveillance warrant.

    A few months later, February 2017, with Donald Trump now in office as President, it was Mary McCord who went with Deputy AG Sally Yates to the White House to confront White House legal counsel Don McGahn over the Michael Flynn interview with FBI agents.  The surveillance of Flynn’s calls was presumably done under the auspices and legal authority of the FISA application Mary McCord previously was in charge of submitting.

    ♦ At the time the Carter Page application was filed (October 21, 2016), Mary McCord’s chief legal counsel inside the office was a DOJ-NSD lawyer named Michael Atkinson.  In his role as the legal counsel for the DOJ-NSD, it was Atkinson’s job to review and audit all FISA applications submitted from inside the DOJ.  Essentially, Atkinson was the DOJ internal compliance officer in charge of making sure all FISA applications were correctly assembled and documented.

    ♦ When the anonymous CIA whistleblower complaint was filed against President Trump for the issues of the Ukraine call with President Zelensky, the Intelligence Community Inspector General had to change the rules for the complaint to allow an anonymous submission.  Prior to this change, all intelligence whistleblowers had to put their name on the complaint.  It was this 2019 IGIC who changed the rules.  Who was the Intelligence Community Inspector General?  Michael Atkinson.

    When ICIG Michael Atkinson turned over the newly authorized anonymous whistleblower complaint to the joint House Intelligence and Judiciary Committee (Schiff and Nadler chairs), who did Michael Atkinson give the complaint to?  Mary McCord.

    Yes, after she left main justice, Mary McCord took the job of working for Chairman Jerry Nadler and Chairman Adam Schiff as the chief legal advisor inside the investigation that led to the construction of articles of impeachment.   As a consequence, Mary McCord received the newly permitted anonymous whistleblower complaint from her old office colleague Michael Atkinson.

    KEY: Michael Atkinson was forced to testify to the joint House impeachment committee about the CIA whistleblower rule change and the process he authorized and participated in as the Intelligence Community Inspector General.  Adam Schiff sealed that deposition, and no one has ever discussed what Atkinson said when questioned.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson can unseal that testimony, and Tulsi Gabbard can declassify his deposition.

    Moving on…

    ♦ During his investigation of the Carter Page application, Inspector General Michael Horowitz discovered an intentional lie inside the Carter Page FISA application (directly related to the ‘Woods File’), which his team eventually tracked to FBI counterintelligence division lawyer, Kevin Clinesmith.  Eventually Clinesmith was criminally charged with fabricating evidence (changed wording on an email) in order to intentionally falsify the underlying evidence in the FISA submission.

    When John Durham took the Clinesmith indictment to court, the judge in the case was James Boasberg.

    ♦ In addition to being a DC criminal judge, James Boasberg is also a FISA court judge who signed-off on one of the renewals for the FISA application that was submitted using fraudulent evidence fabricated by Kevin Clinesmith.  In essence, now the presiding judge over the FISA court, Boasberg was the FISC judge who was tricked by Clinesmith, and now the criminal court judge in charge of determining Clinesmith’s legal outcome.  Judge Boasberg eventually sentenced Clinesmith to 6 months probation.

    As an outcome of continued FISA application fraud and wrongdoing by the FBI, in their exploitation of searches of the NSA database, Presiding FISC Judge James Boasberg appointed an amici curiae advisor to the court who would monitor the DOJ-NSD submissions and ongoing FBI activities.

    Who did James Boasberg select as a FISA court amicus?  Mary McCord.

    ♦ SUMMARY:  Mary McCord submitted the original false FISA application to the court using the demonstrably false Dossier.  Mary McCord participated in the framing of Michael Flynn.  Mary McCord worked with ICIG Michael Atkinson to create a fraudulent whistleblower complaint against President Trump; and Mary McCord used that manipulated complaint to assemble articles of impeachment on behalf of the joint House Intel and Judiciary Committee.  Mary McCord then took up a defensive position inside the FISA court to protect the DOJ and FBI from sunlight upon all the aforementioned corrupt activity.

    You can clearly see how Mary McCord would be a person of interest if anyone was going to start digging into corruption internally within the FBI, DOJ or DOJ-NSD.

    What happened next….

    November 3, 2021 – In Washington DC – “Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) and the House Jan. 6 Select Committee has tapped Mary McCord, who once ran the Justice Department’s National Security Division, for representation in its fight to obtain former President Donald Trump’s White House records. (read more)

    Yes, that is correct.  After seeding and guiding all of the Lawfare attacks against candidate Donald Trump, then President-Elect Donald Trump, then President Donald Trump, Mary McCord took up a key legal position inside the J6 committee to continue the Lawfare against President Trump after he left office.

    But wait,…. Remember the stories of the J6 investigative staff going to work for Jack Smith on the investigation of Donald Trump, that included the raid on Mar-a-Lago?  Well, Mary McCord was a member of that team [citation]; all indications are that her efforts continued as a quiet member of the Special Counsel team

    That’s the context; now I want to go back a little.

    First, when did Mary McCord become “amicus” to the FISA court?  ANSWER: When the court (Boasberg) discovered IG Michael Horowitz was investigating the fraudulent FISA application.  In essence, the FISA Court appointed the person who submitted the fraudulent filing, to advise on any ramifications from the fraudulent filing.  See how that works?

    Now, let’s go deeper….

    When Mary McCord went to the White House with Sally Yates to talk to white house counsel Don McGhan about the Flynn call with Russian Ambassador Kislyak, and the subsequent CBS interview with VP Pence, where Pence’s denial of any wrongdoing took place, the background narrative in the attack against Flynn was the Logan Act.

    The construct of the Logan Act narrative was pure Lawfare, and DAG Sally Yates with Acting NSD AAG Mary McCord were the architects.

    Why was the DOJ National Security Division concerned with a conflict between what Pence said on CBS and what Flynn said about his conversations with Kislyak?

    This is where a big mental reset is needed.

    Flynn did nothing wrong. The incoming National Security Advisor can say anything he wants with the Russian ambassador, short of giving away classified details of any national security issue.  In December of 2016, if Michael Flynn wanted to say Obama was an a**hole, and the Trump administration disagreed with everything he ever did, the incoming NSA was free to do so.  There was simply nothing wrong with that conversation – regardless of content.

    So, why were McCord and Yates so determined to make an issue in media and in confrontation with the White House?

    Why did the DOJ-NSD even care?  This is the part that people overlooked when the media narrative was driving the news cycle.  People got too stuck in the weeds and didn’t ask the right questions.

    Some entity, we discover later was the FBI counterintelligence division, was monitoring Flynn’s calls.  They transcribed a copy of the call between Flynn and Kislyak, and that became known as the “Flynn Cuts” as described within internal documents, and later statements.

    After the Flynn/Kislyak conversation was leaked to the media, Obama asked ODNI Clapper how that call got leaked.  Clapper went to the FBI on 1/4/17 and asked FBI Director James Comey.  Comey gave Clapper a copy of the Flynn Cuts which Clapper then took back to the White House to explain to Obama.

    Obama’s White House counsel went bananas, because Clapper had just walked directly into the Oval Office with proof the Obama administration was monitoring the incoming National Security Advisor.  Obama’s plausible deniability of the surveillance was lost as soon as Clapper walked in with the written transcript.

    That was the motive for the 1/5/17 Susan Rice memo, and the reason for Obama to emphasize “buy the book” three times.

    It wasn’t that Obama didn’t know already; it was that a document trail now existed (likely a CYA from Comey) that took away Obama’s plausible deniability of knowledge.  The entire January 5th meeting was organized to mitigate this issue.

    Knowing the Flynn Cuts were created simultaneously with the phone call, and knowing how it was quickly decided to use the Logan Act as a narrative against Flynn and Trump, we can be very sure both McCord and Yates had read that transcript before they went to the White House.  [Again, this is the entire purpose of them going to the White House to confront McGhan with their manufactured concerns.]

    So, when it comes to ‘who leaked’ the reality of the Flynn/Kislyak call to the media, the entire predicate for the Logan Act violation – in hindsight – I would bet a donut it was Mary McCord.

    But wait, there’s more…. 

    Now we go back to McCord’s husband, Sheldon Snook.

    Sheldon was working for the counsel to John Roberts.  The counsel to the Chief Justice has one job, to review the legal implications of issues before the court and advise Justice John Roberts.  The counsel to the Chief Justice knows everything happening in the court and is the sounding board for any legal issues impacting the Supreme Court.

    In his position as the right hand of the counsel to the chief justice, Sheldon Snook would know everything happening inside the court.

    At the time, there was nothing bigger inside the court than the Alito opinion known as the Dobb’s Decision – the returning of abortion law to the states.  Without any doubt, the counsel to Chief Justice Roberts would have that decision at the forefront of his advice and counsel.  By extension, this puts the actual written Alito opinion in the orbit of Sheldon Snook.

    After the Supreme Court launched a heavily publicized internal investigation into the leaking of the Dobbs decision (Alito opinion), something interesting happened.  Sheldon Snook left his position.   If you look at the timing of the leak, the investigation and the Sheldon Snook exit, the circumstantial evidence looms large.

    Of course, given the extremely high stakes, the institutional crisis with the public discovering the office of the legal counsel to the Chief Justice likely leaked the decision, such an outcome would be catastrophic for the institutional credibility.  In essence, it would be Robert’s office who leaked the opinion to the media.

    If you were Chief Justice John Roberts and desperately needed to protect the integrity of the court, making sure such a thermonuclear discovery was never identified would be paramount.  Under the auspices of motive, Sheldon Snook would exit quietly.  Which is exactly what happened.

    The timeline holds the key.

    BACK TO MARY in 2025 – During the question session for Attorney General Pam Bondi’s nomination, Adam Schiff asked Mary McCord about whether AG Bondi should recuse herself from investigating Adam Schiff and Mary McCord. It’s a little funny if you understand the background.

    I prompted the video to the part at 01:36:14 when Schiff asks McCord, and Mrs. McCord responds with “yes, Pam Bondi should recuse.” WATCH:



    Mary McCord says Pam Bondi must recuse herself from any investigative outcome related to the first impeachment effort.

    Who was the lead staff working for Adam Schiff and Jerry Nadler on the first impeachment effort?

    Mary McCord.

    Now, triggering that first impeachment effort… Who worked with ICIG Michael Atkinson to change the CIA whistleblower regulations permitting an anonymous complaint?

    Yep, that would be the same Mary McCord.

    In essence, the woman who organized, structured, led and coordinated the first impeachment effort, says Pam Bondi must recuse herself from investigating the organization, structure, leadership and coordination of the first impeachment effort.

    If all that seems overwhelming, here’s a short recap:

    ♦ McCord submitted the fraudulent FISA application to spy on Trump campaign.

    ♦ McCord helped create the “Logan Act” claim used against Michael Flynn and then went with Sally Yates to confront the White House.

    ♦ McCord then left the DOJ and went to work for Adam Schiff and Jerry Nadler on Impeachment Committee.

    ♦ McCord organized the CIA rule changes with Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson.

    ♦ McCord led and organized the impeachment effort, in the background, using the evidence she helped create.

    ♦ McCord joined the FISA Court to protect against DOJ IG Michael Horowitz newly gained NSD oversight and FISA review.

    ♦ McCord joined the J6 Committee helping to create all the lawfare angles they deployed.

    ♦ McCord then coordinated with DA Fani Willis in Georgia.

    ♦ McCord was working with Special Counsel Jack Smith to prosecute Trump.

    ♦ McCord is now coordinating outside Lawfare attacks against Donald Trump in term #2

    ♦ McCord also testified that AG Pam Bondi must recuse herself from investigating McCord.

    ♦ Joe Biden then pardoned Mary McCord.

    [SOURCE]

    Yes, I’m looking at multiple distinct silos and pulling out the common denominator.

    Thank you for your attention to this matter.