KASHED OUT! It is time to Admit Dash Pongino Can't get it done | Ep 627 - podcast episode cover

KASHED OUT! It is time to Admit Dash Pongino Can't get it done | Ep 627

Aug 08, 20251 hr 7 min
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Transcript

Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistle blower, an American patriot. Prepare to embrace the uncomfortable truth because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Seraphin. Well hello my friends, welcome

to the Kyle Seraphin show. Today is Friday, it is August the 8th, it is 88. And that means if you are a Bongino Mcgrind clown then you are calling it something and putting my face up on. Apparently someone printed out my face, one of those lunatics over at the the Bongino Army. So that's hilariously funny to me. Thank you for letting me live in your head for free. I always need an extra place to stay, so we're going to do that. Today's show is going to be mostly catching up on wild news

that broke yesterday. Hard to underestimate how ridiculous some of the news that I got was. So if you listen to Infowars for hours like I was on yesterday, then you probably know most of this stuff, but not all of it. We're going to give you some new stuff. I'm going to be bringing Steve Friend on for his commentary as well. If you listen to Owen, he and I kind of cut it up on Owen's War Room show yesterday as well. So that's what's in order for you today.

Let's get started with a read from our sponsors who are making this program possible. The lovely folks over at My Patriot Supply make today's program what it is. It's mypatriotsupply.com/kyle folks. It's not just hot in the summer, it is historic. We've had flash flood warnings at 40 year highs. We are not slowing down. There are all kinds of wild things happening. Central Texas was underwater, roads washed out. And in every crisis zone, it's

always the same scene. There are people that are waiting in line, waiting, hoping for bottled water, for food, waiting for someone else to show up and save them. And you don't need to do that. You can prepare instead of repair. What if that help takes days? What if it doesn't come at all? The system's not built to accommodate or protect you. It barely can handle one emergency, let alone dozens happening in any place and they can always pop up around you. So go ahead and insulate

yourself. Have your own personal insurance policy right now. You can get one from my Patriot supply by getting their three-week emergency food kit and getting four weeks of emergency food free. Go to my Patriot supply at dot com slash Kyle. Claim your four free week food supply along with the same kit that the Seraphim family uses. It's the one that I have and my wife has. We have it just stacked up underneath one of our our stairwells. We have a closet that stashes all that stuff.

Again, it's four weeks of free food. You're buying three. You're getting a fourth free. It's a good deal. It might be a better deal than we actually got when we paid for ours. Check out mypatriotsupply.com slash Kyle. Again, it's mypatriotsupply.com/kyle. Conveniently, I've put the links in the show description for you. Let's go ahead and bring on Steve Friend and get into today's Friendly Friday with the real Steve Friend.

And here we go. All right, then I'm going to say I'm going to tell you guys right up front. Last night while we were doing our call in program, the sound board crashed right before I was going to drop a big nugget on somebody. And so I'm a little disappointed that that was the case. I'm going to see if we can bring on. I think this is going to get it done. So stand by here. We try. I think you can hear do do do do do Steve friend. Love the walk up music.

Good morning, Kyle Serifan, good morning to the FBI director and everyone who's sitting around in his suite. And congratulations are in order to the Kyle Serifan Show for being the number one podcast at the Hoover Building. It's a friendly Friday. Welcome aboard.

What a silly day. All right, today's episode is entitled Cashed Out. I think it's time to admit that they can't get it done now Privately, I would suggest that people should know we may have been saying this as as early as March. Is that accurate? Yeah, I think we probably had a pretty quick hook. We had a shorter attention span than most or, you know, a shorter leash than most, because we knew that they changes had to be made very quickly if they were in effect, going to

actually happen. We could kind of look over the horizon better than most, just being more familiar with the problems that existed. And when we didn't see the shock and awe, when we saw the winning hearts and minds approach, that was a cautionary tale. I think you said it was sort of like you had to take the beach in order to move into the hedgerows, like an amphibious landing in Normandy, and they

failed to do that. So we were already behind the curve and so many people on the outside just not having that. The subject matter expertise that we have just in light of our experiences, they're high on the opium and still in the philosophy of we got our number one draft choice, so we're totally going to win the Super Bowl. Instead now, as we're 5-6 months into it, we see that we're O and five and down a few touchdowns at halftime here. It might be time to change quarterbacks.

And we're only a few months in, but they still couldn't figure out that they've got the wrong guys in there. So it's pretty bad news when when I'm getting calls yesterday, I'm actually going to pull my phone out of the silent bag and read this to you real quick, which I think I I shared with you yesterday. But just in case for our audience that may not have seen this or heard it, it got a text message last night. Just said had another phone

call. Kyle. The person said Kyle Serafin might as well be the FBI director since he's dictating the FBI's priorities and setting de facto policies. Pretty ridiculous. Also found out that apparently the the reason for yesterday's firings, which we're going to go ahead and give you a teaser on. I got to go and talk to Alex Jones about it. Actually offered to break the story about Chris Meyer and and then you took it and told what is his name? Is it Deese? Steve Deese.

Steve Deese. Deese why? Why does he spell it that way? Why doesn't he have like a a name that makes sense to spell? He's got a stepfather, I think, and doesn't really know the etymological origin. But I all right, so here's the deal. We, I offered to break the, the, the news initially on Alex Jones's show. It ended up not being the case. We ended up putting it on Twitter. We got about 3 million views on it.

Member of the Trump administration was warned 3 days prior that that was going to go public. And then apparently yesterday it actually caused the reaction, probably more than we expected, that the supervisor above the pilot who was the case agent on the Mona Lago case and then now is the current FBI pilot for the director. It caused enough flak and I'm guessing Alex Jones is probably right. He said it.

It was probably brought to Trump's attention directly, but caused enough Flack that they actually decided to ask for his removal. And the person who was his, his supervisor in the chain of command said no. Now, I was told in no uncertain terms that the right answer for an FBI employee is to do what you're told. Isn't that the rule that we heard?

I was told that by current leadership that the American people expect in a chain of command someone who can raise concerns about the end of the day. They let me not say it, but it kind of say it anyway. Just follow orders. Who said that? But you promoted Stephen Jensen, the architect of the FB is overzealous January 6th investigation. I want the American public to realize what we did.

That man was in a position where he literally fought back against the machine who was saying we want to politicize this event, We want to politicize this event. And at the end of the day, remember Maria, there's a chain of command here. So you can fight back your chain of command to a certain degree before they fire. And Steve Jensen and other folks were promoted because they embody what the American public demands of FBI agents.

Just follow orders. You're seeing on the screen a picture of sort of Steve Jensen, but he's crossed out because per the sourcing that came from the CNN folks, the the the Fox News folks, New York Times, etcetera, all reporting that Steve Jensen was removed. I have some insight and sell that. He was asked to do something very specific and something that should have been an easy yes and he denied it. He said, no, I'm not going to do

that. He had no problem going after J Sixers and politicizing the event, even though he resisted it and said he protested. But at the end of the day, he was supposed to follow orders. Apparently that's what the administration thought would happen, and he didn't do it. What Can you believe him? The guy was AJ6 warlord and the most egregious examples of weaponization that the country has ever witnessed at the hands of federal law enforcement.

He was promoted out to Quantico, promoted to Columbia, SC, promoted to become the Assistant Director in charge of the Washington Field Office. Not on a temporary basis. Betty Crocker. Julie Kelly, he thought he was going to walk on water. There was going to be no accountability. So I can say no, whatever I want here because I got the director's, got my back here. He's going on Maria Bartiromo and saying that he represents everything that the American people should want.

So can you blame him for trying to take a stand thinking that he was above any sort of accountability? No. And as you mentioned, Betty Crocker, Esquire, also stated very clearly that this was a temporary thing, but that's not really what happened. What they believed was that that's where the bodies are buried. Zero bodies on Earth. It turns out 00 bodies on Earth. And I want to just reiterate, Steve Jensen's hands are dirty on January 6th.

There's in some cases, in some ways dirtier than others because he did take a lead role. So I'm not diminishing that. I'm not excusing it. I'm not justifying it, but when you're looking for people who know where the dead bodies are buried, who knows where this information could be housed, who can explain how everything went down and who was really responsible for it, you have to have those inside sources to do that. And so look, I was defund the FBI, you know, burn down the building.

I mean, I don't think I said that. So I don't want to be in trouble for that. But that was when the Democrats were running it. So, OK, now we can shut down the FBI. Sounds like a swell idea. OK, I'm sure we can survive without it. But with it goes all the answers to the questions that we have. How many FBI informants and undercover employees and other assets were involved in January 6th stocking, the events of that day? You saw Joe, Joe Kent so admirably talk to Mark, Senator

Mark Kelly about that yesterday. And there's and more excuses to boot. How many bodies have been unearthed? How many sources were at January 6th? I heard we were going to hear about a wave of transparency in just a week or two. That's like 2 months ago now. I. Mean it hasn't been 6 to 8 months yet. It has been eight months since cash jumped in and I guess it's been 6 months since he jumped in, right? And so for me, that's enough. I'm calling it.

It's time to cash out. Donald Trump needs to remove these two guys. They've proven themselves incompetent and I'm going to keep exposing them. I've got my next two targets already lined up. So for those of you who are paying attention at home, if you want to put them on your bingo card, if you worked as Chris Ray's special assistant in charge of strategy for more than a year and a half, you probably shouldn't be running a division at the FBI. What say you, Steve friend?

I say that if you want to know what is going to happen personnel wise at the FBI five to six months in advance, you should probably listen to what you're saying right now, because apparently that's the lag time. When the information gets to the ears of the people in charge to make a decision, Then they realize that, oh, perhaps they should have listened at the outset. And look, we don't care one way

or another. We can offer you the advice and you can take it and it's good advice and good and concrete. You're going to have good results from it. Or you could not, and then you could be embarrassed and do the exact same thing. In the end, we get to the bottom line accounting aspects of it. We get to the same personnel decisions. It's just whether or not you want to be embarrassed. I'm happy to embarrass you if

you want to be like that. And I'm really happy to hear this guy say this headline, which makes me laugh and nothing makes me smile more than an Alex Jones gloat. So let's do that real quick. Breaking bloodbath. I like that headline. FBI fires former acting director Brian Driscoll, senior officials involved in Jan 6 cases and

Trump investigations. You know, there's been representing all these lawyers, you know what lawyers representing all the J6 FBI agents that have been targeted for investigation for before, during and after. So the FBI ran the attacks with the CIA and others. Oh, the very same law firm suing me out of Connecticut is their law firm. Oh, that the FBI admits they went to and created the lawsuits. Oh, that's. So good. He's such a bad man. You can't make it up Look, we're

not saying anything crazy here. We're just saying the things that we're told we were supposed to believe by the people who are going in there. Look at that guy. What's going on with that guy there sitting in this confirmation hearing? He. Looks very uncomfortable, like he was asked about his relationship with Stu Peters and said come again. What? You familiar with the Stu Peters? Does that name ring a bell? I'm sorry, what? Are you familiar with Mr. Stu

Peters? Not off the top of my head. He made eight separate appearances on his podcast. He promoted outrageous conspiracy theories and worked with a prominent neo Nazi. So what happened there? What was that going on? I think that's called perjury. Yeah, I think they call that lack of candor a clearly cash. Patel's lying. Yeah, he he he absolutely does know who I am. And he's very familiar on a lot

of different levels. And I'm not going to get into that right now because this guy is going through a Senate confirmation hearing. So I'm not going to get into too many personal specifics at this point. But that's just, that's flagrantly false.

What what he said there. And I don't want to hear this 6,000,000 D chest stuff about how Cash Patel just has to get through this part of it. And then he just has to get in there and infiltrate so that he can root out all of the rats and the Jews and, you know, the globalists. No, that that's not what's happening here. That was a like an Alex Jones little toss there. He definitely. Dropped his his voice a little octave or three to get to. That level, the guttural look,

it's, it's super simple, right? Because if you hire and promote and, and move forward and, and sustain the people that were part of the problem that you called out for years, we're going to have to look at you, evaluate you against your own campaign ideas and say objectively, you failed, had an opportunity. We'd hammered the Jensen stuff. I think the Driscoll stuff is worth bringing up because not a lot is known about the driz. Because he was the acting

director. He was keeping the seat warm but was actually fulfilling the obligations as being like the PR hype guy and doing like hype videos when he should have just been like making sure that the agency didn't crash into a block, cinder block as it's barreling down the highway at 75 miles an hour. That's right.

But he was the one who resisted Department of Justice, the request for the January 6th list of employees who worked on January 6th cases went back when the DOJ was under the impression that it was probably like 20 people in a skiff. Meanwhile, it was 6000 employees. And he became legendary for that. And we told Cash originally, hey, Brian Driscoll's resisting this, he's a problem guy. And we were told that no, he's, he's one of the good ones. He's a bro, don't worry about

him. And then he was elevated because he was over HRT and there was some rumors that HRT was the hostage rescue team went down to Mar a Lago, which should be a problematic. And now then he was elevated to become the special agent in charge of Newark, then the

acting director of the FBI. And then instead of going back to Newark, they elevated him to assistant director over of critical incident response group back to where the hostage rescue team is back to where surveillance and where the pilots are managed out of. So the actual reason that I guess Brian Driscoll is going to be saying bye bye today, today is his last day. Ties back to your original post on X about Chris Meyer being the pilot. Yeah. So the story goes something like

this. Apparently cash got wind of my thread either through the source that I have inside the the Trump administration or the the the person that I I reached out to to kind of share some information that was a courtesy reach. We don't have to do that, but we like to. And then the thread went viral and shared a lot of information and and is it pretty lock locked

in thing? It shows that not only did Christopher Meyer, who is the the pilot's been flying cash round for the last eight months, not only or seven months. Not only did he, you know, have something to do with the Mar A Lago raid and that he was the case agent there, but he also was involved in other cases that were part of Jack Smith's like overall sort of suite of of cases.

And so the Fulton County one that was with Fannie Willis and, and an arrest that ended up happening for Harrison Floyd, the guy that he was working with was one of the people who clapped cuffs on Peter Navarro and threw leg irons on him. So all the kind of scandalous nonsense that's happened to the Trump administration, I can imagine those people being pissed. And if any of those people have access to Trump's ear and they saw what we put out.

And I think the odds are decent because I tagged them and they've responded to that since then saying this son of a bitch is one of the guys that put me in cuffs. That was Peter Navarro's line last night. You know, here's the deal. The story goes apparently that that the Driscoll was called into the office and was asked to remove this pilot, to which he resisted. And you know what? Good on Driscoll for that. I think that's actually reasonable.

Like no one said that the guy needed to be fired. He just shouldn't be flying the FBI director around. And you probably should have some additional questions. And if you want to go through the Serafin friend, go boil suspension process, the thing that happened to Phil Kennedy or others, then maybe that's something you could do. And the FBI has a pretty good track record of getting rid of people they don't like. But you can't just fire the guy on day one. That's just not how it works in

the federal system either. Give him a job he doesn't want, whatever, all kinds of options, or place him somewhere where he's not going to cause any damage. Right, set him down to San Juan like we recommended. So instead, what happened was Driscoll said no, per my sourcing, and Patel insisted. Then apparently this sort of veiled threat went out there, and I can't substantiate this, but this is what I've heard, so I'm going to share it with you guys. Apparently, he said.

Do you really want to cut loose the guy that's been sitting in the plane and listening to your conversations for the last seven months? That got Alex Jones pretty riled up yesterday. So there's that. And then Driscoll refused. They're going to make it happen one way or another. Can you imagine somebody refusing, I don't know, like Mueller, if he wanted to get rid of somebody? No, I was. They wouldn't resist. Paula Bate. And nobody knew his name. That's Deputy.

That's exactly. Right, because you don't know his name. Right, because he was the previous deputy, so they decided to go ahead and let this fly. So anyway, a couple hours later, apparently Driscoll gets an e-mail stating that he's also going to be removed effective today. That's not great necessarily, but you know, Driscoll does have some real problems as far as like what he did within the Bureau.

And I, I'm, you know, he kind of sealed his own fate by standing up against DOJ, pushing back and defending the agents, which I don't think was a great move. At the end of the day, the FBI is accountable to the DOJ. If the DOJ or if the, the DAG, the deputy attorney general wants a list of all the people that worked on a case, you don't know what they're going to use it for. He didn't say they were going to

fire all these people. I would want them to investigate it. In fact, if I was running one of these organizations. We had a little conversation this morning about it. I'd like to see the 950 fours and anybody who bragged about Mar a Lago or January 6 cases in those 950 fours. For those of you who don't know about the FBI, the 954 is the document which you brag and you apply to supervisory and higher positions.

So if you want to get a job that's further up in the Bureau, it's like your internal FBI resume and it conclude it include classified information on there 'cause it's actually a Bureau document instead of like a resume on LinkedIn. So, yeah, why wouldn't you want that? Wouldn't you want to go look for the people that want to to flout what they did that that was basically directly opposed to what Donald Trump is into? The 954 is truly bizarre.

It's a contrived promotion document system that is designed to only promote the worst people. Because if you fill out a 954 and you say like, hey, I had this career case, let's say it's a legitimate thing you did, right? You brought down some cartel or organized crime or public corruption scandal and you got an award for it. If you say you got an award for it, you immediately get dinged and your entire application gets

thrown out. Don't tell us you got an award for it, but you're rewarded for taking credit for things you didn't do, which is what those people wind up doing, which is why I worked on an Indian Reservation. I had a program manager, which is the entry level into management from the Hoover Building every 18 months because they were cycling in, cycling out, cycling up. I would get a call and they would say, hey, I'm the program

manager. I don't know anything about Indian Reservation reservations though. And then 6-8, maybe 12 months later, that person would then make contact again and ask me an obscure question about one particular case that I was working that wouldn't need their

oversight or funding or access. Because they wanted to say they had oversight of that case because it looked good on their 954. And if they were able to claim any sort of credit for having oversight of a case that they had nothing to do with it, I work completely independently. One agent doing all the work on it, they could claim for it and use that to promote to some supervisory special agent desk somewhere that they wanted to go and they will be up and out.

That is the contrive system that it is. Yeah. And so the problem continues to be that all of the mid level management went through that process. Everybody that's no longer a case agent or a first line supervisor writes a 954 hoping to promote beyond ASAC into the the the various chiefs, the unit chiefs and the section chief positions. One day they aspire to be a deputy assistant director and

then an assistant director. And maybe one day, God willing, they too could sit in the chair that Dan Bongino does as the the deputy director. And then you'd think that the real answer would be that. It is time for total personnel warfare. Do you understand that everybody has to go? Anyone in the justice system, a United States Attorney, an AUSA, an assistant United States Attorney, that's what we call them in the system, the intake

AUSA, who decides? Anyone who sniffed this case, touched this case, tweeted positively about this case. It is the president's full and final discretion to keep you hired in the DOJ. Pam Bondi, soon to be president Trump, soon to be attorney general, Everybody's got to go. It is time for say it with me, folks. Throw it in the chat right now. Total personnel warfare. Podcast Dan is correct for 10 points. Well done. Yes, that's the answer.

What happened to the president's total discretion and get rid of all the people that were involved in the coup against him? I guess we can't do it. I guess the human resources branch people came in and said, you know, we, we just can't. You have to leave them where they are. You totally can't. Even if removal is off the table, reallocating them to somewhere to supervise a broom closet in Minot, ND is just not

possible. So we better actually elevate them, promote them within the agency that they give them more power and control. Like the Sarah Lindens of the world taking a knee for BLM. She should totally be in charge of counterintelligence of Russia for the entire FBII.

Got a, a note this morning from a, from an FBI agent that said one of the major issues with these two guys is that they actually believed the people that they've been calling snakes for years and realized or believed for whatever reason, that they just couldn't run the ship without the people who have been running the ship. Which is exactly what we said

was the problem. They bought into folks that said that they were indispensable, that they could not be removed and there was no chance that Dan and Cash would be successful. And if, God, you know, forbid they were to remove all of this rot, the first thing that would happen is New York would explode or a cyber attack in LA or as a bioterrorist in Kansas City or something. And so they got them. They freaking rolled these guys, guys who spent their entire time

talking about one thing. So for all of you that want to go out there and talk about how great Dan is, Dan used to know he's already given you your marching orders. If you're a Dan Bongino Podcast Army person, Cash, we're looking at you 2 sitting in the director's chair listening to this podcast, you goofball. Do not fall in love with Paula politicians. Fall in love with what folks in the chat fall in love with what outcomes.

Sorry, I'm jumping. I'm jumping into clips for fun and I'm not telling Steve. Steve, you say what you think you think. Do you think the deputy director can hear the Kyle Serfin podcast through the wall of the director right now? Because he says that he uses the sink, he can hear it. So perhaps we're reaching both people. Look and look, I want to say this, both of these guys came in from the outside.

It's a unique time. Typically the deputy director is a company man, actually knows the way that the operations work for the FBI could actually implement the director's vision. That's the the relationship they typically have and that's the way it normally works. But coming in from the outside, they were both in a position to be bubble wrapped, which is what happened. And their vulnerability, I think was that they were fearful that they would be judged as being

incompetent and incapable. So they relied on the good men and women of the FBI to give them advice, heed what they wanted, be distracted willfully to go look at the James comedy rooms, be briefed up on the 100 level 10 things that are just mysteriously on your desk every day as opposed to asking why are you putting this on my desk? That's not my job. And they just went along with it. And then now we will see. And I this is a prediction.

Both of these guys got huge bona fides from one particular thing than mega world and that is Russian collusion. You have Cash Patel who is notorious for being the investigator on the House Select Committee on Intelligence breaking this story. And then Dan Bongino from the podcasting world went all the way out on that limb from the very beginning. He was the OG guy saying this is a complete hoax and that elevated him into the

stratosphere of podcasting. We will see that message harder and harder and harder because they have to keep their credibility. They. Have no other choice. They have to just keep banging the only drum that they have. Like you said, I've had multiple people tell me that the reason why I get to live rent free in these guys heads and get make make directions about policy is because they're on acts all day. That's what they know.

And you've said it before, when people go to crisis, they don't go to like novel ideas and try to solve problems. They go to what they know. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, has it been 5 minutes yet? Has the deputy dispatched agents to an area where the person's already in custody and there's no more danger? Oh, dude, you can't make it up.

Yeah. So behind the scenes, folks, we refer to Dan now as dispatcher Deputy Dan, because he continues to do the thing that, by the way, I used to make fun of the FB, the ATF about doing. In fact, I would make fun of them to my ATF friends. I had FBI agents that would regularly send me tweets and post from the ATF on social media before I was ever on social media. And it would be like, there's a shooting in Dallas, ATF responding and you're like, what?

Why? Why are you responding like you want an emergency gun trace? They'll they'll ask you when they want it like they have. Their own resource weekend in Chicago and there were 48 shootings. Are you sending agents out to that? Never and that's the other funny thing. We're not seeing them dispatch They're they're they're touting their success in operation summer heat, but you're not seeing them dispatch people non-stop to the shootings that happen every single day in Chicago.

So again, it's the same BS. It's not it's not real. This is made for TV and it's made for I guess the boomer Fox News audience, shamefully. Let's do a quick read for one of the sponsors were going to come back. I got some more stuff too and then we'll talk a little bit. There's a I've got an RFK clip that's kind of funny. So folks, if you guys are thinking, hey, I don't want to be scammed. I like keeping my own money. Maybe you should consider how many cyber hacks continue to

happen. Maybe you should consider that Kyle Seraphin can sniff you out using a lot of these data broker websites that are out there. It's one of the ways that we went after and found who the people are inside the FBI. If it works on them, it can work on you. You guys want to make sure you keep your name out of the pile for scammers and cyber terrorists and all the other kind of creepers that are out there.

Whether they want to impersonate you or whether they want to call you up and tell you they know enough about you to pretend to be a business that you're doing business with and get your money or your information and your logins and so on. patriot-protect.com/kyle. That's the website. It is LinkedIn, the show description below. Their job is to constantly scan the Internet and get your information taken down. So it's not so easy to find. It's easy for me to find people regularly.

If you guys don't want to be found, if you don't want to have your information out there like a like a digital Yellow Pages for for scammers go to patriot-protect.com/kyle. The other thing they do is they search the dark web to find out if you're compromised information has been sent out or sold and that way you know at least to change your logins or to move things around. patriot-protect.com/kyle. Make sure when you do check out that you do fill in that name

Kyle in the promo code. You'll save 15% on an annual subscription and they'll know that we sent you along. It cost dollars a month to make yourself out. The average scam they say is $600.00 on average per year across your lifetime. It usually doesn't happen, you know, in a $600.00 little increment one one year. It usually happens in like 10s of thousands of dollars and you might only hit hit once in your life.

Stay out of that pile, Don't get scammed and check out my friends over at Patriot Protect. All right, Steve, I got some more fun stuff. What else should we do? Let me see here, I have like this like Kliptopia thing here. So we'll play with some of those We got. We did Chuck Grassley and you know, the one of the things that's been bothering me, I guess this is the reason why I knew this wasn't going to work out is because this didn't turn out to be true. So we have a friend who hasn't

been paid in a long time. Will the FBI whistleblowers have an opportunity to get their jobs back in the department? God bless. Yes. I would hope that's the case. Again, I'm outside of the administration. I think these are things that are really important. We're confirming that's the case. Yes. The whistleblowers certainly. OK. We're confirming it in our lives. So that congratulations. Well done. Congratulations. Well done. I mean, that was the speed of government.

This administration is solid. That was so. That's Don Junior on his podcast Triggered. I like Dodd Junior, actually. I find him to be really amusing. I don't know who he was looking to off camera. Who is he talking to over there? Somebody 15° away from the lens apparently has the ability to instantly access people in positions of authority and power to give them that information and then not follow through on it. I guess because what's Garrett up to? Almost 1050 days now? Congratulations.

Yeah. And so this is folks, this was such an easy win. It was so obvious. And I know the people that are in charge over at the FBI actually had access to this information. The fact that they've turned under pressure from me, which is ridiculous, by the way, just as dumb as anything there is to see that I can push the buttons and make the FBI director do the thing that he should have done in the 1st place.

But the fact that they have gotten rid of Walter Gardena, who was mentioned in my thread on Monday as the arresting officer or the arresting agent on Peter Navarro, who was also out there going after Harrison Floyd. So repeating that name was in there. The other one, Chris Meyer, this pilot that we've caused problems with simply because of who he was or what cases he was working. I've got a statement from the FBI Agents Association will read to you. That'll make you puke in a SEC, Steve.

And then the other two, Steve Jensen, who was apparently asked for something really simple. Hey, go do this thing. And he said, no, we already know that Kash Patel believes that the right answer is that you're going to say yes to whatever the administration says. You're supposed to follow orders, including J6. But if you said yes to J6 and no to a simple request that you should have been involved in, he knows what he did. And that's not good.

So there's that. And then lastly, Driscoll, the Drizz who started the original sort of like insurrection in there or the resistance movement inside the Bureau underneath Trump 2 point O, who kind of pushed back and, and and said, we're not going to give you the names you want for something that they totally had a right to have. And then he did what I think was probably the right thing saying, hey, you can't just fire this guy, which is true. You're not supposed to in theory.

This is how we get to a spot where the FBI director has a gun and badge promptly displayed as he walks around in, not a suit because nobody is in the room telling him, Sir, that's a bad idea, don't do that because he'll take corrective action and remove them over something that they probably at the end of they think, well, that's trivial and transient and it's not worth

losing my job over. The fact of the matter is we know that Gerardo Boyle's situation was well known to the current people that are running the Bureau. We know that your situation, we know that my situation were and it used to be talked about really favorably, kind of like by this guy who's the number 2. Kyle Serafin's a former FBI agent. Do you know him? It's been on my show quite a bit. He tweeted this out the other day. He was suspended from the FBI on April 23rd, 2022.

The FBI human Resources department sent him a final package and that they, they said they're doing an administrative investigation. The FBI confirmed its decision to agree with itself on June 1st, 2022, which is strange because they conducted credit checks on Kyle. You can see on August 9th, 2022 as well. Why are they doing credit checks via LexisNexis? Look at this if you're not well, if you listen on Apple and

Spotify, check this out. I want you to see this on on Rumble. Go to Rumble and go to like the 23 minute mark or something. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, why are they credit checking this guy? Why would you be doing that? Now, I get it. We all have to be skeptical even of our friends, even of me. I encourage you all the time to Fact Check me.

It keeps me honest. So you may say, well, Dan, maybe that's just a big coincidence that the FBI would be running credit checks and such on whistleblowers as damaging whistleblower information about the FBI is coming out. But maybe it's just a coincidence they did that. Who knows? Maybe they were like, looking to sell them a car or something like that.

OK, what else? That's fascinating because Steve Friend and Garrett O'boyle, who are other whistleblowers in the FBI, Oh, no, they look, the FBI looked at their credit, too, twice the month they were suspended, including one four days beforehand, then once more this past October, Garrett notes. Wonder why is it? Perhaps they're doing all they can to make the process the

punishment. Could you imagine doing that, going out and telling millions of people the thing that he just said and then going in and being like, oh, give me that file on the thing that I used to make fun of on my podcast. Let's find out. Whatever derogatory information you have on Steve Friend has character issues, and so does Gerardo Boyle and so does Seraphin. And we can't trust them. Oops. Now we have to fire who they said to. Fire those guys might have committed felonies.

They're actually deep black hats. You should definitely not cover them favorable because you're going to lose all credibility if you point the fact that Garreto Boyle has been credibly cleared by the FBI of the allegations that were made against him to justify removing him from duty and yet he still sits unpaid after all this time. But yes, let's focus on the really important level 10 things here because if we don't, if we don't sit in those meetings.

And as a side note, I've learned that the deputy director can't sit in those meetings very long. His attention span goes off. He needs to cut a commercial break before the 55 minute rule comes up. They could give him a shake weight, you know, like, I feel like if Dan had like, a shake weight in one of those things, he could sit there and just kind of like, still be doing something. Yeah. He could, like, do more than one

thing. Squish. No, I don't think a squish ball. I think he needs to shake. He needs to lift something. Yeah. Dan knows that that Gerardo Boyle didn't do the wrong thing because Dan covered that story on his own podcast and therefore knows that current FBI employee who hasn't been paid in 1050 days actually did nothing wrong because I told him.

This is an agency that has betrayed you and that oath you took into this man or woman who stepped forward and disclosed this horrific information about the FBI targeting A legitimate conservative journalist. I applaud you folks. We can't continue like this. We simply cannot. Unfortunately, this was not the only FBI story that came out yesterday. There was another one on the same day, showing you how bad this broken agency.

We can't continue forward like there's no constitutional Republic, can continue with a weaponized arm of the government, with guns and the ability to take your freedom like the FBI. We can't have it. Dang, you know what's crazy? I told him both of those things and I was the source of all that information. It's almost like they had like a blueprint of what was wrong.

It's almost like they also had a slide deck of things that they could do to fix the problem, which they seem to belatedly be considering when it comes to personnel matters. What would you do to fix something like that? You'd have to know what the problem was, obviously. And so we think we've said that. And then you'd need to know what the solution might look like, which we've suggested some things, and then maybe some other people had their own idea.

Oh no, no, no, we can fix it. We just see some tinkering around the edges. No, it does not. The FBI needs to be disbanded. It is an entirely, completely failed operation. 2 takeaways before I move on to a couple more things here 1. I can't help it today, I'm just like yesterday was such a long day of going on people's programs and explaining out all this stuff. It's it's all out there in the public, people.

This is not news. I heard another lady, there was a woman named Liz Yor who was on Bannon's show the other day and she was quoting how I exposed the fact that in in February of 2023 that that we leaked the FBI, you know, Richmond Intel product going after Catholics. This is not a good organization. You got to get rid of the people that said yes to any of these bad ideas. And I thought we put people there who know it. So that's why I'm calling the game. I'm saying that we're cashed out

right now and. I am encouraged by the fact the number of people that are not having the just blind loyalty to the influencer types like the Julie Kelly's, the Betty Crocker esquires when it comes to the burnbag story where people are kind of like, wait a minute, that doesn't make sense. Like they're more receptive to it, which means that that leash that they've been giving the it's getting yanked back little

by little. And then just as a side note, it's really weird to see the image of the Dan Bongino podcast, but it has Vince Cogley and Ease on there, right? Yeah, I know because they just went back and retrofitted it. What about this? Guy the American public to know, too. We've had problems at the FBI.

We are going to hold ourselves internally accountable for those meeting out justice who have the privilege to serve and wear the gun in the badge or the uniform form of the FBI out in the field where those missteps have been taken. We've already addressed that by eliminating those people from the roles of the FBI. And we will continue to vigorously uphold on a 24/7 365 basis as vigorous as we pursue violent crime, those that abuse or corrupt or violate their oath

of office at the FBI. And I will not stand, for I will have 0 tolerance for those that we will utilize our badge to harm our country. OK. Can I get a, can I get a debrief on that one? First of all, what was Cash Patel saying right there? He was saying that this was going to be a total personnel

warfare situation. Anybody who swore an oath to protect, defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign, domestic, protect their fellow citizens against fraud and force, but instead bastardize that, use the oath of office like an iPhone user agreement to personally enrich themselves.

Push a political agenda, operate outside the confines of the law, the policy of the Constitution. They would be held accountable and yet we sat here until August to see some of them and the only reason that they we saw any accountability was because they refused to just follow orders from this director. Yeah, it is time for total personnel warfare. Yeah, so he's right. I mean, when he's right, he's right. When the guy is right, you got to give him credit for being right.

I wish he would just do what he said he would do. You're correct. Also. Did you also find it kind of funny that he said the people with the badge and the gun, whatever else? And I'm just picturing him running around with that thing

and then abusing that authority. And then, you know, we've got people that are on the the FBI director's details, the various details that are out there letting us know that Cash Patel is like partying all night in club in this private club that's in DC. So when he's in DC, he's sleeping in so late that his detail has to wake him up to go

to work like a teenager. I don't remember the last time anyone's had to. Like, I might have had one time in the last 25 years when I've overslept an alarm and I don't know what I was like. I must have been up really late doing something else. And then I, you know, overslept an alarm that I was supposed to have a short amount of sleep and I got more than I needed or was allowed to have. I can't remember anybody waking me up to go to work as a grown up. Is that a real thing?

Steve, Has anyone woken you up and be like Steve? Steve, you got to go out on the arrest or you've got a meeting with the entire senior staff of the FBI and you're you're still hungover, bro. It is so rare in my life that I believe I wrote an entire chapter about it in my book. They feel about the one time that I. Slept the book. Go ahead. Hold on. Plug the book. When was the last time we sold the book? Sell a book. Steve here. You go sell a book. Yeah, that's right.

Go to Amazon.com. You can get a copy of True Blue, My Journey From Beat Cop to Suspended FBI Whistleblower. I probably won't see any royalties from it, but you will nonetheless have a great and accountable, accurate story about how much the FBI sucks and how it mistreats its whistleblowers. Yeah. And on top of it, how they told you that there was supposed to be a loyalty to the FBI and not to the Constitution in direct opposition to what Cash was just saying in that little Fox News

clip. Can you confirm that the people that told you those things still work for the FBI? Is that true? Can confirm. Can confirm, sat in a meeting with Shawn Ryan Colt Markovski. They were both assistant special agents in charge of the FBI Jacksonville field office. Colt sort of ran the meeting. All this is actually documented. It's transcribed. You want to listen to the audio? It's all there as well about the meeting I had with him. And Colt said at one point that

I should set an example. I did have an oath of office. I did have training that said I was supposed to raise concerns. But at the end of the day, I should set an example for my sons and just follow orders. So now, naturally, Sean Ryan has been promoted. He's a special agent in charge of Washington Field Office. Colt Markovski is a unit chief

over at headquarters. And both of those names are names of people who I gave to Cash Patel in the lead up to him becoming the FBI director, which he then directly testified that he didn't not have any sort of conversations about personnel matters similar to the way that he talked about not knowing Stu Peters could be a problem. So yeah, the question came up yesterday while I was on Infowars.

I'm going to, I'm going to address it real quickly here 'cause I think I got cut off yesterday, as is known to happen on that program. What do people have on Cash Patel? I think they have probably a total of 2 serious things thing #1A lack of candor, Underoath, perjury charges that could exist for lying during his confirmation process, both in writing and in Word. This happened. It's non negotiable.

He knew who Stu Peters was. He knew who and some of the other people that he was questioned about. Whether he went on their podcast, there will be text message evidence that would indicate that's the case. He's flat out denied knowing or being in connected to or being aware of certain people, right? So I think that's true.

The second thing is, is that he clearly lied about whether or not he had foreknowledge or some sort of input in personal actions that took place before he was confirmed as director. That was shared by Brian. Driscoll would have known about that for sure. Driscoll, who was just terminated, We had the what was the guy Dennehy that was out in New York would have known about that and was the whistle blower apparently that went to went to Cory Booker.

So we know that happened. And then I have text messages as do you that showed that he was telling us that he had gotten rid of some people and some of those people have been reinstated. It sounds like those people now may be on the hook. We may actually have Spencer Evans. I'm hearing some rumblings that he was actually let go as well in this little bloodbath for the

Alex Jones piece. So all these things are problematic when your job is to run an agency where lack of candor for any reason will end your career, especially Underoath. That's like that's a no brainer. And I don't even have a problem with him in while in the confirmation process sort of back channelling things to set the ground for a shock and awe campaign he. Should have been doing that, but you should just admit to it. You just go like, yeah, like I'm part of the transition team.

Like I'm work. I'm. I'm planning on doing that job. That's why I'm here to be confirmed. Yes, and this is the whole thing with a president gets elected and he starts publicly naming people who he's going to nominate for members of his cabinet. Sir, were were you involved in planning to take over the government? Yeah, I was elected similarly. It's usually. Going to become the incoming FBI director. I don't want to show up the first day and be like, all

right, what are we going to do? Next year, where's my desk? Is there like a health club or something? Do I need key card access to the gym like that's not supposed to? Happen to that too? Because what the director is saying is right. You got to remember, we come in in the morning, there's a portfolio of 100 level 10 items. If it's a level 9, which is a pretty big freaking deal, someone else fixed it. The only thing that gets to my desk or his is a level 10. That's the entire day.

Look at his schedule any given day. Shouldn't he know who's putting those level 10s on his desk? Steve Friend. Yeah. And we should also know what the schedule looks like. Does it start at 8 or probably closer to 11:45? That's called a soft 1030. Yeah, no, all that's craziness. Of course you would have some access to it and and they should have had their own people in there and they should have had people that they can trust to go and vet that information for BS.

That's your job. And I, I mean, I would want the director, incoming director, the nominee to be getting similar briefings that you would have a president-elect on sensitive national security matters because you don't want him showing up in the first week and being like, all right, let me show you how the terrorist attack is probably going to happen next week. Like they, they need to have

that information and that. And I don't doubt for a minute that there is a transition thing going on and it was maybe perhaps some sort of a gotcha question, but he should have just been direct and answered that question. Similarly, it was an unnecessary lie about Stu Peters. Hey, yes, I like to share my information with as wide audience as possible. I'm not responsible for what that host says at any other point in time.

If he had said anything to me that I found abhorrent or put me as in Chris Ray said made me feel aghast, then I would have severed that relationship and just gone on. But instead he said, I, I don't know who you're talking about. No, I don't know anything and just an unnecessary mistake. Yeah, there's no reason for it. And the only reason I took this job was because my business acumen sucks.

All these days are on private jets, so the only way I was going to get home was becoming the director. Yeah, it's a joke. That was the day that he was confirmed when he was talking about that plane. We've heard how much he loves that plane, how he's going out there with bottles of booze, that he's flying back and forth to Las Vegas. My, my second thought is, is that cash is not just compromised by things that he

said that were lies. Underoath The second piece of it is, is that he really likes being the FBI director. It's a pretty good gig. And he gets to live like a billionaire. So why, why would you want to give that up? He's willing to play ball. I don't think the FBI director job is that hard. I think the deputy director job is incredibly. Yeah, no, I have. Here's the Here's the funniest

thing. For all my irritation with Dan Bongino and the fact that he's behind my, the scenes, like slandering me, I actually would never want any. I wouldn't wish that job on you or anyone that I liked. And I actually wouldn't wish it on people that I had even like a decent opinion of. And I wouldn't wish it on Dan Bongino, 'cause he's set up to fail. He walked into a job that he didn't know how to do with an agency that he wasn't familiar with after a lot of big talk for

a long time. And he didn't have the humility to say, I'm not the guy for this job. Like whoever asked him whether it was Donald Trump, whether it was Pam Bondi, whether it was Susie Wiles, whether it was whether it was Cash Patel himself and just said, hey, I need, I need the star power of Dan Bongino. A, an honest operator would have said, really want to help you. Let me help you find the right guy 'cause I'm not it. That's what a that's what a humble man would have said.

Someone who had an accurate self-assessment. Or if you are duty bound, you're truly a patriotic person. The president himself calls you up and says I need you. You are the unique person in this position and you feel some sort of obligation to take that on, that you still have to maintain a level of humility to say, I don't know what I'm doing and surround yourself with people. If you're an outsider, there's nothing stopping you from

bringing in other outsiders. There's nothing stopping you from doing some sort of a vetting process, poking and prodding people who you maybe have relationships with who know the good actors. I mean, I can think of a cast of characters who have been tossed aside by the FBI that seem to have a lot of access and know who the good people are and might be able to be in a position to throw names towards them and say, hey, look, they're on Team America.

You should probably surround on yourself with these guys and then go in completely open book and say, I don't know my ass from a hole in the wall when it comes to running this agency. I'm going to lean heavily on you to help me with the mechanics of it. I'm also going to lean heavily on you to call BS. When somebody does a Bureau speak and talks over me and they sound confident, but I really don't know what they're saying me tap me on the shoulder and

say that's a bunch of bull. Everything he said should be disregarded. And while we're doing that, let's go ahead and name some targets that are coming down the line in the future. So for those of you who work inside the FBI, there's people who I am setting my sights on, and most of them are people who worked with this smiling face

right there. It's quite interesting to me that we've heard a lot of focus on Jim Comedy, who's outside the statute of limitations, who's no longer there, who was part of the Russia gate of 2016. We're hearing very, very little about Chris Ray. Why would that be? Would it be because all the people that are advising Dash Pongino are former Chris Ray acolytes? Of course it is. That's who was there. So we're going to be talking about, let's see, let's see if

we've got some names here. Was it things like Vanessa Tibbins? Is that her name? What did I share with you guys earlier today? We're going to have to look at Robert Kasane. How about the former #2 underneath Driscoll, who was just removed when he was the acting number one? These are people we're going to have to start looking into.

We're going to have to find the special assistants and the folks that were the senior advisors that managed to scape out because they weren't on the top of the org chart. There are people that had direct access to Chris Ray, were moved into positions by Chris Ray in his way out that were not the the associate or the executive assistant directors that were

actually all kind of removed. They got rid of like 6 people, but they were dozens of people that were in that orbit that got moved into senior positions, like special agents in charge around the country. And some of them are in New York. And we're going to have to go and pull them out for you. So what are your thoughts?

On that, have this challenge, if they had followed a recommendation like eliminating everybody who was AGS 15 and above and just doing a just drastic reformation of the way that you had management slash leadership. And in actually acquiring people and elevating people who were competent at law enforcement and national security matters from the field as opposed to from the DC swamp where they just tend to just hang out, That would have been a recipe to reform the

agency dramatically and quickly. What if your previous job from July of 2023 until February of 2025, just before Cash Patel was sworn in? What if your previous job was the Executive Special Assistant to the FBI Director and Section Chief of the Directors, Operations and Strategy Section? Do you think that you should still be holding on to an SES position in one of the most important field offices in America? Would that make sense to you at

all, Steve? Not if that FBI director was Christopher Wray, who's credibly been accused by people on this program, IE me and you, of committing perjury. Because all of the whistleblower disclosures that suspendables brought forward were during Chris Wray's tenure. He was the FBI director for eight years. It wasn't like he had a cup of coffee there.

The radical traditional Catholic memo, spying on parents at school board meetings, All the weaponization with the January 6th stuff, like all of it. It was Chris Ray time. So if you were in his orbit, you were a special advisor or special assistant. You were like rubbing elbows with Chris Ray. I can't help but think that perhaps you might be a bad faith actor. What if you were the section chief for the Director's

Operation and Strategy section? That sounds like something that would actually be pulling all the nefarious deeds, and the whistleblowers helped expose some of that. You think that a guy that'd be in charge right now would want to help? Actually, he said that he would. Underoath. As you well know, and you and I discussed this in my office, whistleblowers are critical to rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse.

Their courage to come forward and make legally protected disclosures about government wrongdoing benefits the country. I think they're politically, they are good. American citizens just want the government to do what it's supposed to do. I think they're treated by bureaucracies, not just in the FBI, but throughout the bureaucracy, like skunks at a picnic.

Will you protect whistleblowers from retaliation, unlike former Director Ray, and promote a culture at the FBI that values whistleblowers important contributions? Absolutely, Mr. Chairman, I share in your beliefs about the importance of whistleblowers. So we've spent a lot of taxpayers money ruining whistleblowers. Will you commit to ensuring that no taxpayer money will be used to identify and retaliate against whistleblowers? Senator, if I'm confirmed, it will not. OK. Back check.

This is something else that's worth going into. There's two aspects to what happens to whistleblowers and they're talking about they're the one aspect and we've hammered it. And Garrett Boyle being indefinitely unpaid, suspended for 1050 days at this point. That's the retaliation aspect. It's completely correctable and it should be adjudicated, but nobody ever pays attention to

the first aspect. And that is the reasonable concern of waste, fraud, abuse, rest of the public safety, violation of rule, policy, procedure, constitution of the law that that individual brings forward. Is that matter addressed? Has it been or is it just been ignored? And then we went after the

person. Then we focused on the retaliation because the corrective action that I wanted, that you wanted, that Garrett wanted we brought forward in good faith and said, like, hey, I think I see a problem here. Can you take that up? And I'm just going to go back to work that that's all we really were concerned about. Yeah, no, I went back to my job. Well, then I got kicked out of the office. But I went back to my job until they kicked me out of the office.

But those problems have not been adjudicated. I mean, there's been some vindication. I mean, like you might, January 6th concerns were vindicated. Tulsi Gabbard released documents six weeks ago that verified 100% accurate everything that I said. Whereas the accountability on that right and the secondary concern is the retaliation. But really at the crux of it is I just wanted that matter addressed because it was important enough for me to put

my livelihood on the line. I knew the the potentiality that I was taking on and doing that and have lost out on that opportunity hurts worse than the retaliation.

We're getting some vindication too, because all this stuff not just goes back to the weaponization of the FBI or the weaponization of DOJ at the American public, but like there's a big problem with the COVID vaccine mandates, which came out because the Biden administration just said we're going to use a whole of government approach to purge people that don't believe and do exactly what we say.

And that was a big issue. I think there was a settlement that was announced yesterday between DOJ and a group that I've been affiliated with since they started the Feds for Medical Freedom. And they actually got I think a like 1/2 win. But what they got is, is the retraction and deletion of the database of all the people. By the way, they should have never had this.

But all the people that were in the federal service that got the vaccines or didn't get the vaccines, more importantly, so they could be looked over for promotions or they could be identified as potential like, you know, conservative issue problems. So they actually got that. Supposedly it's going to be deleted in the next 60 days. That was one of the things that my lawsuit was actually looking for. So now we don't have to ask for it because it's already been done.

And they got a partial repayment of some of their legal fees, which were substantial. And we crowdsourced them from people that were either current or federal or former federal employees. So that's worth noting. This was the same sort of lawsuit that was moving forward out of the 5th Circuit that actually ended up getting the original injunctions that stopped the vaccine mandates. So all these things went back to compliance.

And I think that's what you're saying is like, look, people are who are willing to step out of sort of that compliance safety and say, hey, I got a problem. This looks wrong. We should probably check that like the code is bad or it's doing what it's not designed to do. The system has a flaw. Can we address that before we hurt somebody and they're like, you're the problem.

You can't call out problems here like we need to go and do freaking credit checks on you and find out what's wrong, you know, and then we thought we had guys that were going to go and fix it. And that's the that's what the betrayal looks like for you. And I like forget that Chris Ray did it because I assumed that that was the case. We actually heard for a long time that the guys that are running it right now, we're going to go fix it.

They're on record and both, both of them a plethora of times all across different channels and different outlets. They've declared the problems and they said that they were uniquely qualified to go in and fix it. And I took them at their word. I continue to be optimistic to a certain regard that they will actually have the scales fall away from their eyes. Maybe they just need to be embarrassed a little bit more and go do it. But at the same time, I'm also, you know, my core.

I'm a pragmatist. Some would call that pessimist. I just say I'm the guy in the POW camp who's not willing to say, well, maybe tomorrow the rescue is going to come. I just kind of say embrace the suck now and maybe we'll fall in a solution. That way I don't feel like I got psychologically kicked in the crotch every day for the rest of my life. Yeah, you can't wait for them to solve it. I knew this was over, by the way, and I think this is pretty clear.

I knew this was over when this happened. But you promoted Stephen Jensen, the architect of the FB is overzealous January 6th investigation. I want the American public to realize what we did. That man was in a position where he he literally fought back against the machine who was saying we want to politicize this event. We want to politicize this

event. And at the end of the day, remember, Maria, there's a chain of command here so you can fight back your chain of command to a certain degree before they fire. And Steve Jensen and other folks were promoted because they embody what the American public demands of FBI agents. Subservience the minute that he made excuses for a bad personnel decision instead of saying holy crap we didn't know, which is what they just had to do yesterday, holy crap we didn't

know this guy was a problem. Thank God that the people out there that do know about it, that the suspendables have been pointing this idiot out and showing what he did and what he was a part of. Thank God for that. And we're going to correct our actions and we're going to actually consult with some people who actually know what

the FBI means. Because we didn't know that the section chief of DTOS, who's on record in the Congressional Record and was actually the guy who declared that January Sixers were in fact terrorists, We didn't know that that guy was a real problem. I just thought he was a bro from New York because that's where I came from. This goes back to the humility. This goes back to the the question over your competence and capabilities.

I have no expectation that the director and the deputy director, both outsiders, are going to go in there and are going to know the resume of all 38,000 people within their orbit. That's right. We have to have the humility to say, hey, we screwed up. We're going to course correct right away, snap back into place. But instead they doubled down and went really aggressive. They go out to Fox News, the biggest conservative news source out there, and say things

adamantly. Yeah, I mean, he, he really stressed just the word. Literally with. Me, seriously, I guess because it's not written in literature, so I'm going to be a pedantic jerk and call him out on that. But secondly, he then caught himself. I'd said it, he caught him. He was about to say just followers, but then he just worked that in anyway, all right? Well, you're going to hear it here first folks, for those of you that are listening now, let me just go ahead and call the next shot.

The next shot we're going to be exposing and showing is this exact person that I told you, a former section chief, the director's operation and. Strategy section, someone who spent a year and a half in Chris Ray's orbit doing his strategy and was then promoted just before Cash Patel stepped in. Her name is Vanessa Tibbits. TIBBITS. You can dig on your own. It's very easy.

Luckily, these people are so dumb that they put Linkedin's out there because they expect to get a job after they they leave the FBI. She's got more than 20 years. She can retire tomorrow. She should. If she does, I'm going to claim that scalp as well. Vanessa Tibbetts is the next shot and they're both are our next people are going to be exposed from the New York field office where Cash Patel has moved people that he's already fired. He's already fired the guy that

was there. He fired the a Dick Dennehy who showed a small rebellion. All of these people are working against them If they can't see that what we want is a de weaponized FBI and we don't want the people that were under this guy's tutelage. We're just going to the iron law, the iron law of Phil Kennedy's law #1 which is that no matter who you put in that director's chair, you get Jim Comedy. It doesn't matter that his name is Cash Patel today. And like I said, our our

summation. My summation is I'm cashed out, I'm, I'm done. Like these guys need to go. Donald Trump needs to go ahead and get himself an FBI director that knows what's going on. By the way, that's not me and it's not you. I wouldn't even recommend you Steve, even though I like you. Don't put that evil on me. Yeah, yeah, I wouldn't, sorry. Look, they can take the corrective action now or later and just have a whole bunch of

embarrassment right around. I mean, if current trends hold, they'll have a very unhappy Christmas time if they don't, right? Yeah, and I still think that Bongino just quits on his own because I think he's miserable. So that's what we hear. All right, that's going to be today's podcast. We'll go and have something funny because God forbid we not do that. Let me just go a couple other things here first.

If you're watching over on Rumble, if you're watching on X, if you're watching on YouTube, will you please like this? If you're subscribed over on Locals, we appreciate you. And if not, you can do so by going to kyleseraphin.com. You're basically just supporting what we're doing over here, but you're also able to call for the call in show like we did last night and we have fun with that. You get a little bit of behind the scenes stuff, so great appreciation for all of you that

are involved in that. You can find the show also on Spotify. It's Kyle seraphinshow.com, kyleseraphinshow.com. We'll get you to Spotify. You're going to hear some ads that I don't read on there. We do get paid for those, so we appreciate you listening whether you're on Apple or on Spotify or iHeartRadio or any of those things. The video and the audio are both available on Spotify, which makes it great.

And if you're a Spotify Premium member, then you don't get any extra commercials, so that's pretty cool too. And you can skip around and do things after the fact. If you ever want to catch it in the replay, that's a good place to go do that. I'm going to give some funny stuff because we have to have something that makes us laugh a little bit. But before that, Steve friend, what do you got coming up on the American Radicals this weekend?

Well, join us tomorrow, 10:30 Eastern Time rumble.com/AM Rad Pod American Radicals Saturday Grab bag edition. We talked about how California is about to legalize child trafficking and then also some questions in the New York Times about Karen. Am I married to a bisexual man and I need some advice on SO? It's going to be a fun one. Looking forward to it. Join us tomorrow 10:30 Eastern Time. Guys, have a great weekend.

Steve, friend, I appreciate you. It's always fun to know that if you're on my program, it's Friday, which means it's the weekend for most the audience. So you got it, man. See you. All right, buddy, See you. All right, ladies and gentlemen, I'm going to give you 1 little thing we've been bagging on certain people in the world, and I'm going to go ahead and say that this is a fairly universal experience. When you're married, you start outsourcing some of the things that you're good at.

Your competencies go away. I am no longer capable of cooking for myself, Basically. I used to be, that wasn't great, but I could. But I can't do that anymore and I find that my wife doesn't like to back in and park the car anymore. Sometimes I have to get out and do that. So when you're in a partnership where some person dominates at one thing and another person dominates at another, then you end up having these sort of

specializations. This is a man going to the doctor without his wife when he doesn't know the answers to the questions because this is not his section or Forte. Just a little kind of a palate cleanse as we go into the weekend. Go out there and find your partner. If you don't have one, find someone that's going to help. Be good at the things that you're not. Hey, how you doing? Checking in? Yeah, checking in. You still have the same insurance. Hey, do we have the same insurance?

I don't know. He just asked me. He was like, do you have the same insurance? Yeah, we have the same insurance. Great. What's the reason for your visit today? Well. So just tell him I have a sore throat and then he'll know what I'm supposed to do. I have a sore. Throat No. No. Yeah, it's been bothering me since last. Night What medications are you currently taking? Currently I'm the name of the medication. I'm taking the 1 stuff. No yeah, mylana. Also don't don't say mylana. Nothing.

I'm not taking anything. OK. Any allergies? Any allergies? He just he just asked me if I had allergies. No, I don't have any allergies. No allergies. Got it. Any changes to your address? Like, have I moved recently? Yeah. OK. So we're still right there with where we live with the kids. I still live at the same address and. Your phone number is still the same. My phone number, Yeah. Is it still the same? Yeah. What number did you dial when you called me?

My phone number is still the same. Who's? Your primary care physician. It's Doctor Alan Grove. You. Sure, you don't want to make a call just to be. Positive. I'm positive it's Doctor Alan Grove. Why don't you go make the? Call who's our primary care physician, Dr. Leah Ballinger. OK, so Doctor Ballinger. I guess we've been going to her for years. OK, follow me and we'll get your weight. Yeah, but he went to the back. So follow him all the way to the back. OK. Hey, I'm going to what?

Put them on the scale. OK. So I'll put them on the scale. Yeah. Yeah, you got to get on that thing down there. A plot twist eventually the doctor has to ask what goes next ladies, we love you and parts of your life you are running all of our parts of those lives and parts of the world that's outside we have to protect you from so that's what it's all about go out like I said it's all about partnership.

You guys are the best. This odd of this show is a little bit self-serving, I understand, but also kind of a victory lap. And also because we got to solve these problems. We cannot have a weaponized DOJFBI out there targeting us. We don't have infinite amount of time. We probably only got about 18 months to figure this thing out. These guys blew it. I'm calling it early. The biggest sin in the MAGA movement or on the conservative side of the coin is knowing the

right thing too soon. I'm going to go ahead and do it anyway. So I'm saying cash these guys out. Donald Trump, let's find you an FBI director that's going to get the work done because it needs to be done so that we don't get killed and so that your wife's underwear drawer doesn't get raided. Again. God bless all of you. I hope you have a fantastic weekend. Where's there's no Sunday. Sit down. We kind of had a busy week here and I look forward to doing

another one. I got kind of some interesting ideas for who it might be someone you've probably never heard of out of Texas that's doing some good work. So that's it for for us today. Again, great weekend. God bless. Adios. Thanks for listening to the Kyle Serafin show, streamed live weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Serafin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth Social and Instagram at Kyle Serafin.

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