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New details suggest that the CIA, under Obama's administration, targeted Trump and initiated the Russia investigation. Former CIA director John Brennan identified 26 Trump associates to be monitored by the 5 Eyes Intelligence Alliance, and the FBI then targeted these individuals as suspicious. This led to the launch of the Russia collusion investigation. The operation's details were kept in a top-secret binder, which Trump has ordered to be declassified. There are rumors that the binder may be missing.

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The transcript states that documents contain emails allegedly from the senior vice president of the George Soros Open Society Foundation. These emails quote a Clinton campaign adviser saying, "it will be a long term affair" and to "demonize Putin and Trump," and that, "later, the FBI will put more oil into the fire." Other emails reportedly reveal Hillary Clinton approved the idea of tying Trump and Russia to election interference, describing it as a scheme hoping the allegations would distract people from her own email scandal. The documents purportedly provide clear evidence that Hillary Clinton's campaign was behind the Russia hoax and that the FBI knew what the Clinton team was up to, acknowledging that the information they were receiving about the Trump campaign may have come from the Clinton camp. The transcript adds that, despite these alleged disclosures, the Obama intel community forged ahead with a 2017 assessment concluding that Russia aspired to help Trump win the election.

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In July 2016, Christopher Steele gave his dossier to the FBI while John Brennan, then head of the CIA, received information about the Hillary Clinton campaign's questionable activities. The evidence related to this was either destroyed or returned to the Clinton Global Initiative. The corruption within the DOJ and FBI is concerning, as an entire investigative team conducting a lawful investigation can be shut down by the Department of Justice. This should be a major story, given the magnitude of the situation.

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Your investigation uncovered witnesses who told you that or told your team that CIA Director John Brennan overruled intelligence officials who were objecting to the inclusion of the Steele dossier in the intelligence community assessment. How well would some of those witnesses hold up in court or in a public hearing of the House Oversight Committee? Well, these are some of the most senior intelligence officials within the CIA who came forward and spoke the truth to the House Intelligence Committee's, majority staff team that launched this investigation. They invest they they spoke to and interviewed over 20 intelligence community professionals, senior officials within the CIA, which is how they uncovered the truth of what actually happened as reported in the documents that we released yesterday.

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The Clinton plan intelligence involved creating a scandal linking Trump to Russia. President Obama, Vice President Biden, and Comey were briefed on this, but it was not shared with agents or the FISA court. The Steele dossier has not been corroborated. The FBI's payments to Steele and Twitter were explained as standard practice. The FBI's actions regarding the Hunter Biden laptop and financial institutions were questioned as political. The FBI's reputation was criticized for appearing political. The FBI's request for financial data from Bank of America was brought up.

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Svetlana Lokova recounts a years-spanning, shadowy influence operation that she says began long before the public Russiagate narrative took hold and continued to unfold through high-level intelligence and political circles in the United States and the United Kingdom. She argues that a coordinated conspiracy, involving American and British intelligence figures, political operatives, and foreign partners, was designed to undermine Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, demonize him in the public sphere, and ultimately reshape U.S. politics in ways that persist to today. She explains that the conspiracy starts with the idea of weaponizing Russia as a pretext to derail Trump. In September 2015, Hillary Clinton’s circle tied to Strobe Talbott and to London-based figures including Richard Dearlove and Christopher Andrew decides to dust off “the old Russian handbook” and pursue a plan to run with Russia as the central smokescreen. Svetlana notes that General Michael Flynn, then head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under Obama, was already engaging with Russia on matters of security and terrorism, and that Flynn’s Moscow trip in December 2015, arranged through the DIA, became a focal point of later accusations. She emphasizes that the trip was conducted under normal security procedures, with defensive briefings and debriefings required for someone of Flynn’s level of clearance. A key tie-in is the Cambridge operation she herself experienced. In 2015 she was an academic at Cambridge University, where she formed connections with MI6’s Richard Dearlove, Cambridge-based MI6-linked figures, and CIA asset Stefan Halper, who had Cambridge cover as a professor. She describes what she calls “bump” encounters—unexpected introductions that later produced routine reports. One such meeting introduced her to John McLaughlin, then acting CIA director, who allegedly expressed admiration for Russia and who later became a conduit for information within the FBI and CIA. Alan Collar, a London-based FBI liaison (Ligat) and a contact to Cambridge, also emerges as a pivotal figure; Svetlana recalls that Collar later sought to have Halper’s help in various capacities, including a potential PhD placement at Cambridge. Svetlana underscores how the operation leveraged a web of relationships: Christopher Steele in Britain, Halper in the U.S., McLaughlin, and MI6 heads like Dearlove, all part of what she describes as a “newsroom-to-FBI-to-CIA” loop. She explains that Steele and Halper acted as confidential informants for the FBI and CIA, with Steele’s dossier and Halper’s reports forming the backbone of what would become the Crossfire Hurricane investigation. She contends that the plan was not simply to accuse Trump of wrongdoing but to create a narrative of foreign interference—Russian involvement used to undermine Trump’s legitimacy and to give cover for the political takes of the Clinton-Soros alliance. The narrative continues with the infamous 2016 timeline. Svetlana recounts how the Hillary Clinton campaign, with Soros backing and with John Podesta’s circle, leveraged a “two-pronged” approach: demonize Trump through a public narrative of Russian interference and simultaneously seed a parallel set of claims about Trump campaign contacts with Russian intelligence. The plan, she says, was documented in internal emails circulated through Soros-linked channels and high-level Clinton aides. An August 2016 Oval Office meeting reportedly included Barack Obama, Susan Rice, James Comey, and John Brennan; Brennan allegedly noted that Hillary’s plan to distract from her email scandal involved tying Trump to Russia and ordered or supported steps to surface contacts between Trump advisers and Russian intelligence. This, she says, culminated in the opening of Crossfire Hurricane, justified by Downer’s May 2016 meeting with George Papadopoulos in London, which fed the FBI’s launch of an overarching inquiry into the Trump campaign. Svetlana emphasizes the mechanics of the operation: a cascade of “two-source” corroboration that failed to exist in reality but was manufactured through coordinated reporting. Stefan Halper and Christopher Steele allegedly provided separate but harmonized lines to the FBI and to journalists (for example, Washington Post and New York Times), with Fusion GPS coordinating research and payments, and with journalists feeding stories into the media while the FBI used those articles as cover to justify surveillance. She notes that the Steele dossier and Halper reports described contacts with Russian figures and asserted Kremlin orders, even while evidence mountains suggested the opposite or were non-existent. The operation allegedly relied on “ambiguous” or “dual-source” reporting to maintain plausible deniability and to keep multiple actors downstream of a single fabrication. Svetlana also describes internal institutional dynamics. She recounts that the Cambridge network included Gina Haspel (then head of the London CIA station) and Mike Morell (a senior CIA official) who allegedly used Cambridge as a front to pursue operations with university cover. The effort, she says, involved the use of “color revolutions” metaphors and methods—funding, organizing demonstrations, and controlling media narratives—through a transatlantic network that included British intelligence (MI6), American agencies (CIA, FBI, DHS), and at times Ukrainian actors. She asserts that the aim was not merely to affect the 2016 election but to create a “fog of war” (as she calls it) to obscure the truth, with the ultimate objective of removing Trump from power or preventing his influence in foreign policy. Two focal consequences are highlighted. First, the emergence of the Russia-collusion frame itself, built on forged or misrepresented evidence about Trump’s alleged ties to Russia and to Russian elites. Second, the use of this frame to drive real-world investigations, media coverage, and political pressure—culminating in the Mueller investigation and attempts to impeach or remove Trump from office. She contends that the Crossfire Hurricane investigation, and later the intelligence community assessment that purported Russian interference and Trump’s supposed collaboration, were built on manipulated or false premises, with the principal architects’ fingerprints on the evidence and the dissemination of the narrative across intelligence and media channels. In her discussion of the Mar-a-Lago documents and the Florida case surrounding John Brennan and other co-conspirators, Svetlana asserts that declassification by President Trump of Crossfire Hurricane documents demonstrated both the existence of the conspiracy and government overreach. She repeats a central point: the documents show a plan written down by Brennan and other aides to tie Trump to Russia, demonize him, and justify an ongoing investigation to undermine his presidency. She notes that the same players who orchestrated the scheme—Halper, Steele, Downer, Brennan, Clapper, Comey, and others—were allegedly involved in a broader pattern of off-the-books operations, funding, and information leaks designed to influence U.S. politics and foreign policy outcomes, with foreign allies in Britain and elsewhere participating in the broader maneuver. Svetlana’s overarching message is that accountability is possible but contingent on public attention and political will. She points to subpoenas and grand jury activity around Brennan and others as indications that the origins of the Russia investigation are formally being examined. She stresses that, despite the persistence of the conspiracy narrative, documents and testimony could reveal the truth behind the orchestrated campaign to disrupt the Trump presidency. She calls on the American public to demand accountability and to remain vigilant about the institutions and actors involved in what she describes as a continuing conspiracy, from Crossfire Hurricane to the later narratives surrounding Mueller and impeachment efforts, and into current political disputes. The dialogue closes with a personal appeal from Svetlana to the audience and to Lara Logan: the need to push for transparency and for due process, to scrutinize the roles of the people who allegedly manufactured and propagated the Russia collusion claims, and to insist on accountability for those who oversaw or participated in actions she frames as treasonous or seditious. She credits Lara Logan for ongoing coverage and expresses gratitude for the support of viewers and readers who seek an unflinching account of events, urging continued public scrutiny and a demand for principled governance.

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The Clinton plan referenced in the video was a purported plan by one of Mrs. Clinton's foreign policy advisers to create a scandal linking Donald Trump to the Russians. This information was received around the same time as the Australian intelligence. On August 3, 2016, Director Brennan briefed President Obama, Vice President Biden, Director of National Intelligence, FBI, Attorney General, and others about this intelligence. However, it was not provided to the agents working on the case or the secret FISA court. The Steele dossier, which was entered into the congressional record, has not been corroborated by the FBI or anyone else.

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The allegations regarding the politicization of the criminal justice system have been dismissed even by Republican-controlled committees. A significant issue is the potential misuse of intelligence, highlighted by a purported plan from a Clinton adviser to create a scandal linking Trump to Russia. On August 3, 2016, key officials, including President Obama and FBI Director Comey, were briefed on this intelligence, but it was not shared with the agents involved or the FISA court. The Steele dossier has not been corroborated by the FBI. Questions arose about the FBI's financial dealings, including a $1 million offer to Christopher Steele and a $3 million payment to Twitter regarding the Hunter Biden laptop story, raising concerns about political motivations. Additionally, there were inquiries about the FBI requesting customer purchase histories related to the January 6 events.

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The Durham report failed to address the issue of Russia's involvement in disseminating hacked emails to benefit Donald Trump. It focused on internal FBI files and only conducted a preliminary investigation. The report also discussed the Steele dossier, which led to convictions of six individuals connected to the Trump campaign. However, the report neglected to mention the FBI whistleblowers, who were deemed national security risks.

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In 2016, a political party in the U.S. allegedly hired a former foreign intelligence asset to create damaging media about their opponent, using campaign funds illegally. They then reportedly involved the FBI to mislead a federal court for unlawful surveillance of the presidential candidate. Even after the candidate was elected, they continued this surveillance with funding from the Hillary and DNC campaign. This scenario, resembling a fictional plot, was part of the Russiagate controversy, where the party sought intelligence from a supposed Russian expert to link their opponent to Russia.

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In July 2016, Christopher Steele gave his dossier to the FBI while John Brennan, then head of the CIA, received information about the Hillary Clinton campaign's questionable activities. The evidence related to this was either destroyed or returned to the Clinton Global Initiative. The corruption within the DOJ and FBI is concerning, as it led to the shutdown of a lawful investigation by the Department of Justice. This should have been a major news story, given the extent of the corruption involved.

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Two years ago, the acting attorney general asked me to serve as special counsel, creating the special counsel's office to investigate Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, including any links or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the Trump campaign. I have not spoken publicly during the investigation, but I am speaking out now because our investigation is complete, the attorney general has made the report largely public, the office is formally closed, and I am resigning from the Department of Justice to return to private life. Beyond a few remarks, the office’s written work should speak for itself. We begin with interference in the 2016 presidential election. The grand jury, in an indictment, alleged that Russian intelligence officers, part of the Russian military, launched a concerted attack on our political system, using sophisticated cyber techniques to hack into computers and networks used by the Clinton campaign. They stole private information and released it through fake online identities and through WikiLeaks, and the releases were designed and timed to interfere with the election and damage a presidential candidate. In a separate indictment, a private Russian entity engaged in a social media operation where Russian citizens posed as Americans to influence an election. These indictments contain allegations, and we are not commenting on the guilt or innocence of any specific defendant. Every defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. The indictments and other activities in our report describe efforts to interfere in our political system, and they needed to be investigated and understood, which is among the reasons the Department of Justice established our office. It was also a reason we investigated efforts to obstruct the investigation. The matters we investigated were of paramount importance; it was critical to obtain full and accurate information from every person we questioned. When a subject obstructs an investigation or lies to investigators, it strikes at the core of the government’s effort to find the truth and hold wrongdoers accountable. Let me say a word about the report. Speaker 1 asks: The name of that firm was Fusion GPS. Is that correct? On page 103, volume two, when referring to the firm that produced the Steele reporting, the name is Fusion GPS. Speaker 0: I’m not familiar with that. Speaker 1 clarifies: It was Fusion GPS. It produced the opposition research.

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The Trump-Russia collusion story was allegedly a hoax known by Democrats, the FBI, the CIA, and Barack Obama. John Ratcliffe approved the release of documents to the DOJ regarding the Obama administration's oversight of the Trump-Russia investigation. John Brennan briefed Obama in 2016 on Hillary Clinton's plan to link Trump to Russia. John O'Connor claims the Clinton campaign, not Trump, worked with Russia. Critics allege abuse of power and potential criminal activity by intelligence and law enforcement agencies. Hillary Clinton and the Democrats were responsible, and Obama and Biden may have known. A CIA memo notes Russians believed Hillary Clinton tried to stir up scandal to distract from her email server. The FBI allegedly shut down investigations into the Clinton Foundation and illegal contributions to Hillary's campaign from overseas. James Comey allegedly pushed to spy on the Trump campaign. The Obama administration allegedly prevented investigations into Hillary and greenlit fake investigations into Trump. Obama allegedly lied about not discussing pending investigations with the Attorney General or FBI director. The Biden administration allegedly obstructed the Durham report. The New York Times allegedly had meetings with the Clinton campaign. The Durham report is considered devastating to the FBI and exonerates Donald Trump to a degree. Some believe those involved should be prosecuted for misusing the CIA and FBI.

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The transcript reports that Tulsi Gabbard released a House Intel report alleging a conspiracy by President Obama and U.S. intelligence agencies to undermine the 2016 election and Donald Trump. It claims Obama ordered a new intelligence community assessment on Russia’s interference, handpicking five CIA analysts to draft a rushed, siloed report with only one person in charge. The four elements cited as the basis of the Russia hoax are: Putin wanted Trump to win; Putin took action to help Trump win; the Russians had blackmail on Trump (the Steele dossier); and that the Russians tried colluding with the Trump campaign. It asserts there was no reliable intelligence to support these allegations, senior CIA officials refused to traffic in them, but were overruled by Brennan and Comey, who allegedly cherry-picked, misquoted, and suppressed countervailing intelligence, including anonymous postings. The document alleges Obama continued promoting the hoax, mentions potential criminal implications, and states the Steele dossier was not used by the CIA. It ends with accountability rhetoric.

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In the summer of 2016, our government received intelligence suggesting that Secretary Clinton had approved a plan to link President Trump to Russia. Director Brennan briefed the President, Vice President, Attorney General, and FBI Director on this important intelligence, which was then put into a referral memorandum. Director Comey and Agent Strzok received this memorandum, but it was not shared with the FISA court, the lawyers preparing the FISA application, or the agents working on the Crossfire Hurricane case. When the referral memo was shown to one of the agents, he had never seen it before and became upset because it was important information that had been kept from him.

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Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign manager Robbie Mook testified that Clinton herself approved the idea of giving the Alpha Bank story to a reporter as part of the Trump-Russia narrative. He described a moment when the campaign told Clinton they had information alleging a link between the Trump Organization and a Russian-based bank through a back channel, and that she agreed to let it be shared with the media. To provide background, the report involved an allegation about the Trump Organization, via a back channel to a Russian bank named Alfa Bank, which has ties to the Kremlin and Russian oligarchs close to Vladimir Putin. In 2016, campaign attorney Michael Sussman went to James Baker, the FBI’s general counsel at the time, informing him that he had information linking the Trump Organization to a Russian bank through a back channel and via a computer server. James Baker took the information to the FBI, which investigated and found nothing substantial. The Clinton campaign also learned about the information, and Robbie Mook later stated that Clinton was briefed on the allegation and gave the approval to disseminate it to the media. Sussman faces one count of providing a false statement to the FBI. The moment described by Mook—that Clinton personally approved sending the story to a reporter—was presented as surprising in court, especially since the information later turned out to be baseless. During coverage, a reporter quotes Mook: “we told her, Hillary Clinton, we have this, and that's the information about this bank allegedly having this communication or at least the server suggested so with the Trump Organization. We told her we have this, and we wanna share it with a reporter. She agreed to that.” The discussion also notes that the information was ultimately false or lacking evidence. Questions are raised about why the information was given to reporters, including a claim that they did not have the expertise to judge the information and were briefed by Mark Elias about it. Mook says they decided to give it to a reporter so the reporter could run it down more. It’s argued that reporters may not have done due diligence to verify with the FBI or other sources, and that the story was amplified despite its lack of substantiation. Speaker commentary emphasizes the perceived strategic value of the release and critiques the media’s coverage, suggesting that the Russia narrative was intensified by those opposed to a Trump presidency. The discussion also references Mark Elias, who led the law firm that funded the Steele dossier, tying the episode to broader assertions about campaign desperation and attempts to influence the political outcome.

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- Speaker 0 states they believe certain people are dishonest and crooked and that they may have to pay a price; they insist they are truly bad and dishonest people, and imply consequences may follow. - Speaker 1 discusses a criminal investigation into James Comey and John Brennan related to the so-called Russian collusion hoax, asserting they tried to ruin Trump’s life and that he prevailed. - Speaker 1 notes that for years, ranking members of Congress, the intelligence community, and the FBI claimed Donald Trump was colluding with Russia to win the 2016 election, and that this was continued through his first presidency. - Speaker 2 references emails suggesting Donald Trump Jr. was willing to collude with Russia, questioning how to know what happens when Trump and Putin meet, and suggests Trump’s repeated denials of collusion may have been truthful. - Speaker 3 asks if there has been any evidence of collusion, coordination, or conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia, and Speaker 2 disagrees, saying there is plenty of evidence of collusion or conspiracy in plain sight. - Speaker 1 cites a recently declassified CIA “lessons learned” document from John Ratcliffe noting that the investigation was messed up, aimed at preventing Trump from winning and then hampering his agenda, and mentions multiple procedural anomalies in the preparation of the ICA (intelligence community assessment). - They walk through the timeline: Christopher Steele, a former MI-6 officer with Russian intel expertise, was hired by Fusion GPS, which was paid by Perkins Coie for Hillary Clinton’s campaign (notably Mark Elias) to produce opposition research on Trump; this unvetted dossier was used to bolster the case and was shopped to media to create a narrative of Trump-Russia ties, then used as a legal hook to push a narrative. - Speaker 1 argues Hillary Clinton leveraged influence to funnel the unverified dossier into the FBI and into a FISA warrant for Carter Page, noting it was not disclosed that the dossier was funded by Hillary Clinton, which they view as a major omission. - Ratcliffe’s document is cited as saying including the Steele dossier in the ICA undermined credibility and ran counter to tradecraft principles. - A second parallel element involved Natalia Veselnitskaya, a Russian lawyer paid by Fusion GPS and Clinton campaign, who met Don Jr. at Trump Tower; Don Jr. texted during the meeting that he was unsure what was happening, and the meeting was publicly used to support the Steele dossier claims about Trump’s ties to Russia. - The Speaker covers Hillary Clinton’s classified server issue, including the use of BleachBit and hammers, and notes DNC servers were hacked by Russia; they frame these events as being used to shift focus to Trump collusion. - They describe Crossfire Hurricane as the investigation into Trump, calling it an “insurance policy” to deflect attention from Clinton’s classified server issues and to portray Trump as guilty, describing the investigations into Trump associates (Papadopoulos, Carter Page, Manafort, Flynn) as efforts to keep the narrative alive even after Trump’s election victory. - Speaker 1 asserts Mueller’s appointment was scope-limited but later expanded, allowing broad access and substantial taxpayer cost; Brennan and Comey are accused of feeding initial information for a political purpose, with high-level agency involvement and misrepresentation in Congress. - They claim there was never any actual evidence of Russian collusion charged against the Trump campaign. - They mention Charles McGonigal, a former FBI counterintelligence official, as someone charged in connection with Russia, implying the broader narrative was invalid and asserting that those involved lied. - The speakers conclude that the entire setup was a scam and express a desire for accountability.

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Michael Flynn, a former Defense Intelligence Agency head and Trump national security advisor, was an intelligence community surveillance target, as was staffer George Papadopoulos. The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence released a report clearing Trump of colluding with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. Sources close to the House Permanent Select Committee, led by Adam Schiff, continued working covertly out of a small room in Langley. They had access to raw logs and communications from agencies like the CIA and the National Security Council.

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Fox News alert: Tulsi Gabbard releases a report alleging a conspiracy by a sitting president, Barack Obama, and his intel agencies to sabotage the president-elect Donald Trump, brainwash the electorate, and undermine the legitimacy of an election. There is irrefutable evidence detailing how Obama and his national security team directed the creation of an intelligence community assessment they knew was false, promoting a narrative that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to help Trump win, selling it to the American people as true. Gabbard obtained a House Intelligence Committee report locked away in a CIA vault for almost a decade. Investigators spent over two thousand hours interviewing 20 CIA and FBI officials, and it shows the Obama administration doctored intelligence to make it look like Putin and Trump stole the election. A month after Trump beat Hillary, Obama wasn’t satisfied with intelligence reporting and ordered his CIA director to create a new assessment of how Russia interfered with the election. This was a highly unusual move. John Brennan handpicked five CIA analysts to write the assessment, and they were siloed; none knew what the others were doing, and only one analyst was in charge of drafting the report. It was not routine, and it was rushed to publish before Trump’s inauguration. Nothing was coordinated with other intelligence agencies. Basically, this was “home cooking” for Barack Obama. Four key elements were repeated to form the basis of the Russia hoax and the Mueller investigation: 1) that Vladimir Putin wanted Trump to win; 2) Putin took action to help Trump win; 3) the Russians had blackmail on Trump (the Steele dossier); and 4) that the Russians tried colluding with the Trump campaign. None of this was ever true; there was no reliable intelligence to support these allegations. Senior CIA officials repeatedly refused to traffic in these allegations, but were overruled by CIA director Brennan and FBI director Comey, who insisted they be pushed without verifiable evidence. The Obama administration cherry-picked intelligence, lied about sources, misquoted sources, did not corroborate claims, suppressed intelligence counter to their narratives, and even used anonymous Internet postings. Rank-and-file CIA admitted violations of tradecraft standards; a massive pressure campaign came from the top, with unusual directives from political appointees, the CIA director, and Obama himself. This is how the Russia hoax was born. Donald Trump knows that the Russians helped him win in 2016. Putin hated Hillary Clinton, with a noted preference for the opponent he disliked least. It was Russia in a systematic effort to interfere in the election and advance Trump’s prospects. The report notes that at one point, 60% of Democrats believed the Russians hacked voting machines to help Trump win, but the report shows Russians sought to create chaos and undermine democracy; solid intelligence suggested Putin had no preference, and expected Hillary to win, holding compromising dirt on her that he never released. If Putin wanted Trump to win, why didn’t he drop the dirt? There were high-level DNC emails detailing Hillary’s psycho-emotional problems, uncontrolled fits of anger, aggression, and a daily regimen of tranquilizers; Brennan and the intelligence community mischaracterized intelligence and relied on dubious sources to create a narrative of Putin’s preference for Trump, though Obama and intelligence leaders knew Putin did not collude with Trump and did not direct his people to help Trump win, yet they published it anyway. Obama and his intel spies purportedly cooked intelligence to look like Putin preferred Trump, undermining faith in elections and causing chaos. Do you believe this implicates Obama in criminal behavior? There is a referral of documents to the Department of Justice and the FBI to investigate criminal implications. Evidence points to Obama leading the manufacturing of the intelligence assessment. Even two years after the election, Obama pushed a hoax he knew wasn’t true. Brennan, Comey, and others may have liability. Trey Gowdy claims Brennan committed perjury for lying to Congress. When asked who commissioned the Steele dossier, responses indicate the CIA did not rely on it; it was not part of the intelligence community assessment. The broadcast concludes with the assertion that what happened to these officials is not revenge, but accountability, while noting ongoing questions about potential criminal action.

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According to declassified documents, there was intelligence information received around the same time as information from the Australians, indicating a purported plan by one of Hillary Clinton's foreign policy advisors to create a scandal tying Donald Trump to Russia. Then-Director Brennan briefed President Obama, Vice President Biden, Director of National Intelligence, the FBI (Director Comey), the Attorney General, and others about this intelligence on August 3, 2016. A congressman stated that the Steele dossier was entered into the congressional record, but that there is not a single substantive piece of information in the dossier that has ever been corroborated by the FBI or to his knowledge anyone else. Another congressman questioned why the FBI allegedly offered Christopher Steele $1,000,000 to verify the dossier and then allegedly offered $3,000,000 to Twitter to suppress the Hunter Biden laptop story, suggesting the FBI was planning elections. Director Ray responded that payments to social media companies are for costs in responding to legal processes, as per longstanding federal law. Another congressman asked Director Ray if the FBI asked financial institutions to turn over customers' debit and credit card purchase history in the Washington D.C. area for January 5th-6th, 2021. Director Ray stated he did not know the answer.

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The Obama administration allegedly spied on the Trump campaign and presidency, misleading the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) to obtain search warrants. The court was not informed that the main evidence was the Trump dossier, which was funded by the Clinton campaign and the Democratic party. The dossier was described as unverified and salacious by FBI Director Comey. The court was also not told that the British spy who wrote part of the dossier was biased against Trump. Additionally, the court was not informed that the FBI fired the source of the dossier for leaking information to the media. The government presented a Yahoo article as corroboration, without disclosing that it was based on the phony dossier. The FISA court approved the warrant multiple times without knowing the full story. FBI and DOJ officials are accused of lying to the court and the American people. The dossier was crucial in obtaining the warrant, and without it, they would not have been able to do so. The Grassley-Graham memo and report further confirmed the deception by the FBI. The search warrant targeted Carter Page, a former Trump campaign volunteer, but it was also used to spy on others in the Trump team. The spying was seen as an attempt to ensure Clinton's victory and as an insurance policy in case Trump won. This is considered a serious violation of the US constitution and an attempt to subvert the will of the American people. Several high-ranking FBI and DOJ officials may face criminal charges for their actions.

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The discussion centers on the Inspector General's (IG) report on the FBI's investigation into the Trump campaign. Speaker 0 claims the report vindicates the FBI from accusations of treason and illegal spying. However, Speaker 1 points out the IG's findings of significant inaccuracies and omissions in the FISA applications, including 17 errors. Speaker 0 admits to being wrong about the FISA process but maintains the Steele dossier was part of a broader mosaic of facts. Speaker 1 counters that the IG found the dossier essential to obtaining the FISA warrant and that the FBI renewed the application multiple times despite knowing the Steele reporting was not credible. Speaker 1 highlights that the CIA informed the FBI about Carter Page's relationship with them, but this information was not shared with the FISA court. Additionally, an FBI lawyer allegedly altered a document to state Page was not a source. Speaker 0 states the IG did not find misconduct by FBI personnel, only mistakes. Speaker 1 notes that the case of Kevin Klein Smith has been referred for criminal investigation. Speaker 0 emphasizes the IG did not find criminal misconduct, political bias, or illegal conduct.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Fact-Checking the New York Times' "Daily" Podcast's Disinformation-Filled Russiagate Episode
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Megyn Kelly’s show centers on Russia Gate coverage and how the New York Times has handled it. The host highlights Michael Schmidt, the Times investigative reporter tied to leaks via a Columbia professor, and notes Schmidt’s appearance on the Daily and later promotion on MSNBC with his wife as anchor. The segment accuses the Times of withholding key context and presenting Schmidt as an unquestioned expert while neglecting his involvement and conflicts of interest. Panelists recount the evolution of the Russia inquiry: Obama ordered an assessment after Russia meddled in 2016 to determine what happened, with conclusions that Putin tried to hurt Hillary and help Trump. They contrast that with the House Intelligence Committee’s HypSY report, which they say shows the ICA relied on cherry-picked intelligence and that the Steele dossier influenced the process. NSA head Mike Rogers warned in a December 2016 email that he hadn’t seen enough underlying intelligence to support the conclusion. The conversation touches on declassifications showing disputes within the intelligence community, questions about Obama’s role, and a broader claim that media and intelligence officials orchestrated a disinformation campaign to frame Trump as loyal to Moscow. They cite Tulsi Gabbard’s declassification, the Republican and Democratic investigations, and calls for transparency and accountability, including intelligence reform and increased scrutiny of sources—while contending the mainstream press often promotes narratives without adequately vetting them.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Leftist Sydney Sweeney Gaslighting, and New Russiagate Revelations, w/ Charlie Kirk & Shellenberger
Guests: Charlie Kirk, Shellenberger
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Megyn Kelly opens the show discussing new revelations about the Obama administration's involvement in the Russia investigation, featuring insights from whistleblower Michael Shellenberger. The whistleblower claims CIA Director John Brennan had a "pathological need for control" over the investigation, which aimed to frame Donald Trump as a Russian puppet. Brennan allegedly insisted on including the debunked Steele dossier in the intelligence community assessment, despite analysts' objections. Shellenberger explains that the CIA's analysis process was corrupted, drawing parallels to the flawed intelligence on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The whistleblower expressed anger at Brennan's insistence on including the Steele dossier, which was linked to the Hillary Clinton campaign. The discussion highlights how the intelligence community's findings were manipulated to fit a narrative that favored the Obama administration. Kelly and Shellenberger also address why this information is surfacing now, suggesting that the intelligence community used secrecy to hide crucial documents. They reference the Durham report, which revealed that the FBI dismissed credible intelligence about Clinton's campaign while accepting dubious claims from the Steele dossier. The conversation shifts to the media's portrayal of these revelations, with Kelly criticizing figures like Joe Scarborough for dismissing the claims as conspiracy theories. Shellenberger counters that the CIA's analysis supported the idea that Clinton's campaign sought to smear Trump, contradicting claims of Russian disinformation. The discussion then transitions to the cultural implications of recent controversies, including the backlash against actress Sydney Sweeney for an ad perceived as racially insensitive. Kelly and guest Charlie Kirk analyze the reactions to Sweeney's ad, arguing that the left's outrage is disproportionate and reflects a broader cultural shift. They assert that young men are drawn to Sweeney's authenticity compared to the artificiality of other celebrities like Beyoncé. Kirk emphasizes the importance of traditional gender roles in dating, advocating for men to take the lead and pay on the first date. He argues that this dynamic fosters respect and attraction, while Kelly shares her own experiences in her marriage, reinforcing the idea that men should pursue women actively. The conversation concludes with a call for a dating service aimed at young conservatives, focusing on teaching them how to navigate relationships in today's cultural landscape.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Did Schiff Approve Classified Info Leak, and Melt Down Over Trump's DC Fix, with Klavan and Solomon
Guests: Andrew Klavan, Benjamin Solomon
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Megyn Kelly opens with the DC crime debate and media reaction. She notes President Trump’s pledge to reduce crime in Washington, DC and contrasts coverage with other issues, describing a cycle where critics first deny crime, then invoke January 6th and race, and attack Trump as biased against black cities. She then introduces a bombshell: Cash Patel has released documents about how classified information was leaked and weaponized against Trump during his first term. She recalls Tulsi Gabbard’s disclosures alleging the Obama administration pressured intelligence to upplay Russia’s role, and claims that the initial assessment in December 2016 flipped after a meeting with Obama’s top staff, directing a new emphasis on Russia interference and collusion. According to Patel’s reporting, the December 8 briefing appeared to show limited Russia involvement, but by December 9 a new assignment instructed the IC to upplay Russia, with the resulting “homework” entering January 2017, aligning with Hillary Clinton’s aims to allege interference. The material asserts there was no supporting intelligence for Russia collusion, relying instead on the Steele dossier. Patel, in partnership with Just the News, presents a whistleblower who told the FBI he observed Adam Schiff approve leaks of classified information to the media, with reassurance that leakers would not be prosecuted. The whistleblower’s four FBI interviews, beginning in 2017 and continuing through 2022, form the 302 writeups released to reporter John Solomon. The FBI reportedly did not interview Schiff and the US attorney’s office declined to pursue. Solomon stresses a broader pattern: a cycle of protecting Democrats while pursuing Republicans. He compares the alleged leaks to earlier episodes in Hillary Clinton’s classified-email case, James Comey’s actions, and the broader Russia investigation, suggesting a persistent bias in prosecutions and leak investigations. The inspector general’s report is cited as questioning the whistleblower’s credibility while noting that two unnamed lawmakers were targeted by DOJ leak inquiries, though without evidentiary support for the allegations. The DOJ previously subpoenaed Apple data from Schiff and Swalwell, suggesting investigators looked at possible leaks. The conversation turns to practical questions: would a grand conspiracy toll the statute of limitations, and could the espionage act be used to extend time for willful leaks? Pam Bondi’s role as attorney general and whether she will pursue consequences is highlighted as pivotal. The segment closes with speculation that accountability may hinge on political and legal decisions in the weeks ahead, followed by Andrew Klavan’s assessment that Schiff’s actions echo McCarthyism, and a reflection on media coverage and the state of DC governance, including reactions to federal intervention and local crime data debates. The segment ends with Klavan weighing in on culture, the Sydney Sweeney ad controversy, and the state of woke Hollywood, before wrapping with sponsor plugs and a tease of tomorrow’s guests.
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