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Breaking news from Washington reveals serious allegations against the State Department. Internal memos suggest the agency may have intervened in investigations into illegal and inappropriate behavior to protect jobs and avoid scandals during Hillary Clinton's tenure as Secretary of State. Allegations include prostitution and pedophilia, with claims that these investigations were either whitewashed or halted entirely by high-ranking officials. The State Department is now responding to these troubling claims regarding misconduct by its officials, including an ambassador and security agents associated with Clinton.

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A U.S. State Department counselor officer in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this to undercover journalists. Experts like Gordon Chang note the difficulty in vetting Chinese nationals, citing instances of undisclosed PLA or CCP membership. While Stephen Orlins argues Chinese students fuel U.S. AI growth, Marco Rubio implemented stricter visa measures. The State Department fired staff, including Choi, who became "discouraged," making him a potential target. Choi admitted the woman's father was a CCP member and she might have been a spy. He failed to report the relationship as required, instead confiding in a stranger from a dating app. Choi dated Joy Zhao for six weeks after she entered the U.S., sending her updates during a State Department trip. Experts state that Chinese nationals are obligated to commit espionage if asked by their government. The report calls for public servants to adhere to reporting rules regarding contact with potential spies and encourages whistleblowers to report corruption.

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"Huge breaking news within the state department. Secretary Marco Rubio, with the approval of the president of The United States, Donald Trump, has just fired the foreign service officer, Daniel Choi, who we at OMG caught on hidden camera revealing his romantic relationship with a CCP affiliate, possible Chinese spy." "today, after presidential review and approval, the secretary of state has terminated a foreign service officer, also known as FSO, who concealed a romantic relationship with a Chinese national with ties to the Chinese Communist Party." "Executive order one four two one one states that all officers or employees charged with implementing the foreign policy of The United States must under article two do so under the direction and authority of the president." "Failure to faithfully implement the president's policy is grounds for professional discipline, including separation."

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I'm here investigating the administrative state. I confronted a former FBI special agent and current advisor to the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon. I questioned him about potential ethical conflicts, including fundraising activities and his work with retired generals. He became angry, called me names, and accused me of fraud and lying. I'm operating within my First Amendment rights as a journalist, but he claimed I needed his permission to record him, which isn't true in Washington D.C. He was visibly upset, and at one point even cried. I believe he lied about his activities and shared sensitive information. It's concerning to see such political behavior from government officials.

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I have some breaking news. State Farm has just informed us that they've fired their vice president. This follows a video where he stated that California residents shouldn't build in the desert and admitted to being biased against white people, expressing a desire to hire more Hispanic and Latino individuals. Gina Morse Fisher, the corporate communication specialist at State Farm, stated that these assertions are inaccurate and don't represent State Farm's views. They also don't reflect their position regarding the victims of the California tragedy or their hiring practices. The individual in the video is no longer affiliated with State Farm. It makes you wonder if other insurance executives feel the same way, though they'd never say it on the record.

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CBS likely didn't air the full Rubio interview because of comments like the one about Liz Cheney. The media is misrepresenting what Trump meant when he said he'd give Cheney a gun. He wasn't suggesting violence. The full context reveals he meant she's eager for war while safely in Washington. He's saying, let's see how eager you are for war when you're the one in combat. It's a common point made by both parties, that it's easy to advocate for war from a safe distance. Trump's language might be unconventional, but the media's portrayal is unfair and egregious.

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The speaker claims to have interviewed someone from the Chinese Space Agency who says they know the Apollo missions are fake. Allegedly, China is blackmailing NASA for secret space technology to keep quiet. The speaker suggests that if the truth were exposed, it would be damaging to NASA. This raises concerns about the government violating espionage laws.

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So, you called Elon Musk a fascist and implied he's a national security threat. But is that really more of a threat than, say, sleeping with a Chinese spy? What's fascistic about exposing government corruption? I know you just had dinner with lobbyists, and I heard you like to be with only attractive people. So, do you want to comment on any of this? You think Elon Musk is a national security threat, but you sleeping with a Chinese spy isn't? You don't want to comment on that at all? Looks like guilty is charged.

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The State Department is facing serious allegations of covering up investigations into illegal and inappropriate behavior within its ranks. The allegations involve prostitution, pedophilia, and misconduct by State Department officials, including an ambassador and security agents under Hillary Clinton's tenure. Internal memos suggest that these investigations were whitewashed and halted by high-ranking officials. A whistleblower from the Inspector General's team has gone to Congress demanding an investigation. While the allegations haven't been fully substantiated, the whistleblower believes there is clear evidence. Congressman Ed Royce plans to conduct an investigation. This comes after a previous negative report on the State Department's handling of the Benghazi attack.

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I've seen chatter online, especially from Kash Patel, about the delay in releasing the Epstein files. Well, I'm reporting live from outside the West Wing to show you that the wait is over. We've got the Epstein files right here. Let's make America safe again.

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The segment centers on Huju Choi, a counselor at the US embassy in Seoul, who reveals his actions after admitting to an undercover journalist that he dated a Chinese woman last year he suspects was an agent. "I defied my government for love." Choi, a veteran State Department official, vets Chinese student visas and says the process may be a "pipeline for infiltration and espionage" and that "The pipeline is actively pumping agents of the communist party into the heart of American industry and innovation." Experts note that "'over 80,000 Chinese students who are approved yearly to study in The United States' fuel Silicon Valley." Rubio announced major changes to Chinese student visas; in July, "'1,350 staff were fired by the state department, including 263 foreign service officers like mister Choi and 15 directly from his office of consular affairs." The piece warns of CCP-linked risks and urges transparency.

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A U.S. State Department counselor officer in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this to undercover journalists. Experts like Gordon Chang say the vetting process has loopholes exploited for espionage. Stephen Orlins notes that revoking visas could damage AI growth in Silicon Valley, which relies on Chinese students. Marco Rubio announced changes to Chinese student visas and the State Department fired staff, including Choi, who became demoralized. Choi admitted the woman he dated had a father in the CCP and could have been a spy. He failed to report the relationship as required, instead confiding in a stranger from a dating app. He dated Joy Zhao for six weeks, updating her on his State Department trip to Asia. Experts state that Chinese nationals are required to commit acts of espionage if demanded by authorities, posing a potential threat. The report urges public servants to follow rules for reporting contacts with potential spies and encourages whistleblowers to report corruption.

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I'm declining to be named in your story. I haven't given any quotes. My name is James O'Keefe. We have you on hidden camera talking about Elon Musk, Doge, and unlawful activities at Treasury. I encourage you to speak on the record. We have you on video saying government colleagues don't do much, and Doge targets us because it's easy. I'm a reporter. People deserve to know what you've said. Why did you share this with a stranger but not me? You specialize in foreign policy at the Treasury. What are you afraid of? It'll look bad when you won't speak to me, but you told a stranger everything. This is a major public policy issue. I'm running this story with or without you. I think the people need to know what's happening inside the government, including risks to national security.

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A U.S. State Department counselor in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspects was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this as concerns grow that the program is a pipeline for espionage. Experts like Gordon Chang say loopholes in the vetting process are being exploited. While Stephen Orlins notes that Chinese students have fueled AI growth in Silicon Valley, Marco Rubio announced changes to Chinese student visas and a sweep to revoke visas from those with CCP connections. The State Department fired 1,350 staff, including 263 foreign service officers. Choi, now "discouraged," may be vulnerable to seduction by a spy. Choi dated Joy Zhao for six weeks after she entered the U.S. Zhao's father may be a senior CCP officer involved in student exchanges. Regulations required Choi to report the relationship, especially given Zhao's potential CCP ties, but he concealed it. He sent Zhao updates and photos from an official trip to Asia. According to experts, every Chinese national is a potential threat due to Chinese law requiring espionage if demanded by authorities.

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A U.S. State Department officer, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, is now seen as potentially vulnerable due to being demoralized after State Department cuts. Experts note the difficulty in vetting Chinese nationals, some of whom conceal PLA or CCP affiliations. While some argue Chinese students in the U.S. fuel American innovation, others, like Marco Rubio, seek stricter visa controls due to espionage concerns. Choi acknowledged his girlfriend's father was a CCP member and she could have been a spy, but he failed to report the relationship as required. He instead confided in a stranger from a dating app. Regulations mandate reporting attempts at seduction by foreign governments, especially those linked to senior CCP members. The report emphasizes the need for vigilance against espionage and encourages insiders to report corruption.

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A U.S. State Department counselor in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this to an undercover journalist. Experts like Gordon Chang say the vetting process has loopholes exploited for espionage. While Stephen Orlins notes Chinese students fuel U.S. AI growth, Marco Rubio announced visa changes to target those with CCP ties. Choi, demoralized by State Department cuts, may have been vulnerable to seduction. He acknowledged his date's father was a CCP member and she might have been a spy. Despite regulations requiring reporting such contacts, Choi concealed the relationship, instead confiding in a dating app contact. He dated Joy Zhao for six weeks, updating her on his State Department trip to Asia. Experts state that Chinese nationals are legally obligated to commit espionage if requested by their government. The report urges public servants to adhere to reporting rules and encourages whistleblowers to report corruption.

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I'm a journalist investigating the administrative state. I confronted a former FBI special agent, now an advisor to the joint chiefs at the Pentagon, about his political activities and fundraising efforts with retired generals. He became angry, called me names, and accused me of fraud and being a liar. He even claimed I needed his permission to record him, despite being in a one-party consent state. He denied saying things that I have on tape, including discussing plans after Trump wins. I questioned the ethics of his political involvement as a Pentagon advisor, and I asked him whether he thought it was appropriate to share sensitive information with strangers, even joking about whether I was a Russian spy.

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A U.S. State Department counselor officer in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this to undercover journalists. Experts like Gordon Chang note the difficulty in vetting Chinese nationals, citing instances of undisclosed PLA or CCP affiliations. While Stephen Orlins argues that Chinese students fuel U.S. AI growth, Marco Rubio announced changes to Chinese student visas. The State Department fired 1,350 staff, including some from Choi's office, leaving Choi demoralized and potentially vulnerable to espionage. Choi acknowledged his girlfriend's father was a CCP member and that she might have been a spy but failed to report the relationship as required by federal regulations. He instead confided in a stranger from a dating app. He dated Joy Zhao for six weeks, updating her on his State Department trip to Asia. Experts state that Chinese nationals are required to commit acts of espionage if demanded by authorities, posing a potential threat. The report calls for government officials to adhere to rules regarding contact with potential spies and encourages whistleblowers to report corruption.

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The transcript discusses the Art in Embassies program, described as part of the U.S. Department of State that promotes cultural diplomacy through exhibitions, permanent collections, site-specific commissions, and two-way artist exchanges in over 200 U.S. embassies and consulates. It claims Art in Embassies provided Podestas, Jeff Koons, Rockefellers, Clintons, Marina Abramovich, and James Alafontis access to a private shipping channel that could bypass airport security. Hillary Clinton is quoted as saying that what they do is diplomacy beyond governments. The narrative links the Rothschilds and the Clintons as two major pieces in a secretive international group with access to cargo planes and ships, and notes Clinton wrote an article about art in embassies in Vanity Fair. It asserts the foundation for art and preservation of embassies (FAPE) is made up of dozens of billionaire families and politicians with ties to the global elite who can ship artwork around the world outside conventional security channels. It states that Art in Embassies is now run by Beth Dozorits, described as a close friend of Hillary Clinton and famous for helping Bill Clinton pardon Mark Rich on his final day in office. Vanity Fair is cited stating Dozorits drew attention for persuading Clinton to pardon Mark Rich. The transcript claims that Hillary Clinton’s State Department did little to oversee embassies but invested substantial effort into promoting art in embassies. Dozorits is said to have worked with Alafontis and they are closely linked among the DC elite, implying Alaphontis is tied to globalist power centers in America, as are the Bodesta brothers and company. It claims the Art in Embassies program involves Yale-connected elites including John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, and Robert Starr (dean of Yale School of Art), along with other industrialist families behind major American brands. Examples include the Sacklers, described as the family behind Purdue Pharma who were involved with Valium and OxyContin, said to have promoted the arts with the “global elite.” It alleges the Sacklers coordinated events with James Elephantis, presenting medals to Marina Abramovich and Jeff Koons, whose works have been transported on these aircraft multiple times, some directly via the Tony and Heather Podesta collection. Podesta allegedly arranged for Abramovich’s bloody works to be transported to Whitechapel in London, supported in part by the UK Friends of the National Museum of Women’s Artists. The narrative suggests organizations’ diplomatic groups function within art galleries, implying that events celebrate art while “announcing the sending of the paintings.” It mentions the Aga Khan, who owns private islands in the Caribbean, attending a Sackler Art in Embassies event with Alifantis and Tony Podesta. An image from the 2005 segment of the Art in Embassies project is referenced. The transcript then shifts to allegations regarding the State Department. It reports that internal memos indicate the agency called off or intervened in investigations into allegedly illegal and inappropriate behavior within its ranks during Hillary Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state, claiming investigations were whitewashed or quashed and that those orders came from high up. NBC’s Chuck Todd provides a briefing on these allegations, including prostitution and pedophilia claims related to State Department officials, an ambassador, and security agents. Japanese journalist Yoshi Shimatsu is cited as linking Nicholas Negroponte to a Cambodian orphanage, with Cambodian police shutting down an orphanage’s satellite link tower used to uplink child pornography and connect American pedophiles to victims. Teachers purportedly say computers and satellite systems were isolated and maintained by Nicholas Negroponte, founder of the MIT Media Lab, who allegedly frequented the orphanages and arranged weekend pajama parties for VIPs. Shimatsu is described as noting that the one laptop per child project was initiated by Negroponte, who is also the brother of former UN ambassador and intelligence official John Negroponte; John and his wife Diana are board members of FAPE. Negroponte is also said to appear in Jeffrey Epstein’s “Little Black Book.” The transcript concludes by noting the One Laptop Per Child initiative. A brief reminder to subscribe and view more videos is included at the end.

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A U.S. State Department counselor officer in Seoul, Huju Choi, admitted to dating a Chinese woman he suspected was an agent. Choi, who vets Chinese student visas, revealed this to an undercover journalist. Experts like Gordon Chang say the vetting process has loopholes exploited for espionage, while Stephen Orlins notes that revoking visas could damage U.S. AI growth fueled by Chinese students. Marco Rubio announced changes to Chinese student visas, and the State Department fired staff, including foreign service officers like Choi. Choi, now "discouraged," admitted the woman's father was a member of the Chinese Communist Party and that she might have been a spy. He failed to report the relationship as required, instead confiding in a stranger from a dating app. Choi dated Joy Zhao for six weeks, updating her on his State Department trip to Asia. Experts state that Chinese nationals are required to commit acts of espionage if demanded by authorities. The report urges government employees to follow rules for reporting contacts with potential spies and encourages whistleblowers to report corruption.

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There are serious allegations facing the State Department this morning. According to internal memos, the agency may have interfered with an investigation into possibly illegal behavior to protect jobs and avoid scandals during Hillary Clinton's time as Secretary of State. The allegations include prostitution and pedophilia, and that these crimes were covered up or not properly investigated. Documents obtained by NBC News relate to investigations into State Department personnel, including an ambassador who allegedly solicited sexual favors from prostitutes and minor children. A memo claims a top official directed investigators to cease the investigation into the ambassador's conduct. A State Department spokesperson has not confirmed specific investigations.

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An undercover report focuses on Huju Choi, a counselor officer at the US embassy in Seoul who vets Chinese student visas. He describes dating a Chinese woman last year whom he suspects was an agent, noting, 'I defied my government for love.' The story frames the China student-visa program as 'a pipeline for infiltration and espionage' and warns that 'This pipeline is actively pumping agents of the communist party into the heart of American industry and innovation.' Choi says he concealed the incident, instead reporting to 'a random person on the Internet' and not following procedures for potential seduction by a foreign government. He dated the alleged spy for six weeks; in July, '1,350 staff were fired by the state department, including 263 foreign service officers like Choi and 15 directly from his office of consular affairs.' The report notes broader China competition.

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Remember Edward, the fired intern? He's 19 now and works for the president's top campaign donor. Now he's a "senior advisor" at the State Department with access to all IT and data management for the entire diplomatic operation globally. A US official told the Washington Post "this is dangerous". Giving a 19-year-old with a history of leaking sensitive information access to all centralized data at the US State Department just seems off. This is the latest in a string of national security concerns. Elon Musk's JV team also has access to the payment system at the Treasury Department that controls all US government payments, including secret payments to foreign assets run by US intelligence and payments to US businesses abroad with secret contracts with the CIA. Speaking of the CIA, their entire workforce has been told to resign.

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I'm confirming that Tulsi Gabbard has appointed someone with a history of being untrustworthy, potentially aiding adversarial nations. In Connecticut, the leading Democratic candidate in a major US Senate race is facing scrutiny after being caught misrepresenting his military service. Richard Blumenthal, the state attorney general, previously stated he served in Vietnam, but reports indicate he received five wartime deferments and served stateside in the Marine Reserves. I misspoke, and I won't let a few misplaced words tarnish my record of service to our country. However, video evidence exists of Blumenthal claiming he was in Vietnam.

Breaking Points

ROUNDUP: ALL Trump Admin LIES About MN Shooting
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The episode centers on a major incident in Minnesota involving a shooting at a protest and the immediate government response. The hosts review what is known about the events, the actions of federal agents, and the subsequent public statements from the administration, noting contradictions and shifts in the official narrative. They discuss how the initial claim that the victim brandished a weapon and posed a mass threat was later contested, and they scrutinize the handling of the case by DHS and FBI officials, arguing that the points raised by officials do not align with the available video evidence. The conversation tightens around civil liberties implications, including how authorities characterized protest participants and the broader impact on individual rights during demonstrations. The hosts highlight the dissonance between real-time video footage and the administration’s rhetoric, emphasizing concerns about potential overreach and attempts to justify lethal force by tying it to perceived threats. A guest civil liberties attorney is announced to unpack the legal distinctions in similar cases, particularly the differences between this incident and a prior shooting, and to assess whether due process and proper investigation are being applied. The discourse then shifts to a second major thread: a new surveillance narrative about state actions against protesters. The hosts connect this to a broader trend toward a state surveillance apparatus and risk to civil liberties, including questions about the independence and credibility of investigations. The episode also touches on the political repercussions, including congressional scrutiny and potential shifts in party dynamics around immigration enforcement and governance. As the show rocks between domestic policy fallout and international developments, the conversation briefly turns to a high-profile foreign issue involving leadership and security concerns in China, underscoring the breadth of today’s breaking news. Throughout, the hosts foreground concerns about media responsibility, truthfulness in official narratives, and the consequences for ordinary citizens who exercise constitutional rights under heated political pressures.
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