Job Security at the Bureau of Insurrection

As Americans are forced to grapple with the brutal reality that the FBI were the only ones conspiring to kidnap the sitting governor of Michigan in 2020, details emerging from the lingering smoke of January 6th are becoming impossible to ignore.

16 months after 2 pipe bombs were discovered on Capitol Hill, prompting the evacuation of two congressional buildings, the Cannon House Office Building, and parts of the Library of Congress, the Department of Justice is seemingly without answers for the American people.

During a joint hearing before the Senate Rules Committee and Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, in February of 2021, former Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund confirmed that the pipe bombs were the reason for the evacuation.

Nevertheless, the Department of Justice and its Mockingbird Media continue to push the outright lie that Congress was evacuated because of the mass of people who’d gathered outside the Capitol building to protest what they believed to be a fraudulent election.

Even after offering a $50,000 reward, and plastering ominous looking photos from sea to shining sea, the FBI has so-far been incapable of identifying a suspect.

Karlin Younger is the inconspicuously described D.C. resident who discovered the first pipe bomb and alerted authorities.

According to Younger, she just so happened to be at the right place at the right time, digging around behind dumpsters on her way back from doing laundry.

“You don’t wanna go down as the person who evacuates a city block for a hoax,” Younger said in an interview with WISN 12 News in Milwaukee, “but at the same time there was just enough of that gut instinct that said ‘this isn’t a place that you’d put a hoax’”

At the time, she was also a project manager for First Net Authority, a public-private partnership between AT&T and first responders to prioritize emergency communications during an attack or disaster.

On December 8, 2020 the FBI awarded First Net Authority with a $92 million contract. The five-year deal represented the largest commitment by a law enforcement or public safety agency in the entire history of First Net.

In an interview with Madison Magazine on January 12, Younger explained how some of her previous experience came in handy on January 6th. “Even though I’d done some counterterrorism analysis a decade ago,” she said, “what helped me recognize the device was a scene from ‘The Terminator’ movie.”

Hasta la vista, nothing to see here.

On October 13, 2020, just a few days after 2 innocent Americans were entrapped within his Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping hoax, Steven M. D’Antuono was named Assistant Director in Charge of the Washington Field Office by FBI Director Christopher Wray.

Surely, it’s just a coincidence that the very man with a proven history of formulating domestic false-flag terror operations was given a coveted position in DC, mere months before the worst attack on American democracy since the War of 1812, but in the world of counterterrorism, coincidence is becoming ever more commonplace.

Bobby Powell, the J6 journalist who recorded still unidentified individuals with face coverings and communications equipment as they pulled windows out of the west side of the Capitol building, says he was offered $200,000 by Michigan GOP Chair Ron Weiser, through former Michigan Congressman Kerry Bentivolio, in exchange for suppressing his footage of the agitators.

According to Powell, he refused the bribe, but it was framed as an offer he couldn’t refuse, saying he was told to “Stop talking about the video you recorded in Washington DC on January 6th or you could be killed.”

Just 6 weeks later, on January 6, 2022, Garrett James Smith packed his backpack with what the Pinellas County Bomb Squad would later describe as a “nail-studded pipe bomb”, before donning a ski mask, and heading to a rally where Powell would be speaking for imprisoned Green Beret Jeremy Brown; who even though he never entered the Capitol building, was arrested on misdemeanor trespass after refusing to work as an FBI informant.

Apparently spooked by law enforcement, Smith ran, but was chased down and arrested by Pinellas County Sheriff’s Officers before he could detonate his device.

On February 16, one week after the FBI took over the investigation, felony charges against Smith were dropped when the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives determined the items he possessed that day were legal “novelty devices”.

Smith is now a free man, along with the spooky looking rioters in Bobby Powell’s video, and the oh so hard to track down pipe bomber from Capitol Hill.

With Jeremy Brown, and 774 other defendants from J6 having been arrested, and a reported 2-3000 more arrests coming, the Department of Justice is asking for an additional $34 million, and 130 new personnel in order to handle the unreal workload they’ve created for themselves.

As long as the likes of Christopher Wray, Steven D’Antuono, and others are planning the next entrapment extravaganza from the helm of the FBI, their job security is looking better than ever.

But if you think things are looking good now, just wait until they cut a bigger deal with SkyNet...First Net...whatever.

Special thanks to Julie Kelly at American Greatness, keep up the great work Julie, we should team up!