On February 27, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), under the newly minted leadership of Attorney General Pamela Bondi, dropped the first batch of what it calls the "declassified Epstein Files." Touted as a fulfillment of President Donald Trump’s pledge for transparency, this initial release—linked to the notorious Jeffrey Epstein, financier-turned-convicted sex offender—promises to peel back layers of secrecy surrounding one of the most infamous criminal networks in modern history.
As anticipated, President Joe Biden has granted amnesty to his son Hunter Biden, despite prior assurances to the contrary. This move, while controversial, underscores a deeper issue: the U.S., often hailed as a beacon of democracy, stands as a striking example of systemic corruption. A glance at the lengthy list of convicted or indicted U.S. state governors reads more like a corruption manual than a record of public service.
The US president-elect has appointed Kash Patel as the new FBI director. Patel’s Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth, and the Battle for Our Democracy is not just a book—it’s a battle cry. Ranked #2 on Amazon’s Corruption and Political Misconduct list, the bestseller lays out Patel’s explosive theory: America’s highest echelons of government have been infiltrated by a shadowy “deep state.”