A sparsely furnished cell, with only a bed and a table, in the Palace of Justice (Justizpalast) prison complex in Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany, 1947. (Keystone Features/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
1. The Weakness of Liberalism
I hope you had a nice Fourth of July and got all of that patriotic meshugas out of your system.¹ Because today it’s about to take a beatdown.
Feinberg left the FBI because Dan Bongino discovered that Feinberg was friends with former FBI agent Peter Strzok. Here’s what happened next:
Prior to that day, I had never faced any sort of disciplinary review or investigation. And to be clear, I was not accused of violating any rules or regulations this time either, nor had any of my cases fallen short of institutional standards. My only supposed sin was a long-standing friendship with an individual who appeared on Kash Patel’s enemieslist, and against whom Dan Bongino had railed publicly. . . .
My SAC [special agent in charge] informed me in a moment she described as “brutally honest,” that I would not be receiving any promotions; in fact, I needed to prepare myself for the likelihood of being demoted. She gave me no details about what position or office I would be sent to once my time as a leader prematurely concluded.
Furthermore, she told me, I would be asked to submit to a polygraph exam probing the nature of my friendship with Pete, and (as I was quietly informed by another, friendlier senior employee) what could only be described as a latter-day struggle session. I would be expected to grovel, beg forgiveness, and pledge loyalty as part of the FBI’s cultural revolution brought about by Patel and Bongino’s accession to the highest echelons of American law enforcement and intelligence.
I’m sure you have questions; among them:
Why is senior FBI leadership creating dossiers about employees’ private relationships?
How are these investigations being conducted? What tools are being used?
Do these investigations violate any laws?
Those are good questions. But the most important one is:
If and when Donald Trump leaves office, what are we supposed to do with the people who did this?
Because here is the thing: Imagine it is 2028 and Democrat X has won the presidency. Kash Patel will only be four years into his term as FBI director. Dan Bongino is now a career employee of the bureau. The entire agency will be stacked, top to bottom, with Trump loyalists.
Would a Democratic administration have the will to purge these Trumpist elements from federal law enforcement?
I’m pretty sure I know the answer. And you’re not going to like it...
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