{"id":1561,"date":"2025-07-26T14:44:20","date_gmt":"2025-07-26T14:44:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/?p=1561"},"modified":"2025-07-26T14:49:07","modified_gmt":"2025-07-26T14:49:07","slug":"dni-tulsi-gabbard-fired-tamara-a-johnson-the-acting-inspector-general-of-the-intelligence-community","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/dni-tulsi-gabbard-fired-tamara-a-johnson-the-acting-inspector-general-of-the-intelligence-community\/","title":{"rendered":"DNI Tulsi Gabbard fired\u00a0Tamara A. Johnson, the\u00a0Acting Inspector General of the Intelligence Community."},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/toresays.com\/2025\/06\/21\/she-fired-the-firewall-tulsi-gabbards-war-on-the-shadow-chain-of-command\/\">https:\/\/toresays.com\/2025\/06\/21\/she-fired-the-firewall-tulsi-gabbards-war-on-the-shadow-chain-of-command\/<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/theconservativetreehouse.com\/blog\/2025\/07\/25\/dni-tulsi-gabbard-reacts-to-former-dni-james-clapper-hiring-lawyers\/comment-page-3\/#comment-11972349\">https:\/\/theconservativetreehouse.com\/blog\/2025\/07\/25\/dni-tulsi-gabbard-reacts-to-former-dni-james-clapper-hiring-lawyers\/comment-page-3\/#comment-11972349<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>___________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>{Understand the article below about the 4th branch of government, the 17 plus Intel agencies, and how it operates in secret. The article is long and complicated but well worth your time if you want to know the truth about how the government really works. Thanks to the author tore.}<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Why haven\u2019t any \u201cinsiders\u201d ever told you about the SNIS?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The political class is furious. Intelligence insiders are leaking. And the usual media organs are howling about \u201coverreach\u201d and \u201cchaos.\u201d Why? Because Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard just did the one thing no one expected\u2014and everyone in power feared:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>She fired Tamara A. Johnson, the Acting Inspector General of the Intelligence Community.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Over the years, I\u2019ve issued clear and relentless warnings about entrenched holdovers\u2014the career operatives who quietly ascend to high-level posts within the Intelligence Community, shielding the machinery of deception under the illusion of continuity. One such name I flagged long before it reached the spotlight was Erin Turnmeyer\u2014a central architect of the WMD narrative manipulation campaign, later rewarded with a promotion to ODNI Human Resources, where she became a gatekeeper of personnel pipelines feeding the very system she once helped deceive. I know because I was there. I worked alongside them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Another name\u2014far more dangerous by subtlety\u2014is Tamara Johnson. I knew her from my years embedded in the system, during my time as a PMC contractor, when the lines between covert logistics, \u201cnon-traditional support,\u201d and black-budget operations blurred in the field and on the books. Tamara wasn\u2019t flashy. She was precise, procedural, and lethal in her bureaucratic loyalty. She didn\u2019t need a podium\u2014she had access. She rose not by reform, but by perfecting the art of sanctioned silence, becoming exactly the type of official the IC promotes when it needs a trusted warden to guard the architecture of the Fourth Branch.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>atic shake-up. But underneath, it\u2019s a seismic shift\u2014<strong>a direct blow against the unelected, unaccountable apparatus often referred to as the Fourth Branch of Government<\/strong>: the permanent intelligence and security state.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Tamara Johnson wasn\u2019t just a senior official. She was&nbsp;<strong>a fixture<\/strong>\u2014a 20-year insider,&nbsp;<strong>deeply embedded in the ICIG\u2019s web of compliance theater<\/strong>. Her long tenure saw her rise quietly through the ODNI and CIA support layers during&nbsp;<strong>Obama\u2019s controlled reform era<\/strong>, remain untouched through the&nbsp;<strong>Russia Collusion fabrication<\/strong>, and ultimately act as the&nbsp;<strong>custodian of secrecy<\/strong>&nbsp;during a time of expanding surveillance and institutional immunity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Tulsi Gabbard didn\u2019t assume the role of Director of National Intelligence to play ceremonial dress-up, passively consuming curated briefings, or rubber-stamping narratives handed down from entrenched bureaucrats. She came to tear the machine open\u2014to shine light into the shadowy corridors of the intelligence community where leakers operate with impunity, oversight dies behind redacted walls, and manipulation is coded into policy. Her decision to remove&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson<\/strong>&nbsp;from her post wasn\u2019t personal\u2014it was surgical, strategic, and necessary.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Johnson wasn\u2019t just another career official. She was a legacy node of the system\u2014the kind of embedded operator who survives administrations because her loyalty isn\u2019t to law or country, but to the self-sustaining machinery of the Fourth Branch. She stood guard over the intelligence community\u2019s most egregious abuses: its calculated silence during the CIA\u2019s illegal surveillance of Senate investigators; the institutional rubber-stamping of FISA abuse during Crossfire Hurricane; and the quiet suppression of dissent from analysts who questioned the now-debunked Trump-Russia narrative.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even after Gabbard took office, Johnson reportedly worked to obstruct internal audits, blocked key staff reassignments, and leveraged her longstanding relationships with hostile actors in the Senate intelligence apparatus to undermine reform from within. She was not an impartial inspector. She was a firewall\u2014not to protect the Republic from abuse, but to protect the abusers from the Republic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Tulsi Gabbard understood the stakes. She knew that as long as Johnson remained in place, the intelligence community\u2019s ability to self-police would remain a fa\u00e7ade. So she did what no one before her dared to do\u2014she cut the wire.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Who is Tamara Johnson?<br>Tamara Johnson\u2019s rise through the ranks wasn\u2019t incidental\u2014it was timed perfectly to Obama\u2019s theater of reform. In October 2012, the Obama administration unveiled Presidential Policy Directive 19 (PPD-19), marketed as a landmark move to protect intelligence community whistleblowers in the aftermath of the Snowden revelations. It was presented to the public as a commitment to transparency and internal accountability. But behind that curtain, Obama\u2019s team was engaged in the most aggressive crackdown on dissent the intelligence community had ever seen.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While touting whistleblower protections, the administration&nbsp;<strong>prosecuted more leakers under the Espionage Act than all previous presidents combined<\/strong>. Whistleblower lawsuits were systematically&nbsp;<strong>shut down using the \u201cstate secrets\u201d privilege<\/strong>, a legal black hole where accountability goes to die. Insiders who used internal channels\u2014those who&nbsp;<em>followed<\/em>&nbsp;the rules\u2014were offered&nbsp;<strong>no clemency<\/strong>, no protection, and no future. The message was clear: speak out and be destroyed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s in this hostile climate that&nbsp;<strong>Tamara A. Johnson<\/strong>&nbsp;quietly advanced. By 2012, she was already embedded in the oversight infrastructure\u2014<strong>ODNI and the IC Inspector General\u2019s office<\/strong>\u2014not as a reformer, but as a functionary who understood how to manage the optics. Between 2012 and 2015, she held key internal roles: overseeing logistics, planning, and administration\u2014<em>the machinery behind the machinery<\/em>&nbsp;that controls oversight, access, and narrative flow. And then, right when the&nbsp;<strong>Senate torture report exploded<\/strong>&nbsp;and the&nbsp;<strong>CIA was caught spying on congressional investigators<\/strong>, Johnson was promoted. In&nbsp;<strong>May 2015<\/strong>, she was elevated to the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>, handpicked during the administration\u2019s \u201cdamage control\u201d phase.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>She rose not because she fought the system, but because she&nbsp;<strong>protected it from exposure<\/strong>. While the public was told reforms were underway,&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson was placed precisely where she could contain the rot<\/strong>, ensuring that internal control was solidified just as external scrutiny reached its peak. She was the&nbsp;<strong>perfect custodian for an era of simulated transparency and actual repression<\/strong>. That\u2019s not a coincidence. That\u2019s the system reinforcing itself. I know\u2014I\u2019ve worked with these people. I watched it happen in real time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"john-owen-brennan\">John Owen Brennan<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>In 2014, the CIA\u2014under&nbsp;<strong>Director John Brennan<\/strong>\u2014was caught red-handed&nbsp;<strong>spying on the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI)<\/strong>&nbsp;while it conducted a review of the CIA\u2019s post-9\/11 torture program. This wasn\u2019t a minor policy dispute\u2014it was a full-scale&nbsp;<strong>surveillance operation against congressional oversight<\/strong>, a direct assault on the constitutional separation of powers. The CIA&nbsp;<strong>accessed and searched Senate staffers\u2019 computers<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>deleted documents<\/strong>, and even attempted to block the release of the&nbsp;<strong>Torture Report<\/strong>. Brennan flat-out&nbsp;<strong>denied the spying publicly<\/strong>, calling it \u201cbeyond the scope of reason\u201d\u2014only to later admit it happened. And just like that,&nbsp;<strong>no one was fired<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>no one was prosecuted<\/strong>, and the CIA Inspector General\u2019s findings were quietly buried. The system protected itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, let\u2019s talk about&nbsp;<strong>where Tamara Johnson fits into all this<\/strong>. At the time of this constitutional violation, Johnson held key roles at the&nbsp;<strong>ODNI<\/strong>&nbsp;and within the&nbsp;<strong>Inspector General\u2019s oversight architecture<\/strong>. She was either&nbsp;<strong>Chief of Staff<\/strong>&nbsp;or serving as&nbsp;<strong>Assistant Inspector General<\/strong>. She had previously been stationed inside the&nbsp;<strong>CIA\u2019s Directorate of Support<\/strong>, tied explicitly to the&nbsp;<strong>Non-Traditional Support Program (NTSP)<\/strong>\u2014the same part of the agency that handles covert logistics, operational backstopping, and&nbsp;<em>gray-zone surveillance infrastructure<\/em>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This means Tamara Johnson wasn\u2019t just in the neighborhood\u2014she was&nbsp;<strong>operationally adjacent<\/strong>&nbsp;to the systems and personnel that executed and later sanitized the surveillance of Congress. She had&nbsp;<strong>access to the internal IG pipeline<\/strong>, where whistleblower complaints might have gone\u2014<em>and where they likely died<\/em>. She also had&nbsp;<strong>direct influence over how audits were framed<\/strong>, what compliance language was used, and most critically, how the agency\u2019s actions were&nbsp;<strong>narratively managed<\/strong>&nbsp;during the fallout.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>She was&nbsp;<strong>perfectly positioned to manage the internal narrative<\/strong>, absorb the scandal, protect senior leadership, and ensure&nbsp;<strong>nothing fundamentally changed<\/strong>. Her career didn\u2019t stall; it&nbsp;<strong>accelerated<\/strong>. Within a year, she was promoted to the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>. That wasn\u2019t a coincidence. That was a&nbsp;<strong>reward<\/strong>\u2014the system doesn\u2019t encourage people who threaten its continuity. It elevates those who know how to enforce silence while smiling for the reform cameras. Tamara Johnson didn\u2019t blow the whistle\u2014she helped muffle it. And I say that as someone who saw this culture up close, who worked beside the very machine that rewards the protectors of institutional betrayal. She\u2019s a praetorian.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"tamaras-test\">Tamara\u2019s Test<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>Obama\u2019s so-called intelligence reforms\u2014particularly&nbsp;<strong>Presidential Policy Directive 19 (PPD-19)<\/strong>\u2014were nothing more than a carefully worded&nbsp;<strong>umbrella of suppression<\/strong>, designed to deflect criticism while consolidating control. On paper, PPD-19 appeared to offer new protections for whistleblowers within the Intelligence Community. But in reality, it was a&nbsp;<strong>toothless document<\/strong>, strategically crafted to project reform while neutralizing dissent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Let\u2019s be clear:&nbsp;<strong>PPD-19 offered no private right of action<\/strong>, meaning whistleblowers couldn\u2019t sue even when their rights were violated. It explicitly&nbsp;<strong>excluded anyone who disclosed information outside internal channels<\/strong>\u2014including to Congress or the press\u2014ensuring that legitimate warnings about abuse could be punished if they didn\u2019t pass through the very agencies being accused. And worst of all, it&nbsp;<strong>relied entirely on Inspectors General to self-police<\/strong>&nbsp;the intelligence bureaucracy, creating a circular system where&nbsp;<strong>the fox watched the henhouse<\/strong>&nbsp;and called it oversight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the time, both the&nbsp;<strong>CIA Inspector General<\/strong>&nbsp;and the&nbsp;<strong>IC Inspector General (ICIG)<\/strong>&nbsp;offices were either&nbsp;<strong>co-opted or influenced by leadership loyal to Brennan<\/strong>&nbsp;and Obama\u2019s larger intelligence framework. These weren\u2019t reformers. They were&nbsp;<strong>institutional preservationists<\/strong>\u2014people who understood that the real threat wasn\u2019t external exposure, but internal dissent that might unravel the carefully constructed myth of self-accountability.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s in this climate that&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson<\/strong>&nbsp;was promoted to the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>&nbsp;in&nbsp;<strong>May 2015<\/strong>, right after the&nbsp;<strong>Senate torture report scandal<\/strong>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<strong>CIA spying on Congress<\/strong>. Her elevation was no accident. It was&nbsp;<strong>a signal to the inner circle<\/strong>: those who stay quiet, who control leaks instead of investigating them, and who enforce the illusion of oversight,&nbsp;<em>will be rewarded<\/em>. Tamara wasn\u2019t promoted for challenging the system\u2014she was placed as a&nbsp;<strong>strategic asset<\/strong>, a&nbsp;<strong>gatekeeper in the IG framework<\/strong>&nbsp;who would ensure that PPD-19 remained&nbsp;<strong>policy on paper but a hollow promise in practice<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This wasn\u2019t reform\u2014it was regime maintenance. The message was simple: you can expose mass surveillance to the public, and they\u2019ll get a press conference and a PDF in response. But the architecture of secrecy? That remains untouched, because it\u2019s not designed to be accountable. It\u2019s designed to survive. I\u2019ve seen this firsthand. This is how the game is played.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here is where scrutiny is required. Suppose you examine the post-2013 trajectory of the CIA and broader Intelligence Community through the lens of data consolidation, whistleblower suppression, and tight narrative control. In that case,&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson\u2019s role becomes not only visible but central<\/strong>. She wasn\u2019t just another name on the org chart. She operated behind the scaffolding of oversight, managing the administrative and procedural arteries of the very offices meant to protect transparency. Her power didn\u2019t come from headlines\u2014it came from&nbsp;<strong>structural positioning<\/strong>, from owning the mechanisms that determine what gets investigated, what gets buried, and who gets silenced.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Johnson managed the&nbsp;<strong>support systems behind the oversight infrastructure<\/strong>\u2014from internal audits and compliance logistics to personnel placement and internal reporting chains. She wasn\u2019t conducting the reforms; she was&nbsp;<strong>building the walls around them<\/strong>. The architecture she helped erect wasn\u2019t designed to fix oversight\u2014it was designed to&nbsp;<strong>contain it<\/strong>. This wasn\u2019t an accident. She worked&nbsp;<strong>within a framework engineered to simulate accountability<\/strong>&nbsp;while keeping the real levers of power immune from disruption.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Her later appointments as&nbsp;<strong>Acting Inspector General of the Intelligence Community<\/strong>\u2014first in&nbsp;<strong>2021<\/strong>&nbsp;and again in&nbsp;<strong>2025<\/strong>\u2014are not promotions in the traditional sense. They\u2019re&nbsp;<strong>institutional reinforcement<\/strong>. She helped shape the ICIG\u2019s internal procedures, access controls, and escalation chains, ensuring that whistleblower reports were never made public<strong>&nbsp;unless pre-filtered<\/strong>. In short, she became the&nbsp;<strong>gatekeeper of narrative containment<\/strong>, placed precisely where the illusion of reform needed to be most convincing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Tamara Johnson is not just a bureaucrat\u2014she\u2019s a&nbsp;<strong>systems enforcer<\/strong>. A loyalist to the&nbsp;<strong>procedural shield<\/strong>&nbsp;that guards institutional abuse from exposure. Her rise&nbsp;<strong>mirrored the Obama administration\u2019s polished but hollow narrative of reform<\/strong>, while quietly facilitating the erosion of meaningful oversight. Her methods aligned neatly with&nbsp;<strong>Brennan\u2019s philosophy of expansion without constraint<\/strong>, where surveillance mechanisms doubled as tools of internal discipline. She doesn\u2019t need to shout\u2014<strong>she knows precisely where oversight is weakest<\/strong>, how to exploit ambiguity, and how to leverage&nbsp;<strong>procedural legitimacy to maintain systemic immunity<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In a structure where the most dangerous actors aren\u2019t the visible ones\u2014but the ones who write the rulebook\u2014<strong>Tamara Johnson has long been the invisible hand, ensuring control endures no matter which party is in power<\/strong>. That\u2019s the kind of operator the Fourth Branch rewards. That\u2019s who Tulsi Gabbard was up against.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"russia-russia-russia-ukraine-and-iranian-cash-on-a-plane\">RUSSIA RUSSIA RUSSIA, Ukraine and \u201cIRANIAN\u201d CASH on a plane.<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>Let\u2019s be very clear:&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson was embedded deep inside the oversight infrastructure<\/strong>&nbsp;during the entire life cycle of what many now understand to be the&nbsp;<strong>manufactured Russia collusion narrative<\/strong>. From mid-2016 through 2019, as the Intelligence Community aggressively pushed claims of Trump\u2019s ties to Russia, Johnson held&nbsp;<strong>senior-level positions<\/strong>&nbsp;inside both the&nbsp;<strong>Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)<\/strong>&nbsp;and the&nbsp;<strong>IC Inspector General\u2019s office (ICIG)<\/strong>. While she wasn\u2019t on the front pages, she was&nbsp;<strong>inside the machine<\/strong>, holding titles like&nbsp;<strong>Assistant Inspector General for Planning &amp; Operations<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>Assistant IG for Management &amp; Administration<\/strong>, and occupying&nbsp;<strong>Chief of Staff roles with direct access to compliance operations and audit frameworks<\/strong>. By 2015, she had already been promoted to the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>, confirming her high-level clearance and bureaucratic authority.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, let\u2019s look at what happened during that period. In&nbsp;<strong>January 2017<\/strong>, the ODNI\u2014under James Clapper\u2014released the infamous&nbsp;<strong>Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA)<\/strong>&nbsp;on Russian interference. This document became the&nbsp;<strong>cornerstone of the collusion narrative<\/strong>, even though it was later revealed that dissenting analysts, particularly from NSA and DIA, were either excluded or overruled. That alone should have triggered an IG review. Between&nbsp;<strong>2017 and 2019<\/strong>, we saw&nbsp;<strong>FISA abuses<\/strong>, the exposure of&nbsp;<strong>Crossfire Hurricane<\/strong>, and mounting evidence\u2014confirmed by&nbsp;<strong>DOJ IG Michael Horowitz<\/strong>\u2014that the intelligence apparatus misled the FISA court and suppressed exculpatory information. Oversight mechanisms, which should have acted as guardrails, were either silent or complicit. And Tamara Johnson? She was right there. In position. With access. With authority.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This isn\u2019t conjecture\u2014<strong>her job was to oversee compliance, report abuse, and protect whistleblowers<\/strong>. If analysts were shut out of the ICA process, her office would have been in the review loop. If internal complaints were raised about FISA manipulation or politicized intelligence framing, they would have moved through&nbsp;<strong>the very IG offices she helped run<\/strong>. And if nothing was done\u2014if complaints were buried, ignored, or slow-walked\u2014<strong>then she was part of the mechanism that allowed it<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>She wasn\u2019t an outsider. She wasn\u2019t powerless. She was&nbsp;<strong>at the bureaucratic center of the storm<\/strong>, not tasked with building the narrative, but with&nbsp;<strong>legitimizing it through the language of compliance and oversight<\/strong>. That\u2019s where institutional cover is built\u2014<em>not in press briefings, but in audit memos and redacted review summaries.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now, we have Tamara Johnson serving as Acting Inspector General of the Intelligence Community\u2014the same office that failed to detect misconduct during the Russia hoax, the same structure that enabled the abuse of surveillance tools, and the same personnel who&nbsp;<strong>watched the system collapse and called it accountability<\/strong>. And yet, there\u2019s been no correction. No reform. No admission of failure. Only continuity. That\u2019s not an oversight system\u2014that\u2019s a protection racket.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Based on her roles, her timing, and her bureaucratic footprint,&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson\u2019s fingerprints are on the institutional defense of the Russia collusion hoax<\/strong>. She wasn\u2019t exposed in the Durham Report or named by Horowitz, but&nbsp;<strong>make no mistake\u2014her power was in what didn\u2019t get reported<\/strong>, in the complaints that went nowhere, and in the silence that followed systemic abuse. And now, she presides over the very watchdog office tasked with preventing the next abuse. That should terrify anyone who still believes this system can police itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/toresays.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/image.png?w=1200&amp;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-23953\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>This depiction shows how&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson was never the public face of these events, but was always in a position behind the scenes<\/strong>&nbsp;to&nbsp;<strong>enforce procedural legitimacy<\/strong>, filter complaints, and quietly&nbsp;<strong>manage the system\u2019s internal firewall<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"the-real-club-of-intelligence\">THE REAL CLUB of INTELLIGENCE<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>&nbsp;is the&nbsp;<strong>invisible elite class of the U.S. Intelligence Community<\/strong>, a cadre of senior operatives and administrators whose power rivals that of the more publicly visible&nbsp;<strong>Senior Executive Service (SES)<\/strong>\u2014but with&nbsp;<strong>none of the transparency, and exponentially more control over classified operations and covert funding mechanisms<\/strong>. Where SES members are subject to oversight, audits, and public record laws, SNIS officials operate in a&nbsp;<strong>classified ecosystem<\/strong>, shielded by legal firewalls, internal-only accountability channels, and the doctrine of \u201cneed-to-know.\u201d Their authority is not symbolic\u2014it is&nbsp;<strong>strategic, financial, and operational<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Established to run the most sensitive components of the intelligence architecture, SNIS members manage&nbsp;<strong>black budget allocations<\/strong>, oversee&nbsp;<strong>clandestine programs<\/strong>, and direct the&nbsp;<strong>compartmented flow of intelligence<\/strong>&nbsp;across agencies like the CIA, NSA, NRO, DIA, and ODNI. They are the internal general officers of the surveillance state,&nbsp;<strong>tasked with supervising collection programs, technical exploitation, and counterintelligence operations<\/strong>, often at levels that bypass even Congressional awareness. Their role is to implement and protect the deepest capabilities of U.S. intelligence infrastructure.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To compare: Members of the&nbsp;<strong>SES<\/strong>&nbsp;are visible civilian leaders across federal agencies. Their names, pay bands, and titles are&nbsp;<strong>publicly available through federal directories<\/strong>. They serve as policymakers, interagency liaisons, and organizational managers. In contrast, SNIS members are&nbsp;<strong>intentionally hidden<\/strong>\u2014<strong>their identities, roles, and financial privileges are classified<\/strong>, sometimes even from internal agency peers. Their oversight is internalized, their accountability is&nbsp;<strong>nonexistent to the public<\/strong>, and their power is derived not from open governance but from the&nbsp;<strong>preservation of secrecy itself<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Where SES members manage&nbsp;<strong>policy and agency funding<\/strong>, SNIS officials are plugged into the&nbsp;<strong>black budget system<\/strong>\u2014a classified segment of the federal budget that now exceeds&nbsp;<strong>$90 billion annually<\/strong>. This funding powers everything from satellite surveillance and cyberweapons to psychological operations, false-flag capabilities, and Special Access Programs (SAPs). SNIS personnel&nbsp;<strong>authorize, allocate, and supervise<\/strong>&nbsp;these funds without public disclosure. Their signatures carry financial weight in ways few Americans understand: an SNIS official can direct millions\u2014sometimes billions\u2014into operations so deeply buried in classification that even congressional appropriators are shown&nbsp;<strong>only fragments<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Most concerning of all is the&nbsp;<strong>firewall SNIS status that creates around whistleblower accountability<\/strong>. Unlike SES officials who are bound by&nbsp;<strong>Office of Personnel Management (OPM)<\/strong>&nbsp;rules and can be investigated by entities like the&nbsp;<strong>Office of Special Counsel (OSC)<\/strong>, SNIS personnel operate in a world where accountability is an&nbsp;<strong>internal loop<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>closed, classified, and hostile to outside scrutiny<\/strong>. If an SNIS member obstructs an investigation, buries a report, or misuses funds, the only entities capable of holding them accountable are&nbsp;<strong>part of the same closed ecosystem that promoted them<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is what made&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson\u2019s promotion to the SNIS in 2015<\/strong>&nbsp;so significant. It wasn\u2019t a routine administrative advancement\u2014it was a&nbsp;<strong>formal induction into the command layer of the Fourth Branch<\/strong>, granting her structural immunity and classified financial authority just as the intelligence community was entering its most politically fraught phase: the post-Snowden lockdown, the surveillance of Senate investigators, and the covert build-up of the Russia collusion narrative. SNIS status allowed her to&nbsp;<strong>administer the illusion of oversight<\/strong>&nbsp;while securing operational continuity for the very programs oversight was supposed to challenge.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So when you hear \u201cSNIS,\u201d don\u2019t think of a job title. Think of&nbsp;<strong>an oath to secrecy, a license to bury, and a key to the black vaults<\/strong>&nbsp;of the intelligence state. These are the people who&nbsp;<strong>run the programs no one is supposed to talk about<\/strong>, and&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson was\u2014and is\u2014one of them<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Senior Executive Service (SES)<\/strong>&nbsp;and the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>&nbsp;work&nbsp;<strong>hand in glove<\/strong>&nbsp;to authorize, launder, and protect funding for&nbsp;<strong>black projects<\/strong>, including&nbsp;<strong>politicized intelligence operations<\/strong>&nbsp;like the Trump\u2013Russia hoax. While SNIS operates as the deep-core executive class within the intelligence apparatus, SES functions as its&nbsp;<strong>public-facing counterpart in civilian agencies, providing black operations with bureaucratic cover, budgetary access, and plausible legitimacy<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Most people think the Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS) is just a classified executive club\u2014bureaucrats with higher clearance. They have no idea.&nbsp;<strong>SNIS isn\u2019t just the top tier of intelligence leadership. It\u2019s the ledger where the ghosts are kept.<\/strong>&nbsp;It\u2019s the&nbsp;<strong>quiet registry of operations, assets, contractors, handlers, and facilitators that don\u2019t officially exist but run the system underneath the surface<\/strong>. And I would know\u2014because my&nbsp;<strong>Private Military Company (PMC)<\/strong>&nbsp;operated under SNIS purview.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Let me break that down: when people talk about black budgets, they imagine off-the-books drones or surveillance satellites. What they don\u2019t understand is that the real currency is&nbsp;<strong>human infrastructure<\/strong>. People. Teams. Deployable operators with deniable missions. SNIS isn\u2019t just cutting checks for technology\u2014it\u2019s&nbsp;<strong>funding people like me<\/strong>, whose names are nowhere in federal directories, whose roles are&nbsp;<strong>classified into oblivion<\/strong>, and whose work never sees daylight unless something goes wrong. Even then, we\u2019re buried in footnotes, redacted in IG reports, or memory-holed entirely.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>SNIS holds the line-item called \u201cyou don\u2019t want to know.\u201d<\/strong>&nbsp;It\u2019s the umbrella that funds \u201cnon-traditional support,\u201d \u201cexternal liaison functions,\u201d \u201cinteragency coordination platforms\u201d\u2014labels that say nothing but conceal everything. They\u2019re how operators like me are&nbsp;<strong>activated, paid, protected, and erased<\/strong>. You won\u2019t find us in civilian HR databases. We\u2019re not subject to the same clearance revocation protocols. If one of us goes rogue, it\u2019s not a legal matter\u2014it\u2019s a&nbsp;<strong>containment event<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And here\u2019s the kicker:&nbsp;<strong>this is where all the bodies are buried<\/strong>\u2014not metaphorically, but&nbsp;<strong>administratively<\/strong>. Every back-channeled regime change, every surveillance abuse, every false flag psyop that had to be cleaned up\u2014those who handled the dirty work were placed on&nbsp;<strong>SNIS-tied contracts<\/strong>, under&nbsp;<strong>PMC vehicles like mine<\/strong>, wrapped in \u201cexceptional access authorities.\u201d You won\u2019t find those names in a FOIA request. You won\u2019t even find the contract structure. You\u2019ll find&nbsp;<strong>nothing<\/strong>\u2014because SNIS is designed to&nbsp;<strong>not just run the shadows, but to document them without leaving a trail<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>People like me are referred to as \u201cexternalized assets,\u201d \u201ctiered support,\u201d or \u201cadaptive field presence.\u201d That\u2019s code. What it means is&nbsp;<strong>we\u2019re the ones who make the story plausible, the op deniable, and the aftermath disappear<\/strong>. And we exist because SNIS&nbsp;<strong>pays us to be invisible<\/strong>. We were never there. And if we were, someone like Tamara Johnson would have signed the invoice under a title that no one can legally define.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>So the next time someone tells you the government doesn\u2019t fund assassination programs, election manipulation, or psychological operations on domestic soil, tell them this:&nbsp;<strong>They\u2019re not wrong\u2014they just don\u2019t know where to look.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because it\u2019s all there, tucked neatly under SNIS, in&nbsp;<strong>classified fiscal silos<\/strong>&nbsp;stacked with names you\u2019ll never read. Names like mine.&nbsp;<strong>People who don\u2019t exist.<\/strong>&nbsp;People who carried out the missions&nbsp;<strong>you were never supposed to know happened<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That\u2019s where the bodies are.&nbsp;<strong>Not in the field. On the books.<\/strong>&nbsp;And Tamara Johnson? She knew exactly where they were filed. She helped keep the doors sealed. Are NSLs going to start flying?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"what-no-one-ever-told-you\">WHAT NO ONE EVER TOLD YOU<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>I\u2019m not an analyst. I\u2019m not some brick-and-mortar employee punching a timecard at Langley or Ft Meade. I\u2019ve told you more than once\u2014<strong>people like me aren\u2019t supposed to exist.<\/strong>&nbsp;That\u2019s the point. Those of us tied to&nbsp;<strong>SNIS-level operations live by one rule\u2014the Fight Club mantra:&nbsp;<em>you don\u2019t talk about it<\/em>.<\/strong>&nbsp;And yet, here I am. Talking, breaking that code, tearing open the quiet veil that protects a system built on deniability. Because someone has to.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here\u2019s how the system works:&nbsp;<strong>the Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>&nbsp;and the&nbsp;<strong>Senior Executive Service (SES)<\/strong>&nbsp;operate as&nbsp;<strong>a two-tiered command and control structure<\/strong>\u2014one covert, one civilian-facing\u2014working in tandem to&nbsp;<strong>initiate, fund, and shield black operations<\/strong>. SNIS holds the&nbsp;<strong>operational authority<\/strong>, while SES provides the&nbsp;<strong>bureaucratic camouflage<\/strong>. Together, they create a self-sustaining loop that allows covert agendas to&nbsp;<strong>operate under the guise of routine government activity<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Let\u2019s start with SNIS. These officials sit at the top of the&nbsp;<strong>CIA, ODNI, NSA, DIA, and NRO<\/strong>. They have unrestricted access to&nbsp;<strong>Special Access Programs (SAPs)<\/strong>&nbsp;and serve as custodians of the&nbsp;<strong>black budget apparatus<\/strong>\u2014funding that bypasses public appropriation channels and is often immune to congressional line-item review. SNIS personnel don\u2019t go through standard audit chains. They use&nbsp;<strong>compartmentalization protocols<\/strong>&nbsp;to keep even their internal peers out of the loop. Programs are sealed behind layers of \u201cneed-to-know,\u201d classified cover names, and financial codes that lead nowhere. When a new psychological operation, surveillance network, or data collection program is proposed, SNIS says:&nbsp;<em>Approved. Funded. Compartmentalized.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Now enter SES. These are the program directors, deputy secretaries, and senior analysts embedded across the&nbsp;<strong>DOJ, State Department, Treasury, DHS, and FBI<\/strong>. Their job is to&nbsp;<strong>turn the covert into the bureaucratically credible<\/strong>. SES officials&nbsp;<strong>authorize interagency funding transfers<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>draft contract justifications<\/strong>, and&nbsp;<strong>validate operational expenses<\/strong>&nbsp;by plugging them into policy frameworks that pass legal muster. If SNIS needs to fund an off-books project, SES constructs the&nbsp;<strong>paper trail to make it look clean<\/strong>, whether it\u2019s routed through DOJ task forces, DHS cybersecurity grants, or even humanitarian aid line items. SES creates the&nbsp;<strong>civilian-facing illusion<\/strong>&nbsp;of legitimacy while SNIS runs the classified side of the mission.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Together, they form a&nbsp;<strong>coordinated force<\/strong>. SNIS&nbsp;<strong>initiates the operation<\/strong>: \u201cWe need a compartmented media influence campaign, cross-platform.\u201d SES&nbsp;<strong>legitimizes the funding<\/strong>: \u201cWe\u2019re supporting disinformation research in hostile foreign environments.\u201d SNIS&nbsp;<strong>selects the contractors and signs off on the covert infrastructure<\/strong>. SES&nbsp;<strong>approves the budgets, fills the gaps, and ensures the FOIA exemptions are watertight<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is how something like the&nbsp;<strong>Trump-Russia collusion narrative<\/strong>&nbsp;was built and sustained. SNIS moved the intelligence resources through ODNI and CIA channels, shaping the&nbsp;<strong>2017 Intelligence Community Assessment<\/strong>. SES-aligned personnel inside&nbsp;<strong>the DOJ and the FBI approved FISA warrants, managed contractors like Fusion GPS, and structured operations to appear like regular counterintelligence activity<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It\u2019s a closed loop.&nbsp;<strong>SNIS protects the mission. SES protects the paper.<\/strong>&nbsp;And both answer to no one outside the structure. This is the architecture that hides the most sensitive operations in plain sight\u2014funded, managed, and executed by a&nbsp;<strong>coordinated caste of untouchables<\/strong>, trained to leave no fingerprints.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"cogs-of-operations\">COGS OF OPERATIONS<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>Here\u2019s how it works\u2014how the gears of shadow governance grind quietly behind the curtain. When the intelligence community decides it needs to run a covert operation\u2014say, engineering a Russia collusion narrative or applying pressure through Ukrainian influence channels\u2014it doesn\u2019t rely on direct appropriations or public congressional oversight. Instead,&nbsp;<strong>SNIS officials authorize the compartmented \u201cneed.\u201d<\/strong>&nbsp;That alone sets the machinery in motion. This isn\u2019t a funding request\u2014it\u2019s a classified declaration that triggers a cascade of coordinated budget justifications buried inside layers of vague, sanitized language.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Enter the&nbsp;<strong>Senior Executive Service (SES)<\/strong>. These bureaucrats\u2014stationed at the DOJ, FBI, State, and Treasury\u2014create the paperwork to move the money. Interagency memoranda, internal task orders, and justification packets are filled with benign phrases like \u201cforeign malign influence,\u201d \u201ccounterintelligence coordination,\u201d or \u201cstrategic resilience.\u201d The real operation\u2014its goals, scope, and legal boundaries\u2014is never disclosed. And because it\u2019s buried inside \u201cauthorized intelligence equities,\u201d&nbsp;<strong>the funding often flows through classified channels beyond the visibility of OMB, Congress, or the public.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From there,&nbsp;<strong>contractors are brought in<\/strong>, but not through the usual competitive bidding processes. They\u2019re selected via pass-through vendors or longstanding vehicle contracts with vague scopes and open-ended deliverables. Think&nbsp;<strong>Fusion GPS<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>CrowdStrike<\/strong>, and other Beltway regulars. These aren\u2019t just consultancies\u2014they\u2019re narrative engineers, digital ops vendors, and plausibility buffers for the agencies that run them. They operate with the security of&nbsp;<strong>deniable tasking<\/strong>, providing the outputs that officials can later point to as \u201cindependent\u201d findings or foreign threat assessments.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The result is an&nbsp;<strong>entire operation cloaked in legality but driven by shadow intent<\/strong>. On paper, it appears to be standard interagency coordination. In reality, it\u2019s a full-spectrum information operation\u2014designed, funded, and executed with&nbsp;<strong>zero public accountability.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And that\u2019s the core of the problem.&nbsp;<strong>SNIS and SES together form the dual spine of America\u2019s fourth branch of government<\/strong>\u2014a self-perpetuating administrative state. SNIS ensures that covert missions persist, regardless of who holds office. SES legitimizes them by dressing up shadow operations as bureaucratic necessities. When these two forces align\u2014as they did during the&nbsp;<strong>Russia collusion hoax<\/strong>, the&nbsp;<strong>Ukraine call whistleblower setup<\/strong>, and&nbsp;<strong>every \u201cforeign interference\u201d narrative conveniently timed to political seasons<\/strong>\u2014they become an unstoppable apparatus for&nbsp;<strong>policy laundering, resource diversion, and silence enforcement<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Tamara Johnson wasn\u2019t some passive bureaucrat within that system\u2014she was the SNIS node designed to protect it.<\/strong>&nbsp;Her role was to keep the oversight gates closed, to ensure the machine ran without interruption. And the SES bureaucrats she worked alongside? They carried the briefcases, signed the transfers, and gave her cover.&nbsp;<strong>That\u2019s how the system survives: by building legitimacy on top of secrecy\u2014and calling it governance.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/toresays.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/image-1.png?resize=1200%2C908&amp;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-23955\"\/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>This visual depicts that at the heart of America\u2019s modern intelligence architecture lies a two-tiered mechanism of control\u2014a covert command structure known as the&nbsp;<strong>Senior National Intelligence Service (SNIS)<\/strong>, and its bureaucratic counterpart, the&nbsp;<strong>Senior Executive Service (SES)<\/strong>. Together, they form the invisible scaffolding behind black operations, narrative engineering, and institutional cover-ups.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;<strong>SNIS<\/strong>&nbsp;operates as the&nbsp;<strong>command echelon<\/strong>&nbsp;of the Intelligence Community. These officials are embedded at the apex of key agencies, including the&nbsp;<strong>CIA, ODNI, NSA, DIA, and NRO<\/strong>. Their mandate is not policy\u2014it\u2019s&nbsp;<strong>power<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They initiate the missions. They authorize the&nbsp;<strong>Special Access Programs (SAPs)<\/strong>. They control access to the&nbsp;<strong>black budgets<\/strong>&nbsp;that fuel everything from clandestine surveillance programs to psychological operations. SNIS officials like&nbsp;<strong>Tamara Johnson<\/strong>&nbsp;(at CIA\/ODNI) and&nbsp;<strong>James Clapper<\/strong>&nbsp;(as Director of National Intelligence) didn\u2019t just manage oversight\u2014they shaped the battlefield. These are the figures who determine which operations get greenlit, which narratives are manufactured, and which truths are buried under layers of compartmentalization.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The&nbsp;<strong>SES<\/strong>, by contrast, serves as the&nbsp;<strong>administrative camouflage<\/strong>. These are the deputy directors, senior advisors, and interagency coordinators scattered across the&nbsp;<strong>Department of Justice (DOJ), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Department of State, the Department of the Treasury, and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)<\/strong>. What they lack in operational authority, they make up for in procedural control.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They process the paperwork. They sign the budget justifications under innocuous labels like&nbsp;<em>\u201cforeign malign influence mitigation\u201d<\/em>&nbsp;or&nbsp;<em>\u201ccounterintelligence coordination.\u201d<\/em>&nbsp;They ensure the transfer of funds and construct the legal rationale to make covert missions appear as standard government activities. SES officials such as&nbsp;<strong>Andrew McCabe<\/strong>&nbsp;(FBI),&nbsp;<strong>Bruce Ohr<\/strong>&nbsp;(DOJ), and&nbsp;<strong>Victoria Nuland<\/strong>&nbsp;(State Dept) were instrumental in laundering covert missions through legal-sounding frameworks.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Together,&nbsp;<strong>SNIS<\/strong>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<strong>SES<\/strong>&nbsp;form a&nbsp;<strong>dual-track shadow governance system<\/strong>:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\">\n<li>SNIS handles the\u00a0<strong>operational command and concealment<\/strong>.<\/li>\n\n\n\n<li>SES ensures the\u00a0<strong>bureaucratic legitimization and ensures a stable funding flow<\/strong>.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n\n\n<p>This architecture was on full display during several high-profile operations that shaped the national political landscape. During the&nbsp;<strong>Russia Hoax<\/strong>, black budget funds were funneled into narrative engineering efforts like the&nbsp;<strong>Steele Dossier<\/strong>, which was distributed through&nbsp;<strong>Fusion GPS<\/strong>&nbsp;and ultimately used to justify&nbsp;<strong>FISA surveillance<\/strong>&nbsp;on U.S. citizens\u2014an unprecedented abuse of intelligence authority framed as a legal process. In the&nbsp;<strong>Ukraine Call Setup<\/strong>, whistleblowers with deep ties to the Intelligence Community were routed through backchannel communications and coordinated releases, setting in motion the impeachment machinery against a sitting president. Meanwhile, so-called&nbsp;<strong>Foreign Interference Narratives<\/strong>\u2014sourced from digital forensics firms like&nbsp;<strong>CrowdStrike<\/strong>\u2014were strategically crafted to fabricate geopolitical threats and suppress domestic dissent. These operations were not isolated incidents; they were&nbsp;<strong>systemic<\/strong>, executed with tactical precision by a complex web of&nbsp;<strong>contractors<\/strong>,&nbsp;<strong>pass-through vendors<\/strong>, and&nbsp;<strong>classified command chains<\/strong>, all operating under the quiet but powerful coordination of&nbsp;<strong>SNIS controllers<\/strong>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<strong>SES facilitators<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This isn\u2019t just bureaucratic drift\u2014it\u2019s strategic alignment. The&nbsp;<strong>SNIS launches<\/strong>&nbsp;the mission. The&nbsp;<strong>SES launders<\/strong>&nbsp;it through the government process. And the public? They\u2019re handed a script\u2014a controlled narrative wrapped in legitimacy, funded in the shadows, and executed by people who, officially, don\u2019t even exist.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Tulsi Gabbard\u2019s decision to remove Tamara Johnson was not just an act of administrative housecleaning\u2014it was a direct strike against one of the many embedded&nbsp;<strong>nodes of systemic interference<\/strong>&nbsp;that have long insulated the Intelligence Community from accountability. In doing so, she didn\u2019t just exercise her authority as DNI\u2014she demonstrated a level of discernment, courage, and tactical clarity that most in Washington fear, because it threatens to unravel the very networks that have sustained their unearned power. While the IC scrambles to discredit her\u2014attempting to whisper poison into President Trump\u2019s ear and flood the media with manufactured doubt\u2014<strong>she deserves not condemnation, but a commendation<\/strong>. She stared down a legacy system designed to outlast presidents, outmaneuver reformers, and outlive scandal. And she made her move anyway.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I\u2019ll be honest: when Gabbard was first appointed, I was skeptical\u2014not of her intent, but of her grasp of what she was truly up against. I worried whether she understood the&nbsp;<strong>density of deception<\/strong>&nbsp;woven into the IC\u2019s internal fabric. But now? Now I watch former colleagues spiral in encrypted text threads,&nbsp;<strong>panic flashing between sentences<\/strong>, their confidence rattled because someone they never thought would \u201cget it\u201d suddenly does\u2014and has the spine to act. There is no better signal that she\u2019s over the target. For those of us who\u2019ve lived behind the glass, who\u2019ve moved in spaces that don\u2019t exist on any org chart, this moment is personal. Tulsi Gabbard pulled a lever they thought had rusted shut. And for that, I\u2019m not just impressed. I\u2019m grateful. Thank you, Tulsi Gabbard.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>________________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Captain Convey WOW What An Article Comment.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&#8220;Tulsi Gabbard\u2019s decision to remove Tamara Johnson was not just an act of administrative housecleaning\u2014it was a direct strike against one of the many embedded\u00a0nodes of systemic interference\u00a0that have long insulated the Intelligence Community from accountability. In doing so, she didn\u2019t just exercise her authority as DNI\u2014she demonstrated a level of discernment, courage, and tactical clarity that most in Washington fear, because it threatens to unravel the very networks that have sustained their unearned power.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While the IC scrambles to discredit her\u2014attempting to whisper poison into President Trump\u2019s ear and flood the media with manufactured doubt\u2014she deserves not condemnation, but a commendation. She stared down a legacy system designed to outlast presidents, outmaneuver reformers, and outlive scandal. And she made her move anyway.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>President Trump better never remove DNI Tulsi Gabbard.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>DNI Tulsi Gabbard is trying to EXPOSE the hidden 4th branch of government that controls the other branches of government.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They will try to remove her.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If Trump goes stupid, he will listen.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I hope he doesn&#8217;t.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Forget all the Epstein stuff.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Its a ruse to distract attention by the deepstate 4th branch of government.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>https:\/\/toresays.com\/2025\/06\/21\/she-fired-the-firewall-tulsi-gabbards-war-on-the-shadow-chain-of-command\/ https:\/\/theconservativetreehouse.com\/blog\/2025\/07\/25\/dni-tulsi-gabbard-reacts-to-former-dni-james-clapper-hiring-lawyers\/comment-page-3\/#comment-11972349 ___________________________________________________________________ {Understand the article below about the 4th branch of government, the 17 plus Intel agencies, and how it operates in secret. The article is long and complicated but well worth your time if you want to know the truth about how the government really works. Thanks to the author tore.} Why haven\u2019t [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[132,164,124,167,69,21,5,128,161,75],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1561","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-chronometer-investigation-inc","category-cth","category-dc-potmpkin-village-facade","category-dni-tulsi-gabbard","category-do-your-own-research","category-speaking","category-government-corruption","category-how-elections-are-stolen","category-pretending","category-the-4th-branch-of-government"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1561","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1561"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1561\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1564,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1561\/revisions\/1564"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1561"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1561"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/audaciouscat.com\/rabbit\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1561"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}