What, you want me to delete my post when I’ve said something stupid? I don’t think so, buster.But didn't he kill a puppy or a cat?
Edit: Oh no that was someone else who killed their pet.
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What, you want me to delete my post when I’ve said something stupid? I don’t think so, buster.But didn't he kill a puppy or a cat?
Edit: Oh no that was someone else who killed their pet.
Exactly what I expected.Agreed, way worse. It's mind-bogglingly awful.
That was Kristi Noem, our new U.S. secretary of Homeland Security. Boy do I feel safe!But didn't he kill a puppy or a cat?
Edit: Oh no that was someone else who killed their pet.
“… In recent weeks, the F.B.I. disbanded the Washington field office’s elite federal public corruption squad, which was best known for investigating Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, among other sensitive inquiries involving prominent government officials.Unease at F.B.I. Intensifies as Patel Ousts Top Officials
—> https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/01/...e_code=1.Lk8.rZxO.YLizUy6rfDwk&smid=url-share
“… The actions have obliterated decades of experience in national security and criminal matters at the F.B.I. and raised questions about whether the agents taking over such critical posts have the institutional knowledge to pursue cornerstones of its work.
… “The director and I will have most of our incoming reform teams in place by next week,” Mr. Bongino wrote on social media last week.
“The hiring process can take a little bit of time, but we are approaching that finish line. This will help us both in doubling down on our reform agenda.”
He added that the agency would revisit past investigations, like the 2022 leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion on abortion, cocaine found two years ago at the White House and the pipe bombs found near the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Two of the cases were not the F.B.I.’s to start — the Secret Service investigated the cocaine and the Supreme Court marshal the leak of the draft opinion.)
… “The director and I evaluated a number of cases of potential public corruption that, understandably, have garnered public interest,”
Mr. Bongino said, oddly referring to the pipe bombs as a potential act of public corruption rather than domestic terrorism.
In his previous role as a podcast host, he insisted, without offering evidence, that the pipe bombs were “an inside job” and that “the F.B.I. knows who this person is.” …”