Who is actually creating smoke?
The Biden administration and its establishment media mouthpieces have been in overdrive since Wednesday’s confirmation that the white substance found at the White House over the weekend was in fact cocaine. They are attempting to give the impression that anyone could have left the drug inside one of the most secure buildings in the United States.
But only a limited number of those who have worked inside the building and for the Secret Service are likely to have been involved.
Former Secret Service agent Dan Bongino stated categorically on Twitter on Wednesday that it was a member of the Biden family.
There’s absolutely ZERO chance anyone other than a family member brought that cocaine inside the White House complex. No chance that would make it past the mag/security checkpoints. Family bypasses those.
— Dan Bongino (@dbongino) July 5, 2023
“There’s absolutely ZERO chance anyone other than a family member brought that cocaine inside the White House complex,” Bongino wrote. “No chance that would make it past the mag/security checkpoints. Family bypasses those.”
Bongino is now a conservative commentator and celebrity in his own right, but it is essential to remember that he served both the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations as a bodyguard. When he discusses security, he is apolitical.
Obviously, his interpretation of the narrative is not how the White House PR team is handling it.
According to an NBC report Wednesday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre “reiterated that the cocaine was found in a heavily traveled area that visitors often transit and noted that staff-sponsored tours were held on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.”
Really? Like a White House aide’s cousin from Peru, Indiana, who was on a “staff-sponsored” tour of the executive branch’s seat of power and was frightened into depositing a product from Peru, South America?
The first press secretary of the George W. Bush administration, Ari Fleischer, used Twitter to criticize a New York Times article that used the term “work area” to characterize the location where cocaine was discovered.
What gibberish. A West Wing “work area”?
With the exception of the WH Mess and the bathrooms, the entire West Wing is a work area. Where exactly was the cocaine found? In whose office? In the Sit Room? In the private office next to the Oval?
Where?
— Ari Fleischer (@AriFleischer) July 5, 2023
“What gibberish,” he wrote.
“A West Wing ‘work area’? With the exception of the WH Mess and the bathrooms, the entire West Wing is a work area. Where exactly was the cocaine found? In whose office? In the Sit Room? In the private office next to the Oval? CONTINUE READING…