Johnny ₿ Good
115.4K posts

Johnny ₿ Good
@JohnnyBTCGood
'They' want you to see no truth, hear no truth, speak no truth. 'They' are after your rights and freedoms. Navy Vet #FamilyIsEverything #MAGA #Decentralize ☧



.@VP Vance has chosen former Trump U.S. Attorney @ScottBradyPA to serve as Executive Director of the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud. Scott is leading the charge to fight fraudsters stealing from YOU and endangering the lives of the most vulnerable Americans. 🇺🇸

The day of reckoning has arrived. 🇺🇸

Let me outline the strategic principles that would actually be required to break institutional capture, based on what we’ve just watched fail in real time. 🎯 The Core Problem: Why the Gabbard Approach Was Doomed Before any game plan, you have to understand what went wrong. Tulsi Gabbard walked into ODNI with a flamethrower — fired the NIC heads, referred leakers for prosecution, slashed headcount, and launched declassification initiatives. And she’s now out. Why? Because personnel is not policy. You can fire the top three layers of an agency, and the fourth layer simply waits you out. The permanent bureaucracy has no loyalty to any administration. Their timeline is 30 years. Yours is four. They know this. The intelligence community, in particular, has a unique defense mechanism: the classification system itself. You can't expose what you can't legally reveal. You can't prosecute leakers without burning sources and methods in open court. The system is architecturally self-protecting. ♟️ The Strategic Framework 1. Parallel Institutions, Not Reforms You don't fix a captured institution by reforming it. You render it irrelevant by building alternatives. •The IC has 18 agencies. You certainly don’t need all 18. A president could designate a small, newly-built analytical shop — staffed entirely with vetted outsiders, reporting directly to the Oval — as the primary intelligence provider, reducing the legacy agencies to optional inputs. •This bypasses the classification trap: the new shop's product isn’t buried in compartmented silos controlled by people who hate you. •The old agencies continue to exist, receive budgets, and churn out product — but nobody important reads it anymore. Starvation, not decapitation. 2. Declassification as a Weapon — But at Scale Gabbard’s declassification push was the right instinct, but it was far too narrow. The real play: •Blanket declassification orders on entire categories of documents, not piecemeal releases. The JFK files, the 9/11 files, the COVID origins intelligence, the Ukraine/Russia assessments. Dump it all. Once it’s public, the IC loses its informational monopoly. •Pre-position the legal framework so that career officials who resist declassification are committing contempt of a direct presidential order, not exercising legitimate classification authority. •The Overton window shifts when the public sees what’s actually in those vaults. 3. Follow the Money, Not the People The IC’s power isn’t just in its secrets — it’s in its contractor ecosystem. The revolving door between agencies and defense contractors is the circulatory system of the deep state. •Audit every IC contract over a threshold. Publicly. •Ban former senior IC officials from defense contractor employment for 10 years, not the current laughable cooling-off periods. •Require congressional line-item approval for any intelligence contract above a set dollar figure — no more black budgets where nobody knows what was purchased. 4. Criminal Referrals That Actually Stick Gabbard referred the leakers to the DOJ. But the DOJ under Bondi apparently didn’t produce visible indictments, let alone convictions. The bottleneck is always the prosecution layer. •Appoint a special counsel with a single mandate: investigate and prosecute unauthorized disclosures of classified information from 2016 forward. No other portfolio, no distractions. •Staff that office with attorneys who haven’t cycled through the DC national security bar — bring in federal prosecutors from flyover districts who don’t owe their careers to the same social network. 5. Structural Separation The ODNI itself was created after 9/11 to “coordinate” intelligence. In practice, it added another layer of bureaucracy without fixing the stovepiping it was supposed to solve. •Eliminate ODNI entirely. Return to the pre-2004 model in which agency heads reported separately. Coordination happened through the NSC, which is directly under the president. •Fewer nodes of power mean fewer places for resistance to embed. 6. Move the Physical Footprint A huge percentage of the IC workforce is concentrated in the DC metro area. The culture is self-reinforcing — everyone goes to the same dinner parties, their kids go to the same schools, their spouses work at the same contractors. •Relocate major IC components out of the Beltway. The FBI’s move to Huntsville was a start. Do the same with CIA analytical divisions, NSA cyber operations, and DIA. •Geographic dispersal breaks up the informal networks that make institutional resistance coherent. You can’t coordinate a soft coup over brunch in McLean if half your people now live in Montana. 7. Transparency as Deterrence The deepest vulnerability of the deep state is sunlight. They operate in darkness because darkness works. •Mandate that every intelligence product delivered to the president be archived and subject to declassification review after a fixed period — say, four years. No more permanent secrecy for assessments that turned out to be wrong. •Publish an annual unclassified report on every intelligence failure from the preceding decade — wrong assessments, missed signals, politicized analysis. Name the offices responsible. Let the public see the track record. ⚠️ The Uncomfortable Truth None of this happens without a president who is willing to burn political capital at a rate that makes enemies of people who can end careers — or worse. The Kennedy parallel is uncomfortable but unavoidable. When you genuinely threaten the national security apparatus, the pushback isn’t limited to mean editorials in the Langley Bugle (Washington Post). The reason these reforms don't happen isn’t that nobody’s thought of them. It’s that the people in a position to implement them quickly discover the personal cost is higher than they’re willing to pay. That’s the calculation. That’s always been the calculation. 💥


Republicans are setting fundraising records while democrats are deep in the hole. Clearly Americans are not happy with the Dem's performance! x.com/votehub/status…


#Enthéos Reply to Erin on TS today 6:52 PM

Apparently this is what being a patriot looks like in 2026. It's changed a little...



WATCH: Pope Leo does the “6 7” meme


TRAITOR: Leader Thune just sent the Senate home for a 12 day paid vacation but he’s having one senator stay behind to gavel in every three days to block Trump from making recess appointments. No other president has had his own party use pro forma sessions against him.

The Don Is Intentionally Surrounding Himself.

JUST IN: 🇮🇷🇺🇸 Iran agreed to give up enriched uranium in proposed deal announced by President Trump, NYT reports.

We are aware of multiple foreign influencer campaigns and are actively tracking both the intermediary companies receiving these funds as pass-throughs and the influencers who are failing to disclose their compensation. We need far stricter disclosure laws for foreign influencer marketing ops.










