The Gabbard Files
The revelation of the so-called "Gabbard file" and the fury of intel officers over alleged intelligence fabrications tied to Crossfire Hurricane is no surprise—it’s the inevitable rot of a system built on the shaky foundation of FISA courts. These secretive tribunals, operating beyond public scrutiny, have shredded the Fourth Amendment’s promise against unreasonable searches and seizures. The Constitution demands warrants based on probable cause, yet FISA allows the government to spy on its own citizens with rubber-stamp approvals, often targeting political enemies under the guise of "national security." This is antithetical to the American ethos of liberty, transparency, and individual rights—principles forged in the fires of revolution against overreaching power.
Of course, this system was ripe for abuse. When you hand the state a tool to surveil without accountability, it’s only a matter of time before it’s turned on those who threaten the ruling elite. The targeting of Trump, as hinted in the replies, and now the unmasking of Obama-era intelligence fabrications, prove the point: FISA has become a weapon for political vendettas, not a shield for democracy. The fact that wars—like the speculation around Ukraine—might stem from these lies only amplifies the betrayal. This isn’t governance; it’s a slow-motion coup against the people’s will.
The American spirit demands better. We’re a nation built on distrust of centralized power, yet FISA courts embody the opposite—unseen judges greenlighting mass surveillance, often on flimsy "foreign intelligence" pretexts. The web results highlight how the FBI’s abuses, from backdoor searches to targeting donors, echo the COINTELPRO scandals of the ’60s and ’70s—proof this isn’t new, just more sophisticated. The Constitution isn’t a suggestion; it’s our bedrock. Dismantling FISA and restoring oversight isn’t just necessary—it’s a moral imperative to reclaim our republic from those who’d weaponize it against us.


