President Trump used some of the harshest words possible, in legal terms, to describe the actions of an FBI agent who was closely involved in the Hillary Clinton email cover-up. Somehow, this same agent ended up on the team of agents involved in the fake “Russian collusion” investigation.
Is the FBI really that short-staffed? How does the same agent end up on two of the most high-profile, supposedly unrelated investigations in the same year?
FBI agent Peter Strzok was caught red-handed sending anti-Trump text messages to his mistress. The content of Strzok’s tweets was so inflammatory that Special Counsel Robert Mueller had to remove Strzok from the team that has been busily trying to fabricate Russian collusion “evidence.”
When the news broke, President Trump tweeted that Strzok’s actions were treason. That is an incredible charge coming from the President of the United States against a federal employee.
Treason is defined as betraying one’s country, specifically by trying to assassinate its leader or to overthrow the government. The intent of Strzok’s 2016 tweets, which you can view in the following video, was to set up an “insurance policy” in the event that Donald Trump won the 2016 election. Whatever that insurance policy was, Strzok and other FBI agents wanted it in place in order to overturn the 2016 election if their preferred candidate Hillary Clinton lost.
So, what’s your take on the scandal? Did the FBI commit treason against the US government and President Trump as he charged? Watch the video below for more information.