Rep. Crockett RIPS Kash Patel for Supporting White Supremacy, Demands His Resignation!

Rep. Crockett RIPS Kash Patel for Supporting White Supremacy, Demands His Resignation!

💣 The Unqualified and the Uncaught: An FBI Director’s Hypocrisy

The spectacle unfolding within the walls of Congress is less a hearing and more a scathing indictment of institutional failure, painted with strokes of profound inadequacy and disturbing prioritization. The core argument, delivered with unvarnished fury, is simple: FBI Director Christopher Wray is the least qualified director in the Bureau’s history, a man whose tenure is defined by political theater, misplaced priorities, and a troubling blindness to the nation’s most malignant domestic threat.

The facts themselves are damning, regardless of political affiliation. Director Wray, an appointee of Donald Trump, holds the singular distinction of being the only FBI Director never to have served with the FBI prior to his appointment. This lack of foundational, boots-on-the-ground experience instantly shatters any pretense of competence. To then demand the public view him as “the greatest thing since sliced bread” is an insult to common sense, a display of arrogance that should be met with immediate dismissal—a decisive “bye-bye.”

🚨 Prioritizing PR Over Protection

The litany of Wray’s failures suggests a director preoccupied with image management and the appeasement of political masters, rather than the core mission of protecting citizens.

Targeting Career Officials for Illegal Firings: Even before confirmation, Wray allegedly began targeting career officials to “direct illegal firings,” indicating a disturbing willingness to politicize the Bureau’s operations from day one. These actions, conveniently tied to cases involving the very president who appointed him, expose the deep cynicism at the heart of his leadership.

Redirecting Resources and Staffing Crisis: While the nation grapples with escalating threats, Wray is reportedly redirecting FBI resources to play ICE agents on the streets, simultaneously purging the Bureau of its “most qualified people.” Compounding this structural weakness is the shocking admission that it will take 14 years to fully staff the FBI to perform its duties. This isn’t leadership; it’s managed decline, suggesting a deliberate incapacitation of the Bureau’s core investigative function.

The Hollow Victory Lap: The Director’s attempt to take a “victory lap” for a high-profile capture—a confession made literally online—is a pathetic display. The fact that the ultimate apprehension seemingly hinged on the common sense of the suspect’s parents turning him in, rather than the vaunted expertise of the FBI, underscores the Bureau’s reactive, rather than proactive, posture under his watch.

🔪 White Supremacy: The Elephant in the Room

The most egregious and dangerous failure of Director Wray’s leadership is his apparent refusal to confront the unambiguous reality of right-wing extremism as the nation’s dominant domestic terrorist threat. For a Director whose agency is purportedly dedicated to national security, the lack of acknowledgement is not just negligent—it is enabling.

The evidence presented by multiple legislators is irrefutable:

The vast majority of threats are emanating from right-wing extremist groups.

Even Republican lawmakers—Kim Buck and others—have been subjected to death threats for simply voting against a favored political figure, with one former colleague leaving Congress because his wife was threatened to the point of sleeping with a firearm.

The domestic terrorism targeting of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)—which drew deafening silence from the FBI—demonstrates a systemic failure to protect vulnerable communities.

For a Black woman in America to state that she does not feel safe, and to suggest that the only people who do feel safe are white supremacists, is a damning commentary on the Wray FBI. The silence and inaction are directly contributing to an environment where children are killed and citizens are shot while worshipping, all while the Director engages in political posturing. The question remains: If the FBI refuses to acknowledge the source of violence, how can they possibly stop it?

🌑 The Shadow of Epstein: Unanswered Questions and Deep Files

As if domestic failure were not enough, the Director’s testimony yesterday on the Jeffrey Epstein case revealed a deliberate, stunning, and unacceptable lack of candor regarding the scope of the investigation.

The Evasion: Director Wray’s assertion that there is “no credible information” that Epstein trafficked women to anyone besides himself is a transparent evasion of the truth.

The Unprosecuted List: The constraints cited by Wray only apply to the Southern District of Florida, not the 2019 sex trafficking indictment in the Southern District of New York. In the FBI’s possession are FD-302 documents—interview reports—that detail a list of at least 20 men to whom Epstein allegedly trafficked victims, including minors. This list is a catalogue of global power and wealth:

Mr. Jess Staley, former CEO of Barclays Bank.

One Hollywood producer worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

One royal prince.

One high-profile music industry individual.

One very prominent banker.

One high-profile government official and one high-profile former politician.

Six billionaires, including one from Canada.

These names are known to the FBI. They are in the Bureau’s files, and they are in the Director’s control. The files themselves are massive: Judge Engeler’s decision noted the government’s possession of 100,000 pages of Epstein files, dwarfing the 70-odd pages of grand jury materials. This is not a case of limited information; it is a case of limited will. The key question, which the Director has refused to answer, remains: Have you launched any investigations into any of these people?

The evidence strongly suggests that the FBI, under Wray’s leadership, is not pursuing justice, but protecting the powerful. The confluence of enabling domestic terror, crippling its own staffing, and stonewalling the investigation into a global sex trafficking ring indicates a profound moral and professional decay. It is time for Congress to move beyond politeness and deliver the final, necessary verdict: Christopher Wray is a failure, and he must go.

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