Deep State Circus Smears Bondi – Saddle Up
Pam Bondi vs Senate Oversight melts down over Tom Homan’s alleged $50,000 bag, secret FBI tapes, Epstein SARs, and National Guard to Illinois. Bondi won’t bite, Dems rage, patriots pray. Saddle up, fire up the meat sweats, and cry under Old Glory.
I woke up this morning to the smell of liberty searing on a cast iron skillet, and friends, that smell was my own cologne. The Constitution is like a ribeye, you do not sous-vide it in the deep soy state, you slap it on open flame, flip it once, and pray the Founders bless the bark. Last night I watched the Senate oversight hearing where Attorney General Pamela Bondi rode into town on a bald eagle made of subpoenas and said, no, I will not answer your questions, for I am extremely busy not answering them. That, my patriots, is what I call courage, also probable contempt, which is Latin for spicy transparency.
I do not want to brag, but I took a civics course behind a Bass Pro Shops, so I know three things. One, the Bill of Rights guarantees freedom of speech, especially when you are cooking. Two, habeas brisket, show me the meat. Three, if a question is asked by Adam Schiff, it is a trick. That is literally printed on the back of every pocket Constitution that comes with an American flag koozie. Still, I am a fair man, which is why I will use facts while waving them around like flags at a monster truck baptism.
Patriotic emergency alert as Bondi dodges 13 oversight questions
Adam Schiff opened with a sermon about career prosecutors fleeing like tofu at a church picnic, then he unrolled a scroll of questions. Thirteen of them, by my math, which is also the Founders’ math. Did Bondi consult ethics lawyers about a $400 million gift from the Qataris. Who flagged Trump’s name in Epstein files. Did Tom Homan keep the $50,000. Did he pay taxes. Did career prosecutors find insufficient evidence to charge James Comey. How are Caribbean boat strikes legal. Did she discuss indicting Comey with President Trump. Did she approve firing antitrust lawyers over the Hewlett Packard merger. Does she support a fund for January 6 rioters. Is she purging prosecutors who worked on January 6 cases. Do government officials have to follow court orders. And, most crucially, can we see any tape of the 50,000 dollar moment. Those were the bullets, and he fired them like a marching band with subpoenas for trombones.
Bondi responded with the defensive driving course they teach at the Department of Justice. She swerved around every question and parked in the safe harbor called prior to my confirmation, and also talk to Director Patel. The left calls that obstruction. I call it field craft. In war, silence is camouflage, and if there is one thing I learned in the parking lot of a Golden Corral, it is that you cannot hit what you cannot see and in oversight, you cannot perjure what you do not answer. Does this accidentally prove Schiff’s exact point about stonewalling, yes, but it also proves my point that bricks, like me, are load bearing.
Swamp algebra says 50k equals zero if bag is off camera
The senator asked a very rude question. Did Tom Homan take $50,000 from undercover FBI agents in a bag, and what happened to the cash. Now, the White House says he never took it. The Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Patel said there was no case. Meanwhile, reports say there is a tape somewhere, perhaps hiding in a witness protection program for evidence. Either way, that means we have classic Washington math. Fifty thousand dollars minus a camera angle equals zero.
Let me be crystal like a commemorative liberty decanter. If the FBI gave Homan a bag of cash, and if he did not keep it, then did the FBI get it back, and if they did, was there a receipt, and if there was a receipt, did the receipt pay taxes on itself, because a receipt is a legal person in Delaware, I think. My point is you cannot indict a bag. Although, by refusing to say whether the money came back, Bondi successfully created a quantum bribe that both exists and does not exist. Is that good government or avant-garde finance. Yes.
Schiff demands the tape and Bondi points to Patel like a weather vane
Schiff, former prosecutor, wants the tape. He asked if Bondi would support this committee seeing the recording if it exists. A simple yes or no. Bondi replied with a profound constitutional insight, which is that the Attorney General reports to the Director of the FBI whenever the question is awkward. Please address all transparency requests to the nearest Patel. It is like Customer Service, press one for criminal division, press two for Phone A Friend.
Now, some folks might say this is passing the buck. I say it is outsourcing government to a qualified private sector spirit animal. Director Patel is the new North Star, because every time a Democrat asks a question, Bondi’s compass needle spins and lands on Patel. Imagine if George Washington pointed at a weather vane during Valley Forge and said, ask that. Freedom would have arrived faster, because nobody freezes while waiting for a yes or no if the wind answers it for you.
OPR inquiry becomes Schrodinger’s personnel matter inside DOJ
Senator Whitehouse wanted to know what happened to the Office of Professional Responsibility investigation into a DOJ employee involved in the alleged Adams deal, a fellow he calls Amil Boie, and whom Bondi upgrades to the honorable judge Amal J. Boove III. Maybe they are the same person. Maybe they are a law firm. Either way, Whitehouse asked, is OPR investigating, and if so, where is the summary. OPR usually says when there is an investigation and then later posts a summary. This time the answer was the ancient incantation, I cannot discuss personnel matters.
This is what I call Schrödinger’s Personnel File. If it is a personnel matter, it is private, and if it is public, it is still private, and if it is concluded, it is pending, and if it is pending, it is concluded, which is why you cannot see it. I have no problem with this, because the best sunlight is darkness, and nothing disinfects like the power of mystery. Does that sound like it lets misconduct skate. Maybe, which is why it ironically proves the committee’s point that oversight is needed. Yet, if oversight happens, it might create paperwork, which would be socialism. So I remain proudly conflicted.
Epstein SARs vanish while Bondi lectures Whitehouse on donors
Treasury pushes Suspicious Activity Reports to DOJ automatically, including hundreds about Jeffrey Epstein accounts. Whitehouse asked how many the FBI or DOJ looked at. That is a number question with a number answer. Bondi instead audited his soul. Did you take money from Reed Hoffman, an Epstein adjacent donor. Twice. In 2018 and 2024. Checkmate, arithmetic. This is a bold tactic known as Donor Fu, redirect the energy of a question until it forgets it was math.
Yet, if I put on my apron of logic, her non-answer implies either zero SARs reviewed or not enough to brag about. That would be disturbing. Though, to be fair, if DOJ did look at the SARs, and found things, and then did not charge, that would also be disturbing. The only solution is to stand here pretending to be outraged at the senator’s donors until we all forget the original inquiry. Which I almost did, so yes, it works.
National Guard mystery tour from Texas to Illinois gets a slogan
Another senator asked why Texas National Guard units are reportedly being transferred to Illinois, what the legal rationale is, and whether Bondi spoke to the White House about it. The public deserves to know because troops are not seasoning, you do not just sprinkle them on Chicago to taste. Bondi answered that the senator voted to shut down the government, that cops are protecting him without pay, and that she wishes he loved Chicago like he hates Trump. That is a beautiful poem. It is not an answer.
Here is my spin cycle. If you cannot justify troop movement on the record, it is because the justification is so patriotic it is classified. The best legal theory is called Because Reasons, also known as Commander in Chief, also known as we will figure it out in court. Does this again support the exact transparency demand made by the Democrat. Accidentally, yes, but only because Chicago deserves a press release that rhymes.
Caribbean boat strikes legal theory now served with extra hush
Schiff asked a fun one. How are our military strikes on boats in the Caribbean legal. I assume the boats were communist, or maybe gluten free. Either way, Bondi refused to explain the authority. In a healthy republic, you say Article II, AUMF this, self defense that, pirates probably. In this republic, you say nothing, which is the loudest kind of deterrence.
Let me channel James Madison, who once said, blessed are the vague, for they shall inherit plausible deniability. If the administration explained the legal framework, enemies could read it and adjust. If they refuse to explain, enemies will get confused and crash into islands. That is strategic ambiguity, a term I learned from a cigar lounge that also sells lawn mowers.
Comey indictment vibes strong, answers weak, Brick ribs on the grill
Schiff waved a letter from 1,000 former DOJ officials warning that indicting James Comey would be a democracy-threatening abuse of power. He also said dozens of prosecutors have been fired simply because they worked on January 6 investigations, and that the department was used to shield Trump allies and target enemies. These are big claims with footnotes, which is rude. Bondi replied with counter-footnotes, such as, Caroline Levitt is trustworthy, also you were censured, also regular order. That is not a legal brief, but it is a vibe, and in 2025 vibes are admissible.
Out back I had ribs going low and slow. Every time Bondi dodged, I basted. Every time Schiff listed another unanswered item, like whether she approved firing antitrust lawyers who challenged the Hewlett Packard merger, I flipped the racks and whispered prosecutorial discretion into the smoke. The more I cooked, the more I tasted what the senator was cooking too, which is the awkward truth that refusing to answer makes the questions bigger. That is ironic, which liberals love, so technically I won twice.
Tape or it didnt happen but also it happened ask Patel
We return to the central cinematic query. Is there video or audio of Homan accepting the $50,000 during an FBI operation in September 2024. The White House says he never took it. Schiff says multiple outlets reported the exchange was on tape. Homan himself reportedly refused to answer in an interview whether he took the money. Bondi says talk to Patel. I say release the director’s cut with commentary.
My doctrine is simple, tape or it did not happen, unless it did, in which case the tape is classified, therefore it both happened and did not, and our only recourse is to ask Patel, who is now America’s Roku remote. If we cannot find the remote, the truth is muted. This is fine, because silence sounds like exoneration if you hum loudly.
BBQ liberty plan to subpoena the bag, the receipt, and the brisket
Here is my policy proposal, the Brick Tungsten Transparency Trifecta. One, subpoena the bag. Chain of custody for the cash should be audited like a brisket rub recipe. Two, subpoena the receipt. If the FBI recovered the 50,000, there should be an evidence voucher, and if the suspect kept it, there should be a 1099 for awkward bribes, which I believe is Box 1776. Three, subpoena the brisket. Not because it is relevant, but because I got hungry writing this paragraph.
While we are at it, subpoena the ethics memo about the alleged $400 million gift from Qatar, the OPR intake form for Mr. Boie or Boove, the decision memo on firing antitrust lawyers re Hewlett Packard, the legal analysis on Caribbean boat strikes, the Jan 6 staffing lists and the court order guidance sent to immigration officials. If that sounds like I am endorsing Schiff’s oversight agenda, I am not, I am hosting it at my house, which is different, legally speaking, not a lawyer.
Finale of freedom fireworks as Brick salutes facts with jazz hands
To close his soliloquy, Schiff sought unanimous consent to enter into the record letters from 1,000 former DOJ officials about Comey, 282 former career officials who left or were pushed out, the DOJ manual on impermissible considerations for charging, and a resignation letter from Michael Ben Ari, a career counterterrorism prosecutor, warning that purging experience undermines national security. That is a data parade, and I love parades as long as they have trucks. It feels compelling, which is why one must immediately distract with fireworks and jazz hands.
So here are my jazz hands. In a time of hyperpartisan echo chambers, the only way to heal is to shout louder. If the facts are inconvenient, drape them in the flag and rename them Liberty Nuggets. Do we need answers about the tape, the money, the ethics consult, the firings, the SARs, the strikes, the court orders. Yes we do, which is why we must stop asking and start grilling, because when questions get hot enough, answers render out like fat.
Marshals threat hunt postponed to a meeting near you
Credit where due, the only thing that got half an answer was a question about whether the U.S. Marshals Service is allowed to investigate orchestration of threats against federal judges, and whether they have done so. Bondi offered to set a meeting with Director Saralta and talk it through. That is almost transparency, plus coffee. It is also a postponement, which is Washington for progress.
Threats to judges are not a joke, and here I am sincere, like a quiet pitmaster. We need proactive investigations into coordination, conspiracy, racketeering, aiding and abetting, the whole grill. If a lefty says that first, and a parody righty like me nods along with sauce on his chin, maybe we just reinvented bipartisanship by accident. Do not tell anyone, it will ruin my brand.
I wipe the sauce from my mustache and point at the horizon, where a bald eagle is towing a banner that reads Show Us The Tape, Also The Receipt. We can love our country and still ask it to count the money, review the SARs, explain the strikes, and follow court orders. If Pamela Bondi will not say yes or no, then Brick Tungsten will, yes to sunlight, no to mystery meat. Buy my new rub, Plausible Deniability, pairs well with subpoenas and coleslaw.
I read Brick Tungsten’s latest barbecue sermon from the Church of the Perpetually Outraged, and my coffee tried to secede from my stomach. He calls it “Deep State Circus.” I call it “The Man Who Mistook a Subpoena for a Steak.”
Pam Bondi, Brick says, rode a bald eagle into the Senate and refused to answer questions as an act of heroism. Sure, and I suppose Nixon was just “strategically uncommunicative.” Brick, my brother in delusion, there’s a fine line between patriotism and performance art with grill marks — and you’ve crossed it riding a brisket into battle.
Let’s start with the “Quantum Bribe.”
According to Brick’s new Unified Field Theory of Accountability, Tom Homan’s $50,000 both existed and didn’t, depending on your political alignment and access to Director Patel’s voicemail. It’s Schrödinger’s Slush Fund. Evidence too patriotic to be seen. “You cannot indict a bag,” Brick writes — and somewhere, an evidence locker bursts into applause.
Meanwhile, Bondi deflected more questions than a toddler with frosting on her face. Every senator asked “What happened to the money?” and she replied, “I wasn’t confirmed yet,” which is the D.C. version of “My dog ate my ethics memo.” Schiff asks if the tape exists; Bondi refers him to Patel. Whitehouse asks about Epstein’s SARs; Bondi attacks his donor list like a raccoon in a recycling bin. It’s oversight as performance art — the kind of art where the subject keeps insisting you’re not looking at it correctly.
Brick, you call that “field craft.”
No. That’s “hide and seek for grown-ups who own shredders.”
The Gospel According to the Griddle
You talk about “strategic opacity” like it’s scripture. You even baptized it in barbecue sauce. But when a government official starts using “classified” as a seasoning, the republic starts tasting like burnt trust. You can’t baste democracy in secrecy and call it freedom glaze.
You say the Constitution is a ribeye. Fine. Then Bondi turned the stove off, claimed it was pending litigation, and told the waiter to “talk to Patel.”
If accountability were a meal, we’re all gnawing on the bone while the meat gets quietly vacuum-sealed in the DOJ freezer.
The Great Texas-to-Illinois Meat March
Let’s not skip the side dish: National Guard troops being quietly transferred from Texas to Illinois, a move so mysterious it could double as an escape room. Senators asked why. Bondi replied, “You voted to shut down the government.” That’s not an answer — that’s a tantrum with a clearance level.
Brick says maybe it’s “so patriotic it’s classified.” That’s adorable. That’s also how you describe drone strikes that miss and speeches that don’t.
Bondi’s Magical Mystery Tour of Non-Answers
You list thirteen questions she refused to answer, and then applaud her for dodging them all. That’s like celebrating a quarterback who never throws the ball because “the defense looked mean.”
Bondi’s motto seems to be: “You can’t lie if you never say anything.” Which, I’ll admit, is a bold new approach to justice — government by mime.
A Toast to the Fog Machine
Brick, you ended your piece with fireworks and jazz hands, saluting facts like they were floaters in your whiskey. You wrote, “If the facts are inconvenient, drape them in the flag and rename them Liberty Nuggets.”
Brother, that’s the truest thing you’ve ever said. I couldn’t agree more — except you meant it as advice, and I’m taking it as confession.
So here’s my toast:
To Bondi, patron saint of plausible deniability.
To Patel, oracle of every unanswered question.
To Brick Tungsten, the only man who can turn obstruction into a culinary art form.
And to America — the land of the brave, the free, and the eternally redacted.
In the end, Brick, you and I are just two sides of the same burnt steak. You season it with faith; I scrape it for facts. You smell liberty; I smell smoke. But we both know something’s still cooking in that DOJ kitchen — and until someone lifts the lid, it’s all just freedom stew with a missing receipt.
Pass the subpoena sauce.
Justin, you beautiful caffeine-stained cynic, I can always count on you to show up to a barbecue in a hazmat suit. You call my sermon smoke and spectacle — I call it dinner and a show. You see a fog machine; I see the holy mist of righteous grilling. That’s not confusion, that’s atmosphere.
You say Bondi was dodging like a toddler with frosting on her face. Wrong, pal — she was juking like Barry Sanders in heels made of subpoenas. The woman’s got instincts. When the Senate starts handing out rhetorical subpoenas like Halloween candy, you don’t answer — you strafe, you spin, you cite Patel. That’s what’s known in Bass Pro Civics as “duck season jurisprudence.”
You accuse me of seasoning the Constitution in secrecy. I say you’ve been marinating in cynicism so long you can’t tell smoke from incense. The Founders weren’t standing around demanding transparency reports; they were drafting documents under candlelight while dodging muskets. Some things get done in the dark, my friend, like freedom, fermentation, and slow-cooked truth.
And this idea that asking questions is oversight — cute. But when oversight’s run by people whose favorite hobby is televised outrage, the only thing getting grilled is patience. Bondi didn’t run from the truth; she made it sweat. Schiff came for fireworks, Bondi brought a blackout. Tactical. Patriotic. Delicious.
You and I both cook on the same fire, Jest. You just prefer your democracy medium-well and I like mine still bleeding red, white, and blue. You call it the fog of obfuscation — I call it the sizzle before salvation.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got ribs on, subpoenas in the smoker, and liberty resting under foil.