John Brennan gets physical
I’ve previously written several posts about John Brennan and his history; this one is about his Communist vote, this is about some of his offenses, and more background on Brennan can be found here.
I saw the following video yesterday. It’s quite an extraordinary moment, and Brennan’s actions speak louder than words to tell us what an arrogant thug he is. This is a man who doesn’t think he should ever have to answer for anything. And isn’t what he’s doing to this guy a battery? The situation was as follows:
After the conference on Thursday I confronted former CIA Director Brennan directly regarding his signing the 51 Intelligence Officers Memo knowing that the Hunter Biden laptop was real and not Russian disinformation. Watch his response.
After the conference on Thursday I confronted former CIA Director Brennan directly regarding his signing the 51 Intelligence Officers Memo knowing that the Hunter Biden laptop was real and not Russian disinformation. Watch his response. pic.twitter.com/blg86oBLRb
— Thomas A. Speciale II (@Speciale4VA) November 1, 2025
Brennan’s also a weasel. He knew exactly what the effect of “has all the earmarks of a Russian information operation” would be, and the phrase was carefully crafted to maintain deniability.
One more video of Brennan at that same venue, being asked a question:
This is how someone who is guilty reacts to a question about their guilt. I sincerely hope this man spends the rest of his life in prison but ai seriously doubt that’s going to happen. pic.twitter.com/UNKHR8sARl
— Champagne Joshi (@JoshWalkos) November 1, 2025
His demeanor is that of someone accustomed to being able to shut down anyone who might question him. Class act.
I did some more research last night on what really happened with that letter from the 51 former intelligence officers, and I discovered an astounding amount of very disturbing information. It’s not that I hadn’t covered the story before, when it was happening. But I hadn’t followed up in depth, and when I did I found it’s one of the best examples of what the government did to Trump – and how it protected Biden. And it’s one of the best-documented, although relatively few people have probably read the full story.
And so I plan to write one or two more posts on that subject. Not today, though!

And in the second video the moderator (?) is doing the beltway’s best to silence the question: “Next, next, next.” Flying air support for Brennan, one of their own. They think they own the government, and do not work for the “smellies.”
Matt Taibbi did an excellent follow-up interview with Speciale (he was the questioner in both videos). See https://www.racket.news/p/meet-the-man-who-inspired-former
I’m really looking forward to your report on your research on the 51 spy liars.
In a free and fair election, the government does not censor the truth about either candidate, neither good nor bad truth.
The letter was used by private companies to censor those facts, Google & Meta two of the biggest. Both were under verbal (maybe written?) pressure from govt officials.
Censorship of the truth by the govt means the election was not free & fair.
Thus, rigged / stolen.
I have more than read my fair share of books on Bolsheviks from Marx through Stalin. Brennan would be more at home with Bolsheviks than a free press.
He acts like one and would fit right in in 1940s or 50s Moscow.
Didn’t Gina Haspel, Trump’s CIA director at the time, sign off on that letter (i.e., approve it)? I’ve heard that before, it shows the mess we were (and are) in.
Also it turns out losing in the manner we did in 2020 backfired on them big time. Had they just let Trump go on to a second term, he would be gone now, and his second term would not have been as consequential as it is now.
“His demeanor is that of someone accustomed to being able to shutdown…” Shut down, two words. The one-word “shutdown” is the noun.
David:
Yes, thanks, will fix.
Don:
Whether Haspel did that is unclear, according to what I’ve learned so far. Although most of the signers were former intelligence officers, a couple were still active contractors, and she should have been informed. But I couldn’t find any evidence that she actually WAS informed and said okay.
Where I come from, chest-poking constitutes a casus belli. If some guy pokes you in the chest during a heated discussion, all bets are off. You have moral license to throw down on the guy.
IrishOtter49,
‘Where I come from, chest-poking constitutes a casus belli,’
LOL. My son longs for the days of dueling.
BTW, if only a single handful of the traitors ever actually go to prison, Brennan is at the top of my list.
Maintaining Haspel in that position was one of Trump’s bigger mistakes since her being “in place” essentially prolonged the
dishonestcriminal proclivities and grotesque, wall-to-wall coverups of the Brennan/Obama regime.Maybe Trump got bad advice.
Maybe he had no real choice.
Whatever, she’s very bad news all around.
@ Sandy Milne > “Matt Taibbi did an excellent follow-up interview with Speciale”
Taibbi is a goldmine of solid reporting. He got booted off his longtime gig at Rolling Stone for daring to question the Party Narrative about Trump, then was gifted with access to the Twitter Files by Elon Musk, and has really done the work that today’s “journalists” refuse to do: go to the sources, question the actors, and look beyond the press releases.
He isn’t ever going to be a Republican, but he certainly falls into the “sane Democrat” camp.
The post from Racket is very informative, covering most of the info flying around the internet about the Brennan-Speciale encounter, but it has a “subscriber paywall” midway through, and a lot of the more interesting stuff is past it.
I’m a long time subscriber, and this is a brief look.
The most important part is Speciale’s own credentials: we don’t often get an inside look at what was going on during the 2016 election and Trump’s first term, although it might have been a game-changer if he had blown the whistle on at least some of the conspirators at the time. Maybe that just wasn’t possible, or he didn’t see it as his responsibility. At least he’s playing ball for the right team now
Thanks, AF.
‘…However, the White House instead hastily convened a meeting of its “Principals Committee”…’
Yep, “Principals Committee”…says it ALL.
Molly Brown: “if only a single handful of the traitors ever actually go to prison, Brennan is at the top of my list.”
Mine too. I worked for decades for a defense contractor and had a TS clearance. When I got it and every time thereafter I had to “re-up” I was asked, “Have you ever belonged to an organization that advocated the overthrow of the US government?”. It was like a joke but Brennan voted communist in the 1970s when everyone from 3d grade on up knew the CPUSA was nothing but a front for the Soviet Union, and he got appointed head of the CIA! Though not surprising when you consider who appointed him …
He’s the guy. For years I’ve said he was it. HE was the facilitator.
FOAF: Precisely. Brennan was a bad dude, and I remember answering that same question, then later wondering how the hell Brennan ever made it through the vetting process. Really strange.
“. . . how the hell Brennan ever made it . . . ”
That’s (always been) an easy one word answer: Obama.
I see we are all on the same page regarding Brennan and his comrade Obama.
One Big Assed Mistake America
Brennan looks like exactly what he is.
@Barry Meislin
Maintaining Haspel in that position was one of Trump’s bigger mistakes since her being “in place” essentially prolonged the dishonest criminal proclivities and grotesque, wall-to-wall coverups of the Brennan/Obama regime.
Maybe Trump got bad advice.
Maybe he had no real choice.
Typical for his first administration.
He came in expecting to be a normal POTUS. Not be the target he was. He went to the Republican establishment to find many of the people he put in place in the first term. And there’s a limit on who they will accept in the Senate, particularly with respect to AG.
@neo,
Looking around, I found this:
The highest officials within the CIA were aware of the statement prior to its publication. CIA’s Chief Operating Officer (COO) Andrew Makridis testified that he informed Director Gina Haspel or Deputy Director Vaughn Frederick Bishop about its impending release. This sequence of events suggests that senior CIA leadership had ample opportunity to assess the validity of the statement’s claims. Furthermore, the COO’s office appeared to signal approval of the statement in a move that departed from standard Prepublication Classification Review Board (PCRB) protocols.
https://intelligence.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=1432
This episode should illustrate that no institution is above suspicion and organizational courage is dubious at best.