Anonymous ID: 7d771a Jan. 11, 2022, 4:04 p.m. No.15353744   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3756

Bob Saget shares on his Dec 13th show that he got his booster (0:40 mark)

 

bob saget

@bobsaget

TODAY’S NEW EP— I talk to callers, all with funny or touching stories…I surprised Elizabeth and her super-fan dad, Karen tells me of nightmare Tinder matches, and Sam the DJ who called hungover. —Listen at: /BobSagetsHereForYouPod@allthingscomedy

 

https://twitter.com/bobsaget/status/1470404844926107648

Anonymous ID: 7d771a Jan. 11, 2022, 4:06 p.m. No.15353753   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4206

“Was Ray Epps A Fed?” – ‘I Can’t Answer That’: FBI Asst. Director Refuses To Answer Any of Ted Cruz’s Questions About Jan 6 in Fiery Exchange on Capitol Hill – (Video)

 

Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) grilled FBI National Security Branch Executive Assistant Director Jill Sanborn over the law enforcement agency’s involvement on January 6th in a tense exchange during Tuesday’s Senate Hearings.

 

Cruz, who has been under fire from Conservatives as of late for referring to “terrorism” when talking about 1/6, asked the FBI director several straightforward questions like ‘how many FBI agents or informants actively participated in Jan 6th? And is notorious 1/6 catalyst ‘Ray Epps a fed?’

 

But Cruz was unable to get any real answers from Sanborn during her sworn testimony; the only thing she was able to respond with to the majority of his questions was ‘I can’t answer that.’

 

TRENDING: "Premeditated Manslaughter of Millions of People Coordinated at the Highest Levels" - Naomi Wolf and Dr. Malone Respond to Project Veritas BOMBSHELL (VIDEO)

 

Sanborn did however admit to knowing who Ray Epps is, but acted as if she did not know anything about him before refusing to answer a direct question from Cruz on if he is a Federal agent.

 

Cruz ends his line of questioning by attempting to get a straight answer one last time with a very specific and pointed question.

 

“Ms. Sanburn, a lot of Americans are concerned that the Federal Government deliberately encouraged illegal and violent conduct on January 6th. My question to you – and this is not an ordinary law enforcement question, this is a question about public accountability – Did federal agents, or those in service of federal agents, actively encourage violent and criminal conduct on January 6th?

 

Sandborn defiantly responds, “not to my knowledge.”

 

If the FBI did not participate or encourage the eventual outcome of January 6th, they could easily say so. Refusing to answer the questions is all but direct confirmation of their involvement.

 

Watch:

 

Hate @TedCruz all you want but these questions about FBI's role in 1/6 are vital: because it's what FBI did in the 1st War on Terror and with the Whitmer case, but also because there's ample evidence they did it here. The media's indifference is shameful:pic.twitter.com/68114jle6A

 

— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) January 11, 2022

 

In short, the FBI basically just told the public that they instigated the entire thing on 1/6 – it’s no wonder the majority of Americans who were recently polled view the FBI as Biden’s ‘personal Gestapo.’

 

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/01/ray-epps-fed-cant-answer-fbi-asst-director-refuses-answer-ted-cruzs-questions-jan-6-fiery-exchange-capitol-hill-video/

Anonymous ID: 7d771a Jan. 11, 2022, 4:08 p.m. No.15353765   🗄️.is 🔗kun

If PCR tests don’t work for Covid does that mean they don’t work for HIV?

 

Justice is coming.

 

https://www.uofmhealth.org/health-library/hw4961

Anonymous ID: 7d771a Jan. 11, 2022, 4:16 p.m. No.15353813   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3815 >>3819 >>3827 >>3853 >>3951 >>3965 >>4134

From Small Town Montana to FBI : "Along the Way"

 

By Steve Long

Published: May. 22, 2018 at 10:39 PM MDT

 

The FBI, Central Intelligence Agency, and the fight against terrorism.

 

It's the stuff of books and movies. But it's also the real life experience of a woman with Montana roots.

 

She grew up in a small Montana town, but her work has taken her around the globe.

 

Special Agent Jill Sanbornjoined the FBI at age 27. She had been working at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico when someone encouraged her to apply for the FBI.

 

"I thought I'm from Dillon, Montana. I'm a small town girl. There's no way I could ever get hired by the FBI. He kept pressing me, I applied," Special Agent Sanborn says.

 

She was hired in 1998, now, 20 years later, she is one of less than 60 people in the FBI to be in charge of a field office. She was recently promoted to Special Agent in Charge of the Minneapolis Division of the FBI which includes South Dakota and North Dakota. Much of her career has been focused on counterterrorism.

 

"So shortly after 9-11 I was afforded an opportunity to go overseas and realize that seeing terrorism through the lens of the overseas aspect was really, really powerful," Sanborn says.

 

She continues by explaining, "It made me much better appreciate what we were dealing with here in the U.S. to be able to go overseas and see how what was going on overseas really impacted the threat here in the United States."

 

We were able to talk with Sanborn at the downtown Rapid City FBI office. But because of the sensitive nature of her work, we do not have photos or videos of her actual assignments, which is understandable. What we do have is her words, her vivid first hand account of her life's work.

 

"I volunteered to be a part of the counterterrorism fly team which was post 9-11. Director Mueller stood up a team of agents. that he wanted to be counterterrorism experts, that he could send all around the world," Sanborn says.

 

She explains, "So collecting intelligence, working with foreign partners, working with the embassy, etcetera, figuring out what overseas is posing a threat to us here in the United States and feeding that intelligence back."

 

And as if working for the FBI on a special team of counterterrorism experts is not enough, there's more. A lot more.

 

"I left the Fly Team and went over to a sort of immersion assignment with the CIA, where I was a detailee with CIA for just a little under 2 years which was a phenomenal experience because it took partnership to a whole new level. It actually immersed me in their culture," Sanborn says.

 

And most recently, Sanborn served as the FBI's section chief overseeing all overseas counterterrorism investigations. That, is a major responsibility.

Anonymous ID: 7d771a Jan. 11, 2022, 4:16 p.m. No.15353815   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3819

>>15353813

"Post 9-11, the threat from Al Qaeda was definitely the biggest threat that we were facing from an international terrorism standpoint. That's different today,"Special Agent Jill Sanbornsays.

 

We'll cover how that's changed in a moment. However in addition to being a key counterterrorism expert, we wanted to find out more about Sanborn as a person.

 

"Probably the most rewarding aspect of working in the CIA and FBI is every single day you go home feeling like you made an impact. You're doing something to protect America and uphold the Constitution," Sanborn says.

 

"So when I lived in New Mexico and worked at Los Alamos I became a green chili addict I love green chili. I don't have kids. I'm passionate beyond belief about dogs. I have 2 Labradors, Duke and Max," she says.

 

And while she's a real person, terrorism is just as real.

 

"So homegrown violent extremists are definitely our number one threat that we face and probably the most challenging to figure out where those are because the sheer nature of the threat. They're not reaching out to people. They're not looking to travel," she explains.

 

Sanborn goes on to explain, "The internet and social media and propaganda are coming into the home. That person is getting radicalized inside their home and can mobilize before any indicators of that radicalization and mobilization rise to the outside."

 

Finding those terrorists before they strike, is no easy task.

 

"And we need the community's help, the families, the friends, the co-workers, the students to be able to report that odd behavior to law enforcement," Sanborn says.

 

And as Sanborn takes on her highest level assignment yet: leading the Minneapolis field office, has not forgotten her roots.

 

"I want little girls or little boys that maybe were like me to realize you can be whatever you wanna be. Just because you grew up in a small town in Montana, put your goals out there and achieve them," she says.

 

Not only fighting terrorism and helping protect America, but also inspiring, all at the same time.

 

It's fun to see the human, behind the badge.

 

Another fun fact about Sanborn, her mother was an Olympic Skier.

 

https://www.blackhillsfox.com/content/news/From-Small-Town-Montana-to-FBI–Along-the-Way-483415851.html