FBI Opens Probe Into Alleged Decade
If those long-suppressed Grassley and Durham annexes are ever dragged into the light,
they won’t just fill in the gaps—they could redraw the entire map of recent American political history.
Career officials, party strategists, and media gatekeepers would all be forced to explain
how intelligence that cut against Democrats allegedly died in committee,
while anything that damaged Trump seemed to find its way to the front page.
What had been dismissed as fringe speculation could suddenly acquire names, dates, and signatures.
With a special prosecutor operating far from Washington’s gravitational pull,
a Florida grand jury could become the unlikely stage on which these threads are finally woven together.
The Russia narrative, the Steele dossier, the ignored warnings about foreign interference,
even the Mar‑a‑Lago raid itself could be recast as chapters in a single,
coordinated design—or exposed as a chain of reckless blunders.
Either way, the result would be the same: a nation forced to confront whether its institutions served justice, or merely power.