you know, is apocalyptic exaggeration. it is very difficult. that s the thing that i m worried about going forward is how do we fight that type of social media inundation, the mainlining of these types of things in people s frontal lobes. that s difficult to fight. you identified who was messaging who using geolocation, using different data collection. what did that entail? we didn t really have the ability to do geolocation. being a public trust investigation, rather than criminal investigation, i couldn t get the things that law enforcement and the intelligence community can gather as far as geolocation of specific phones and things like that. that s a thing out there where people are even with lawsuits saying that s there, it s not. that s the other thing the committee has been effective at is merging unclassified information, open source intelligence, with the call detail records, with stuff that has been sort of given up as far as content, merging all that is a challenge, bu
is right what is facts-based. me, being in congress, the fact i am a former congressman and can speak to this the fact i ve done some of those things, made some of those mistakes, you look at polling and fund-raising over what s right first. if you continually do that, you start to lose the big picture on why you re serving in the first place. and that s something that has been bothering me. even as we do this interview has kevin mccarthy lost that? i think when you say the truth, the truth is usually directly after something. i ve seen the truth in the text messages, i ve seen the truth in other types of information. you say the truth directly after something that this individual is responsible and a few days later you retract that, there is only wione reason, polling or fund-raising or your position is threatened and that s politics. it is not like this should be a surprise to anybody. i just despise that ecosystem. i despised always having to do that. and i think that s what
how do you fight this whole ecosystem out there of information that is happening and someone like me who gets very boring with facts, that s why some of these answers are really just sort of facts-based, as you see this investigation happen, in the committee goes through all of these steps, what at the end what is the conclusion and i think with all the different aspects you have of this, it is going to be a challenge, but, again, i think the committee will rise to the occasion. you said the idea of a possible dereliction of duty bothered you for some time. you ve seen the evidence. do you think you ve seen evidence of an actual dereliction of duty? i ll let the committee, since i was on the committee, i ll let them come to that conclusion. what has it been like to work in this committee? say that again, john. what has it been like to work in this committee? there have been two republicans there, you know, congresswoman liz cheney has come under quite a bit of attack from mem
In what is being touted as "a modern Rosetta Stone of white and blue-collar crime," a former staffer from President Donald Trump's administration made more than 120,000 emails from Hunter Biden's infamous laptop public within a searchable.