The author criticizes Greg Reese and Infowars for their video report on pnac, noting that while it presents known information and identifies key figures as “bad guys,” it’s unclear why Infowars and Reese, whom the author suspects of being controlled opposition, would be highlighting pnac now. The author speculates this could be due to the perceived security of the “governors” or a tactic to sacrifice lower-level figures. The report names individuals like Bushes, Clinton, Albright, Kristol, Kagan, and Fauci, who are either deceased or elderly, making them ineffective targets. The author also notes the removal of the American Enterprise Institute Think Tank banner from the graphic, suggesting a desire to prevent people from researching AEI and its connections to wealthy families and corporations like Bristol-Myers, Chemical Bank, Chrysler, Eli Lilly, General Mills, Paine Webber, Motorola, International Paper, Dell, State Farm, MolsonCoors, Trammell Crow, Signa, and American Express. Funding sources like JCPenney, ExxonMobil, and ChaseManhattan are also mentioned. The author points out that AEI’s trustees, officers, national council, and scholars are all Jewish, including John Yoo, whose real name is speculated to be Yoo Choon, possibly a variation of Cohen.

In other news, the author questions the House Judiciary Committee suing FBI “special” agent Elvis Chan for defying a subpoena. The author argues that Congress possesses the constitutional power to deal with such defiance directly, including imprisonment, without needing to sue. This is presented as further “vaudeville” illustrating the perceived ineffectiveness and corruption within government, where entities sue each other indefinitely, masking systemic fraud for the wealthy.