Ex-FBI official: Cocaine being found in WH after Biden saying war on drugs is over, border secure is definition of ‘hypocritical’
Retired FBI Senior Executive Scott Nelson discusses the preparedness of the United States after a recent Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general report revealed that the Biden administration released a migrant on the terrorist watchlist and took over two weeks to re-arrest him. Nelson points to the irony behind this with cocaine being found at the White House this week. Commenting, “it's so hypocritical to find cocaine in our White House, that we own, it’s the people's house, and at the same time [Biden] ended the so called [The War on Drugs], and at the same time allowing that border to be wide open and push more dope in, and the dope is not just fentanyl, by the way, it's cocaine by the kilo plus.” The former top FBI official points to the U.S. being soft, saying “the softness emanates from an American emerging culture that says ‘good guys are bad guys and bad guys are good guys’ and the only only reason somebody is bad is because they've been oppressed and deprived. That's not simply not the case. The terrorist watch list was set up to prevent another 911.” Saying, “unfortunately, the Biden administration and the FBI, to some degree, are ignoring the threat at the border. And that's not just the threat of cartels and vicious billionaires whose activity for a long time has been despicable. But it's also young men in the ages of 16 to 26, who are on the terrorist watch list. What is happening is we are facilitating the cartels, we are facilitating the terrorists, and we are pointing them towards another 911, I hope it doesn't happen.” Nelson saying it is “very unfortunate that all these things are coming together at a time when we need rules and regulations but we need them to be enforced fairly and completely, not just political happenstance.”