Wednesday, October 15, 2025
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The January 6 Committee’s Abusive Overreach Was Much Worse Than You Thought



BREAKING: John Solomon just dropped a bombshell that should shake every American to the core.

According to his new investigation, congressional investigators quietly seized and analyzed more than 30 million lines of phone data connected to Trump allies, Republican senators, and even private citizens — all under the pretense of the January 6 probe.

Let that number sink in. Thirty million lines of private phone data.

Gathered without a warrant!

Compiled by congressional staffers working for the so-called “bipartisan” committee that promised transparency but delivered a surveillance state in disguise.

Solomon reports that the data wasn’t even handled by law enforcement professionals.

It was turned over to political operatives like Adam Kinzinger and his technical sidekick Denver Riggleman, who mapped connections between the White House and everyday Americans… people guilty of nothing more than supporting the wrong candidate.

This is no longer about Trump.

It’s about you.

It’s about every conservative who ever texted, called, or stood up for their beliefs while a weaponized government quietly built dossiers behind closed doors.

The very Congress that lectures America about democracy and the rule of law decided those rules no longer applied to them.

They used subpoena power as a weapon, not to seek truth, but to spy on opponents.

They built a dragnet to trace political relationships like a criminal enterprise.

And they didn’t stop there.

Reports show the FBI later received portions of that database — a massive trove of call records now linked to Jack Smith’s political fishing expeditions. Even sitting senators weren’t spared. Republican lawmakers found their own communications swept up, their privacy tossed aside in the name of “protecting democracy.”

John Solomon deserves enormous credit for this investigation.

While legacy media runs cover for corruption, he followed the trail that others refused to touch.

He uncovered what Washington hoped would stay buried — the proof that congressional investigators turned their authority into a surveillance machine.

This is the kind of story that reminds us why free press matters. Not the corporate press that repeats talking points, but real journalism that risks backlash to expose the truth.

The question now is simple: how many more secrets like this are still hiding under the rug?

How deep does the abuse go?

One thing is clear. The same people who shouted the loudest about “saving democracy” were the ones dismantling its foundations behind the scenes.

John Solomon pulled back the curtain.

Now the American people need to make sure this never happens again.

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