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Campaign Clip Overlay Builder - Embed Fix
This version accepts a full YouTube link, uses a direct iframe embed with a referrer policy, and warns you if the page is being opened locally where YouTube may return Error 153.
If you still get Error 153, host this file on a real domain or local web server such as
http://localhost. Opening an HTML file directly with file:// often
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Chapter 2: Netanyahu celebrates 9/11
Chapter 3: ABC report after 9/11
Chapter 4: Attempt at demonetization
Chapter 5: Hilarious "StopAntisemitism" screw up
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Transcript
Chapter 2: Who is Jonathan Pollard?
Chapter 3: Gov't shocked by Huckabee's meeting with spy for Israel
Chapter 4: Why would Huckabee meet this spy?
Chapter 5: Israel's blackmail on Bill Clinton
Transcript
Transcript
Spy questions, pardon power, and the transparency voters deserve
This campaign page is built for voters who want facts, records, and serious questions — not propaganda, not blind trust, and not lazy dismissal.
My position: when intelligence history, trafficking scandals, espionage cases, and presidential pardon controversies all collide, the answer is not rumor. The answer is lawful disclosure, rigorous oversight, and a government that stops treating the public like it cannot handle the truth.
Page title ideas
- The Spy State, the Pardon Power, and the People Left in the Dark
- Questions the Club Hates: Espionage, Immunity, and Transparency
- Spies, Pardons, and Public Trust
- What Voters Deserve to Know
- No More Secrets for the Connected Class
Jeffrey Epstein: was he a spy?
The honest answer is that publicly available U.S. government sources do not establish that Jeffrey Epstein was a spy. The FBI Vault hosts released Epstein records, and a 2025 DOJ/FBI memo said its review found no incriminating “client list” and no credible evidence that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions.
That means citizens can ask the question. It does not mean the government record has answered it in the affirmative.
Robert Maxwell and intelligence questions
Robert Maxwell remains a figure of enduring interest because the FBI has released a dedicated Robert Maxwell file collection in the FBI Vault. That alone does not prove every public claim about him, but it does show he was significant enough to generate a large federal paper trail.
For voters, the lesson is broader: when wealthy, globally connected figures move through media, finance, politics, and intelligence-adjacent circles, government transparency matters.
Israel-linked espionage and pardon controversy voters can verify
Jonathan Pollard
Pollard was convicted in a major U.S. espionage case involving Israel. White House and DOJ-linked archival material show repeated political attention to his status over multiple administrations.
Aviem Sella
Trump’s archived White House site states that he granted a full pardon to Aviem Sella, describing him as an Israeli citizen indicted in 1986 for espionage in relation to the Pollard case. The same statement says the clemency request was supported by Benjamin Netanyahu, Ron Dermer, David Friedman, and Miriam Adelson.
What voters should take from this
Espionage history, allied pressure, donor influence, and presidential clemency can intersect. That is exactly why the public deserves plain-language explanations and searchable official records.
Past presidents, pardons, and controversy
Joe Biden
DOJ’s Office of the Pardon Attorney lists Biden clemency actions through January 19, 2025. Reuters reported that on January 20, 2025, Biden issued preemptive pardons for several family members and others he believed might face retaliation. Trump later claimed some Biden pardons were void because of autopen use, but legal reporting and the 2005 OLC opinion support the general legality of a president directing a signature after making the decision.
Donald Trump
Official White House and DOJ sources show Trump issued sweeping January 20, 2025 clemency for January 6-related offenses and additional clemency grants in 2025. Trump also used the presidency to direct review of past federal “weaponization,” making pardon power part of a broader political and institutional argument.
Earlier presidents
Controversial uses of clemency are not new. The Office of the Pardon Attorney and White House archives provide searchable records across administrations. The recurring problem is not one party alone. It is a system in which extraordinary mercy can look uncomfortably close to insider protection.
Donald Barr, Bill Barr, CIA questions, Mike Benz, and outside experts
Voters hear many overlapping theories tying elite schools, intelligence history, media, censorship, trafficking, and political protection together. Some of that discussion comes from outside researchers and commentators such as Mike Benz, who served at the State Department before becoming a prominent critic of what he describes as censorship and national-security influence over information systems.
My campaign position is straightforward: outside researchers can raise questions, but government records and sworn evidence must decide the facts. I will not present speculation as proof, and I will not ignore expert criticism just because it is uncomfortable.
My Motta 2028 reform agenda
- Epstein Transparency Review: lawful review and release standards that protect victims but maximize public accountability.
- Pardon Transparency Rules: require public explanatory memos for major clemency actions involving political allies, foreign-espionage controversies, or nationally significant corruption cases.
- Intelligence-History Declassification Push: expand declassification review for old espionage and influence files where release no longer threatens active operations.
- Victim-first accountability: trafficking cases must prioritize victims over elite reputations, redaction games, or donor-class sensitivities.
- One standard of law: no permanent immunity culture for insiders, no selective skepticism for the public, and no secret club rules for connected people.
Numbered source list for voters
- FBI Vault: Robert Maxwell files
- FBI Vault: Jeffrey Epstein files
- DOJ/FBI memo (July 2025) on Epstein review
- Archived White House statement on Trump clemency for Aviem Sella
- Congressional Research Service / DOJ-hosted report mentioning the Pollard espionage case
- Obama White House briefing mentioning Pollard
- George W. Bush White House briefing mentioning Pollard clemency request
- DOJ Office of the Pardon Attorney: clemency recipients portal
- DOJ: pardons granted by President Biden
- DOJ: commutations granted by President Biden
- White House proclamation on Trump January 20, 2025 January 6 clemency
- DOJ: clemency grants by President Trump (2025-present)
- OLC opinion on presidential use of a directed signature
- State Department biography: Michael A. Benz
- Reuters on Biden’s January 20, 2025 preemptive pardons
This page distinguishes three things: what official records show, what remains contested, and what my campaign would do to increase lawful transparency.