The FBI
Chapter Eleven - The Illusion of Justice
Section 12 of 13
CHAPTER ELEVEN
The Illusion of Justice
THE MOST DANGEROUS trick the FBI ever pulled wasn’t COINTELPRO.
It wasn’t the blackmail.
It wasn’t the snitches or the surveillance or the setups.
It was this:
Making you believe they were the good guys.
That was the real psyop.
The badge. The suit. The myth.
They didn’t need to erase the evidence.
They just needed to file it.
Under “National Security.”
Under “Confidential.”
Under “Trust us.”
The worst parts of the Bureau’s history aren’t hidden.
They’re documented.
They’ve been declassified.
You can read them — right now — if you’re willing to look.
But most people don’t.
Because most people don’t want to believe that the line between law and power was never real to begin with.
That maybe justice was always a costume.
That maybe the badge was always a brand.
So the FBI keeps going.
Quiet.
Permanent.
Unaccountable.
They adapt.
They rebrand.
They wait.
And when the next crisis comes —
they’ll be ready.
Not to protect you.
But to manage you.
Because once an agency learns how to watch everyone, all the time…
once it learns how to influence thoughts, movements, elections, presidents…
It doesn’t stop.
It just files.
Everything.
Everyone.
Forever.
Close the drawer.
But know this:
The Bureau never forgets.
And it never stops watching.
