The Curious Case of Matt Gaetz: How the Deep State Destroys Its Enemies
A story about a congressman's downfall that reveals the true power structure in modern America
If you've been following the news, you may have heard that Matt Gaetz - Florida's firebrand congressman and author of "Firebrand" - had been nominated by President Elect Donald Trump for Attorney General. Within 24 hours, Gaetz made what appeared to be a catastrophic political miscalculation: he resigned his congressional seat before Senate confirmation, a move virtually unheard of in Washington.
A week later, on November 22nd, the other shoe dropped. Gaetz announced he wouldn't pursue the nomination, citing opposition from the usual suspects - Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, and their reliable chorus of "reasonable" Republicans. The media narrative wrote itself: another Trump nominee crashes and burns.
The timing seemed suspicious. A House Ethics Committee report on Gaetz was due that Friday - a report that lost its jurisdiction the moment Gaetz resigned. The press corps nodded knowingly: Trump had offered his ally an escape hatch from embarrassing revelations, perhaps with a consolation prize of Florida's Senate seat (recently vacated by Marco Rubio, Trump's Secretary of State nominee) waiting in the wings.
A clean narrative. A simple story. The kind Washington loves to tell about itself.
But like most Washington stories, this one is a carefully constructed facade. The real story - the truth about Matt Gaetz's rise and fall - is a byzantine tale of international intrigue, deep state machinations, and the awesome power of America's permanent bureaucracy to destroy its enemies. And to understand it, we need to go back fifteen years, to a small island off the coast of Iran...
Spooks and Shadows: The Prelude
When Bob Levinson disappeared from Kish Island in 2007, it seemed like just another CIA operation gone wrong - the kind of story that usually ends up as a redacted footnote in some congressional report. The official version - a retired FBI agent on a private investigation - was, like most Washington truths, carefully manufactured. Few bothered to ask why a former FBI agent specializing in Russian organized crime was meeting an American fugitive in Iran. Fewer still wondered why the Bush administration's expressions of "concern" were so studiedly ambiguous.
The story could have ended there, joining countless other spy games lost to the classified archives. But what happened next would set in motion a chain of events that would, years later, bring down one of Congress's most prominent firebrands. Because when it comes to Washington power games, nothing ever really goes away - it just waits for the perfect moment to resurface.
The FBI's first attempt to resolve the Levinson situation was quintessentially Washington: throw money at it, preferably someone else's. Enter Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska and his $20 million private rescue mission, complete with fast-tracked green cards as party favors. Their point man? None other than Andrew McCabe, whose name would later become synonymous with a different kind of operation targeting a different kind of politician. When Hillary Clinton's State Department abruptly shut down the operation in 2011, the Levinson affair went cold.
Or so everyone thought.
The Perfect Patsy: A Tax Collector's Tale
By 2019, the Levinson affair had gone cold, but in Florida, another government official was about to give federal prosecutors exactly what they needed: the perfect cooperating witness. Joel Greenberg, Seminole County's tax collector, wasn't just another corrupt bureaucrat - he was a virtuoso of vice, a renaissance man of criminal enterprise.
The scope of Greenberg's crimes reads like a prosecutor's wish list. Cryptocurrency fraud with government funds? Check. Identity theft? Naturally. Production of false identification documents and government records? It was literally part of his job description. He even managed to expense $70,000 worth of sugar daddy website escapades to his government credit card. As crime sprees go, it was impressively comprehensive - the kind that typically ends with retirement in a federal prison.
When federal investigators finally caught up with Greenberg - not for his creative accounting or his sugar daddy adventures, but for an almost comically inept attempt to smear a political opponent with false allegations - they knew they had struck gold. Greenberg had been photographed with Gaetz and Roger Stone at political events, and the two men moved in the same Florida Republican circles. It wasn't much of a connection, but for investigators desperate to target a rising Republican star and thorn in the establishment's side, it was enough. Facing what amounted to a life sentence, Greenberg was willing to say anything, implicate anyone, to save himself. His thin association with Gaetz, padded with manufactured evidence, would be enough to launch their investigation.
The Trap: How to Frame a Congressman
The deep state's first move was textbook: open a federal sex trafficking investigation based solely on Greenberg's manufactured evidence and coached testimony. But the DOJ knew what they had would never survive real scrutiny in a courtroom - Greenberg's manipulation of official records had poisoned any chance of prosecution. They needed more, and they needed it fast. Their solution was a classic deep state tactic: cast a wider net, target the family, and go fishing for anything that might stick.
The opening gambit wasn't a rogue operation by opportunists, but rather a carefully crafted deep state ploy leveraging their own buried failures. Bob Kent, a former Air Force intelligence officer who had mysteriously learned of the confidential DOJ investigation, approached Matt's father Don Gaetz—former President of the Florida Senate—with an astounding proposition: $25 million for a last-ditch rescue mission for Bob Levinson (whom the deep state knew was long dead), in exchange for a guaranteed presidential pardon for Matt.
The strategy was coldly calculated. By dangling the possibility of a presidential pardon, they hoped to entice Don into revealing damaging information about his son during recorded negotiations. Better yet, if he agreed to fund the fraudulent rescue mission without proper authorities involved, they could charge him with conspiracy or aiding and abetting—creating perfect leverage over both father and son.
Don Gaetz immediately contacted the FBI, who suggested he wear a wire to meetings with McGee—a telling response from federal agents with no legitimate case against his son. When the elder Gaetz simply requested written acknowledgment of the investigation's purpose, the FBI's house of cards collapsed. They balked at documenting their constitutionally questionable fishing expedition, and within twenty-four hours, leaked the investigation to The New York Times. The recordings of these state-sponsored extortion attempts would remain buried until long after Matt Gaetz's reputation was damaged—the DOJ had failed to get their man, but they had demonstrated something more valuable: their power to destroy a political opponent through the mere existence of an investigation, regardless of merit.
The Reality of Modern Political Power
Fast forward to 2024. The DOJ investigation had quietly closed without charges in 2022 – Greenberg's manipulation of official records had made prosecution impossible. But in Washington, the truth is often irrelevant to the outcome. As Gaetz led the charge against Kevin McCarthy's speakership, the machinery of revenge began turning. The House Ethics Committee, that favorite weapon of the political establishment, prepared its report. The timing, once again, was impeccable.
And so we arrive at the present, where a congressman who was never charged with a crime has been forced from office through the coordinated efforts of the intelligence community, the DOJ, establishment Republicans, and a media complex more interested in headlines than truth. The same pattern we've seen deployed against Trump – investigations based on dubious sources, strategic leaks, coordinated media campaigns, and the weaponization of government agencies – was perfected first against lesser targets like Gaetz.
Consider the players: A DOJ that opens investigations based on the word of convicted fraudsters. An FBI that records conversations with extortionists but buries the tapes when they prove inconvenient. Intelligence community veterans running operations that would make the Church Committee blush. Media outlets that breathlessly report allegations but bury exonerations. And finally, the "reasonable" Republicans, always ready to believe the worst about their own side.
But Matt Gaetz's story isn't over. He's young, battle-tested, and now intimately familiar with the machinery of state destruction. The same qualities that made him a threat to the establishment – his willingness to challenge power, his understanding of the deep state's playbook, his ability to rally populist support – make him more dangerous now than ever. The bureaucracy's attempt to destroy him may have inadvertently created exactly what they feared: a politician who knows where the bodies are buried and has nothing left to lose.
In the meantime, remember that in modern America, the truth is no defense against power. The system doesn't need to prove you guilty anymore. It just needs to make enough noise that your allies abandon you. Matt Gaetz won't be the last victim of this system – but he might be one of the first to truly fight back.
You're famous bitch. And you're going to jail.
"committing treason to own the libs"
good work