FBI Director Ends Ties With Organization

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Oh boy. If you’re still under the illusion that the FBI is some sort of neutral, above-the-fray law enforcement agency just out here catching bad guys and protecting apple pie, buckle up. Because things are changing—fast—and not everybody’s thrilled about it.

The new FBI Director, Kash Patel, is doing something that’s apparently controversial in D.C. circles: actual law enforcement. And if you’re wondering what that doesn’t include anymore, it’s this — writing love letters to radical activist groups like the ADL while treating half the country like potential domestic terrorists for voting the wrong way.

That’s right. The days of James Comey’s mushy, cringe-inducing love-fest with the Anti-Defamation League? Over. Canceled. Fired out of a cannon and aimed straight into the “What Were We Thinking?” Hall of Fame.

According to a Fox News exclusive, Patel is cutting ties with the ADL, and not with a polite press release or awkward silence—but with the kind of fiery statement that makes D.C. cocktail parties very uncomfortable.

“James Comey disgraced the FBI by writing ‘love letters’ to the ADL and embedding agents with an extreme group functioning like a terrorist organization…”

You could practically hear CNN choking on its morning mimosa.

And if you think that’s an overstatement, let’s talk about what the ADL has actually been doing. For starters, branding Turning Point USA—yes, the student group that hands out pocket Constitutions and argues about tax brackets—as some sort of extremist organization. You know, because nothing says “hate group” like politely disagreeing with your college professor on immigration policy.

In what universe does that qualify as extremism? Oh right—the one where James Comey gets misty-eyed talking about how “in love” the FBI is with a group that smears conservative students as domestic threats.

Back in 2017, Comey stood in front of the ADL’s National Leadership Summit and delivered what can only be described as a disturbing profession of devotion. He actually referred to a previous speech as a “love letter” to the organization and closed out by saying, “Love, the FBI.”

Seriously. Love. The. FBI.

No wonder things got so weird under his leadership.

And while Comey was busy writing fan mail to the ADL, the FBI was embedding with groups that acted more like ideological enforcement squads than anything resembling constitutional law enforcement. Meanwhile, Americans who dared to disagree with progressive orthodoxy were being quietly watched, flagged, and sometimes even targeted—because of who they supported or what they dared to say online.

You know who wasn’t having their phones tapped? Actual extremists burning cities in the summer of 2020. But sure, let’s monitor Charlie Kirk for suggesting that men aren’t women.

But now, finally, someone’s flipping the lights back on.

Kash Patel just made it clear: the FBI is out of the activism business. No more backroom deals with groups that label free speech as hate speech. No more cozy partnerships with organizations that smear regular Americans for thinking independently. And no more creepy, over-the-top professions of “love” to outfits that have abandoned their original mission in favor of partisan witch hunts.

This isn’t just a policy shift—it’s a cultural earthquake inside the Bureau.

And it’s long overdue.

Because the FBI should be defining extremism based on, you know, extreme actions, not political disagreements. It should be pursuing actual threats, not compiling lists of people who attend conservative conferences or post “wrongthink” on Twitter. The agency should serve all Americans, not just the ones who pass the progressive purity test.

Kash Patel understands that.

James Comey, clearly, did not.

And as for his syrupy, lovestruck speeches to the ADL? Put it this way: if your FBI director is moonlighting as a Hallmark card, it’s probably time for a leadership change.

Good riddance to the love letters. Let’s get back to badges and warrants.