Bongino Responds To Obama Comments With Sharp Warning On Podcast

‘I Know Things Too’ — The FBI Insider’s Deadly Warning to the Obama Legacy
By Senior Investigative Correspondent
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The 2026 Restoration has reached a boiling point, and the "Machine of Disruption" is finally meeting its match in the form of a man who has seen the belly of the beast from both sides. Dan Bongino—the former Secret Service agent turned media titan and recent FBI Co-Deputy Director—has issued a chilling, high-decibel warning to former President Barack Obama that has sent shockwaves through the corridors of power.
“I know things too, Mr. President, and so do you,” Bongino declared during a recent episode of his chart-topping podcast. The statement wasn't just rhetoric; it was a clinical shot across the bow, aimed directly at the heart of the previous era's institutional legacy.
I. THE COLBERT INCIDENT: OBAMA’S "INDEPENDENT" MIRAGE
The firestorm began when Barack Obama emerged from his relative seclusion to appear on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. In a performance characterized by his trademark polished delivery, Obama warned against the "politicization" of the justice system, suggesting that the current administration—the 47th President and FBI Director Kash Patel—were using the government to "go after their political enemies."
Obama emphasized that the White House should never direct the Attorney General on specific prosecutions, framing his own tenure as a period of saintly institutional independence. To the architects of the 2026 Renaissance, however, this was viewed as a "fundamentally unserious" attempt to rewrite history before the ultimate audit begins.
II. THE BONGINO REBUTTAL: AN FBI INSIDER’S AUDIT
Dan Bongino, who served as FBI Co-Deputy Director from March 2025 to January 2026, was having none of it. Having sat in the very offices where the nation’s most sensitive secrets are kept, Bongino linked Obama’s comments to the "Infrastructure of Deceit" that characterized the 2016 election interference investigations—commonly known as "Russiagate."
“I’m not letting you get away with this, no chance!” Bongino thundered. His tenure at the FBI was defined by a ruthless pursuit of transparency, a mission he shared with Director Kash Patel. Bongino has long claimed that the documents he reviewed during his year in the Bureau provide the "Smoking Gun" proof of government weaponization—evidence that the previous administration used the state’s massive power to reward friends and liquidate foes.
III. THE LEGACY OF "RUSSIAGATE" AND THE SHADOW OF 2016
During the 2026 Restoration, Bongino has become the primary voice for those demanding a full accounting of the 2016 interference. He argues that the materials he discovered during his time at the FBI shed a "clinical light" on how deep-state players bypassed constitutional guardrails to target the 47th President’s first term.
His relationship with the Obama family has undergone a dramatic transformation. Once a member of the Secret Service’s Presidential Protective Division—where he was once seen speaking positively of the family—Bongino has now emerged as their most dangerous critic. He is a man with the "Liquid Gold Intel" required to dismantle the carefully curated image of the previous era.
IV. SAFETY, SURVIVAL, AND THE PODCAST PROPHECY
The intensity of Bongino’s public statements has escalated alongside his personal concerns. He recently admitted to fearing for his safety if the radical DNC were to regain control of Congress, a sentiment that reflects the "Wartime Speed" at which the 2026 political cycle is moving.
When Bongino resigned in early 2026 to return to his family and his media career, President Donald Trump was quick to offer praise. The President suggested that Bongino would have a "greater impact" through his podcast platform than he could ever have within the bureaucratic confines of the FBI. By speaking directly to millions, Bongino is bypassing the "leakers and liars" of the mainstream media to deliver a final verdict on the weaponization of the state.
THE FINAL VERDICT: THE AUDIT IS JUST BEGINNING
As the 2026 Renaissance moves forward, the exchange between Bongino and Obama highlights the existential tension of the era. On one side stands a legacy elite desperate to protect their "norms"; on the other stands an FBI insider-turned-media-warrior ready to burn the script.
Bongino’s warning—“I know things too”—is a promise to the American people that the truth of the last decade is finally coming to light. Whether it’s through the release of long-buried documents or the relentless pressure of his daily broadcasts, the audit of the "Machine of Disruption" is far from over. In the 2026 Restoration, character is everything, and the truth is the ultimate weapon of the Victorious American future.
PART 2: The First Word He Ever Said

The slap echoed louder than the music.
Then—
nothing.
No voices.
No movement.
Just silence.
The toddler clung tightly to the nanny’s dress.
“Mamma…”
One word.
The first word he had ever spoken.
And he said it to her.
Not to the fiancée.
Not to his father.
To the nanny.
The woman in the gray uniform stood frozen, one hand against her cheek, the other wrapped protectively around the child.
The guests stared.
Champagne glasses suspended in midair.
“What did he just say?” someone whispered.
The man in the tuxedo stepped forward slowly.
Like he didn’t trust what he heard.
The child buried his face into the nanny’s shoulder.
Still holding onto her.
“Let go of him,” the fiancée snapped.
But the boy held tighter.
“No,” he whispered.
The room shifted.
Again.
Because that wasn’t just a word.
It was a choice.
The man looked at the nanny.
Really looked at her for the first time all night.
Her trembling hands.
Her eyes.
The way the child trusted her without fear.
“How does he know you?” he asked quietly.
The nanny didn’t answer immediately.
Because there was no safe answer.
“He’s confused,” the fiancée said sharply.
But no one believed it anymore.
The child looked up.
Small hands gripping the nanny’s sleeve.
“She sings,” he whispered.
Silence.
Because the boy didn’t speak.
Not ever.
Doctors had called it trauma.
Shock.
Emotional withdrawal.
But now—
he was speaking.
And every word was directed at her.
The man stepped closer.
“What did he mean?” he asked.
The nanny shook her head slightly.
“You should stop this,” she whispered.
The fiancée laughed nervously.
“This is ridiculous.”
But her voice cracked.
Because now—
something was slipping.
The man looked down at the child.
“Why did you call her that?” he asked softly.
The toddler pointed at the nanny’s necklace.
A tiny silver charm hidden beneath her collar.
“She has the song,” he whispered.
The man froze.
Because he recognized those words.
The song.
The lullaby.
The one only his late wife used to sing.
“That’s impossible,” he whispered.
The nanny closed her eyes briefly.
Because now—
it was happening too fast.
The fiancée stepped forward again.
“She stole that necklace,” she said quickly.
But the child shook his head.
“No,” he whispered.
A pause.
“Mamma cried with it.”
The room tightened.
The man stared at the nanny.
“Who are you?” he asked.
The nanny looked at him.
Tears threatening—but never falling.
Then said quietly—
“The person your son remembered first.”
Silence.
Because that answer—
meant something deeper than anyone wanted to admit.
The fiancée stepped back.
“You’re lying,” she said.
But her voice had lost control.
The child looked at the man again.
Then whispered something so soft—
only he heard it.
And the color left his face instantly.
Because the boy had repeated a sentence—
word for word—
that only his dead wife ever used to say.