The Smoking Gun In The Biden Cover-Up 

Jul 10, 2025 - 16:28
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The Smoking Gun In The Biden Cover-Up 

It’s time to talk about the biggest conspiracy and cover-up in modern American history.

No, I’m not talking about Jeffrey Epstein.

I am talking about the cover-up that was right in front of us that actually does go all the way to the top.

That cover-up, of course, involves the fact that the president of the United States was mentally deficient for several years and that someone else — we don’t know who — was actually running the country. 

The smoking gun to that effect was presented on Wednesday in front of Congress. Doctor Kevin O’Connor, who was former President Joe Biden’s White House physician, constantly invoked his rights under the Fifth Amendment and physician-patient privilege before the House Oversight Committee.

That is insane.

O’Connor was asked about what he knew and when he knew it about Joe Biden’s health condition, and he pled the Fifth. He was asked if he was ever told to lie about the president’s health, whether Biden as president was unfit to execute his duties as president, and he consistently invoked physician-patient privilege and the Fifth Amendment.

Exasperated, one GOP rep asked, “Doctor O’Connor, is it your intention to decline to answer all questions put to you today by the Committee on the basis of the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination?”

O’Connor again stated, “On the advice of counsel, I must respectfully decline to answer based upon the physician-patient privilege and in reliance on my right and the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.”

Okay, this is insane.

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He was claiming, based on two different things, that he would not testify. One, of course, is physician-patient privilege, the idea that you are supposed to keep secret health information that you and your doctor exchange. The doctor is not supposed to talk publicly about that.

But physician-patient privilege should probably not extend to public statements that you make about the health of the president of the United States because you’re violating patient privilege by even saying that much. If you make a statement that the president is healthy and the president has the following conditions, that’s a violation of physician-patient privilege.

In any other context, if your doctor went to a bar today and started talking about your specific health issues, even if he said you’re totally healthy and fine, that would be a violation of physician-patient privilege.

But that’s exactly what Kevin O’Connor did. He put out public statements about the health of the president of the United States. Thus, asking him about that should not be an issue.

As far as the Fifth Amendment, which protects against self-incrimination, he was saying that if he spoke, he could find himself in danger of a perjury trap or in danger of committing a crime, which is absolutely astonishing.

Remember, the original question here was, “Were you instructed to lie about the president’s health at any point?”

That is not a question about the president’s health. That’s a question about the lies surrounding the president’s health. So if he says yes, he might have committed a crime when he told the American people something false or told Congress something false.

We have an explicit amendment to the Constitution that is designed to oust people who are mentally incompetent from this office, which means all members of the Biden cabinet were complicit in the cover-up of his health condition. All Biden cabinet members were complicit in the reality that the president of the United States was not actually the president of the United States. That’s a scandal. That’s a cover-up, and requires a much deeper investigation.

It was all out in public view. There was tremendous evidence for it. Yet in 2024, O’Connor said Biden’s mental cognition was “excellent.”

Congress can easily solve this problem. All they have to do is grant him immunity, because then the Fifth Amendment concern goes away. If they say, “Anything you testify on today cannot be used as the basis for your future prosecution,” he can no longer claim the Fifth Amendment because the Fifth Amendment only applies in arenas where you could theoretically be prosecuted for the things that you are saying.

There are also other ways around this. According to the Congressional Research Service, “Under federal statute, when a witness asserts the privilege, the full House or the committee conducting the investigation may seek a court order that 1) directs the witness to testify and 2) grant the witness immunity against the use of his or her testimony.”

So that is presumably the next step.

We already know there was a cover-up. The only question is, who told O’Connor to cover up the health condition?

Was it Jill? Was it Joe who did that? Also, why was everybody else in the White House complicit in this cover-up? And who the hell was the president of the United States for multiple years?

The American people were lied to. Anybody who was involved in the Joe Biden cabinet that refused to make a move to invoke the 25th Amendment to oust him as president of the United States for mental incompetence needs to be effectively barred from politics forever.

Anyone who’s a cabinet secretary who rose to that level — the Pete Buttigiegs of the world, for example — needs to be held accountable for not having tried to invoke the 25th amendment, because the American people were robbed of having a president of the United States that they actually elected.

The fact that O’Connor is taking the Fifth Amendment is demonstrative of the lengths to which people surrounding the president will go to maintain their hold on proximity to power.

They shouldn’t get away with it.

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Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.