Watch the full episode here:

Good evening. It's Wednesday, July 12. Welcome to a new episode of System Update, our live nightly show that airs every Monday through Friday, at 7:00 pm Eastern, exclusively here on Rumble, the free speech alternative to YouTube.
Tonight: The Director of the FBI, Christopher Wray, appeared before the House Judiciary Committee where he testified for more than six hours earlier today. He was grilled by House Republicans about a wide range of scandals and controversies plaguing the Bureau – from how the FBI is pressuring and coercing Big Tech to censor the political speech of American citizens online; to the politicization of law enforcement investigations, including recent accusations from two senior IRS whistleblowers that the DOJ intervened in the Hunter Biden case to protect the president's son; to domestic spying programs in which the FBI purchases comprehensive and extremely invasive data about the lives of American citizens to enable them to create dossiers on the citizens they are supposed to be protecting; to the role the FBI and its various assets played in the events at the Capitol on January 6.
The FBI director's posture for most of the day was one of evasion and feigned ignorance. He routinely refused to answer even the most basic questions by playing obvious semantic games with the questions or claiming he did not have information when it is simply impossible that he was telling the truth – such as when he refused to say how many FBI informants and undercover agents were among the crowd on January 6 by insisting – more than two years after those events that the Bureau described as an "insurrection" – that he does not know the answer to that question. To say that Wray mislead and obstructed the Committee is an understatement; in cases such as that one, he clearly lied. But what else should one expect from the leader of an agency with a long history of lying and weaponizing their vast powers for purely political ends?
The primary reason Director Wray was able to get away with this behavior is because he had a small army of lawyers and defenders who participated in the hearing calling themselves "House Democrats." That the Democratic Party has become the party of the U.S. Security State – the faction that most venerates, protects and defends the FBI, CIA, NSA, Homeland Security and the rest – is a common theme of my reporting and our program. Polling data that we have repeatedly analyzed demonstrate that not just party leaders but also their liberal followers hold these agencies in high esteem. Left-liberal media discourse is almost entirely bereft of reporting or discussions about the abuses of power by these agencies - they barely exist - because the left-wing faction of the Democratic Party perceives – correctly so – that, in the Trump era, these agencies have become their political allies.
Nonetheless – even with that understanding – the extent to which Democrats so flagrantly wagged their tongue and heaped praise on the FBI – even repeatedly expressed rage that House Republicans would dare question the FBI, even though that kind of oversight is the legal requirement of the Congress – surprised even me. There were a couple of noble exceptions – Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, the head of the Progressive Caucus, for instance, demanded answers about the FBI's program of buying data about Americans on the open market, data which - as we have reported - they would be barred by the Constitution from collecting directly.
But for the most part, House Democrats completely disgraced themselves, as one after the next read scripts about the nobility and integrity of the FBI that would have made J. Edgar Hoover blush. I haven't seen an FBI Director feted with such mindless worship since Saturday Night Live sang songs about former Bush/Cheney FBI Director Robert Mueller being our nation's savior.
We will show you the key parts of today's hearing, which was quite revealing. We will also speak with a member of the Judiciary Committee who participated in it and posed some of the most pointed and important questions to Director Wray: he's Republican Congressman Mike Johnson, who has represented Louisiana's 4th Congressional District since 2016.
Then: in 2021, David Miller was a professor of political sociology at the University of Bristol in England. Miller is a longtime defender of the Palestinian cause for statehood and as such is a very vocal critic of the Israeli government and even of the theory of Zionism on which the Israeli state is based. Miller has long used academic freedom the way it is intended to be used to question and challenge, rather than affirm establishment pieties and even venture into topics and issues that the establishment decrees taboo – he is, for example, a vocal critic of the U.S. and British proxy war in Ukraine – but a lecture he gave on Israel and comments about pro-Israel student groups led to complaints of antisemitism and “inciting hatred” against Jewish students, first from British politicians and then the students they commandeered into making those complaints. That was followed by a formal investigation by the university into this professor. Though that investigation cleared him of charges of antisemitism, he ended up nonetheless being fired by that university on the ground that, as the BBC put it, “he did not meet the standards of behavior” it expects from its staff. This case, needless to say, raises exactly the kinds of concerns about free speech and academic freedom we often cover in this program. Professor Miller has appealed this decision and is fighting to win back his job. He will be here tonight to talk about his case and the implications of his firing, both for free speech and for academic freedom.
As a reminder, System Update is available in podcast form as well. You can follow us on Spotify, Apple and all other major podcasting platforms. The episodes are posted 12 hours after they first air, live, here on Rumble and you can rate and review each episode which helps us spread the visibility of the program.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.