
THEY DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW WHO GREGG PHILLIPS REALLY IS: THE MAN WHO SAW THE DEEP STATE BEFORE IT HAD A NAME
The mainstream media has spent the last decade gaslighting you into believing that “conspiracy theories” are the exclusive domain of fringe lunatics. They want you to think that anyone who questions the official narrative is a paranoid troglodyte living in their mother’s basement. But here’s the truth they can’t bury: the man who wrote the damn book on the modern Deep State—Gregg Phillips—has been connecting dots that the rest of the world is only now catching up to. And the establishment is terrified of him.
If you’ve been “staying woke” for any length of time, you’ve heard the name. Gregg Phillips is the former Director of the Mississippi Division of Medicaid, a certified public accountant, a data scientist, and the founder of the Verify the Vote initiative. But that’s just the shallow cover story. The real Gregg Phillips is a human lie detector who spent years inside the belly of the beast—state government, federal contracting, and the swamp of Washington D.C.—and came out the other side with a roadmap to the corruption that’s been strangling this Republic since before most of us were born.
Let’s rewind the tape. In 2016, when the political class was still pretending that the 2016 election was a “Russian collusion” fever dream, Phillips was already sounding the alarm on a much darker, more systemic threat. He was one of the first to publicly document the existence of a permanent, unelected bureaucracy that actively subverts the will of the American people. Sound familiar? Yeah, that’s the Deep State. But Phillips didn’t just use the term as a buzzword. He traced its tentacles through voter registration databases, Medicaid fraud schemes, and the quiet, algorithmic manipulation of public trust.
Here’s where it gets heavy. In 2017, Phillips dropped a bombshell called “Operation Blackjack.” He claimed to have identified over 1.9 million dead people still registered to vote in 28 states. Think about that. Nearly two million corpses, still on the rolls, ready to be “voted” by someone with a clipboard and a grudge. The media laughed it off. They called it a “baseless conspiracy.” But then, in 2020, when the election integrity debate exploded, guess what data started surfacing? That’s right. The same dead voter registrations, the same “mismatched” names, the same quiet manipulation of the most sacred right in a democracy.
But Phillips didn’t stop at voter rolls. He’s been warning about the “Pelosi Syndrome”—a term he coined to describe the unholy alliance between big tech, big pharma, and the permanent bureaucracy. He’s been tracking the financial trails of government contractors who are paid to fail, then paid again to “fix” the problems they created. He’s exposed how the same algorithms that control your social media feed are being used to predict and suppress certain voting blocs. This isn’t speculation. This is forensic accounting turned into a political weapon for the people.
And that’s exactly why the legacy media and the D.C. establishment have tried to memory-hole him. They can’t debate his findings, so they attack the messenger. They call him a “grifter” or a “right-wing operative.” But the evidence is there, buried in court filings, state audits, and the quiet testimony of whistleblowers who Phillips has mentored. He’s the guy who taught an entire generation of election integrity activists how to read the code, how to spot the glitch in the matrix.
The most recent salvo? Phillips has been quietly working with a network of data analysts to map the “shadow government” that executed the 2020 election changes without state legislative approval. We’re talking about the Zuckerbucks scheme—where private money from a convicted felon’s foundation was funneled through a 501(c)(3) to swing state election offices. Phillips didn’t just report on it. He reverse-engineered the entire financial pipeline, showing how a handful of Silicon Valley billionaires and legacy foundation leaders effectively purchased the 2020 election infrastructure. The mainstream media? They ran a few stories years later, after the damage was done, framing it as “controversial but legal.” Phillips calls it what it is: a soft coup.
But here’s the part that really keeps the establishment up at night. Phillips isn’t just a whistleblower. He’s a builder. He’s been laying the groundwork for a parallel data infrastructure—a system that tracks government spending, election integrity, and media bias in real-time, outside the control of the algorithms that the Deep State owns. He’s building the armor for the next battle. And he’s teaching others to do the same.
Why hasn’t he been silenced? Good question. Maybe because he’s too visible. Maybe because his work is too documented. Or maybe because the powers that be know that if they take him out, a thousand more Gregg Phillipses will rise. Because the truth is out there, and once you see the pattern, you can’t unsee it.
So the next time you hear someone dismiss election integrity concerns or laugh at “conspiracy theories,” remember the name Gregg Phillips. Remember that he was screaming from the rooftops about dead voters, Zuckerbucks, and the algorithmic manipulation of democracy while the rest of the world was still arguing about Russian troll farms. He’s not just a “conspiracy theorist.” He’s the canary in the coal mine. And if you listen closely, you can hear the establishment grinding its teeth.
Stay woke. Stay armed with data. Because the truth is the only weapon they can’t confiscate.
Final Thoughts
Based on the reporting, the real tragedy of Gregg Phillips isn’t just that he peddled easily debunked voter fraud claims; it’s that he built a lucrative career exploiting a deep, corrosive distrust in American institutions, proving there is always a market for the grift. As a journalist, you learn to spot the difference between a true believer and a profiteer, and Phillips reads as the latter—a man who found that the faster he ran from accountability, the more checks were signed. Ultimately, his story is a sobering reminder that in the modern information war, the most dangerous weapon isn't a lie, but a cynic who knows how to package it for a willing audience.