
THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW: Tom Kean Jr. Is the Deep State’s Trojan Horse in Plain Sight
You think you know the game, patriot. You watch the news, you see the names, you think you’ve got a handle on who’s who in the swamp. But let me tell you something they pray you never figure out: Congressman Tom Kean Jr. isn’t just another Republican in a blue tie. He’s a carefully curated piece of the puzzle, a generational plant designed to make the Establishment look like it’s changing while keeping the same old poison in the water supply. Wake up, America. The Kean name is a code, and this New Jersey “moderate” is the key to unlocking a truth that goes straight back to the biggest cover-up in American history.
Let’s connect the dots, and I mean really connect them. You remember the name “Kean,” don’t you? Of course you do. Tom Kean Sr., the “beloved” governor of New Jersey. The man they put in charge of the 9/11 Commission. The man who was hand-picked to tell us the official story—the story that we all know now was laced with redactions, contradictions, and convenient omissions. They gave him the gavel, shook his hand on C-SPAN, and said, “Trust this man.” And we did. We were told to look at the smoke, not the fire. Governor Kean Sr. delivered a report that blamed “systemic failures” but conveniently never asked why a Saudi intelligence asset was living in Sarasota, Florida, or why certain buildings at the Pentagon collapsed in a way that physics says shouldn’t happen. Coincidence? Stay woke.
Now, look at the son. Tom Kean Jr. is not an accident. He’s the next phase of the operation. They didn’t just let any random lawyer or local councilman slide into the House of Representatives. They needed someone who carried the brand. The Kean brand is “bipartisan unity,” “civility,” and “reasonable conservatism.” Translation: It’s the label they slap on a poison bottle to make it look like medicine. Kean Jr. is the Trojan Horse that the Deep State wheeled into the GOP conference to keep the machine running smoothly while you’re distracted fighting the culture war.
Let’s look at his record, because the voting record never lies, even if the man does. Tom Kean Jr. represents New Jersey’s 7th Congressional District. On paper, he’s a Republican. In practice, he’s a walking, talking compromise. You want to know how the Establishment keeps its grip? They elect guys like Kean who vote for the “bipartisan” bills that give the Deep State exactly what it wants. He voted for the CHIPS Act—a massive government subsidy bonanza that pads the pockets of globalist semiconductor corporations while doing nothing to secure our supply chains from foreign manipulation. He voted for the Respect for Marriage Act, which sounds nice, but ask yourself: Why is the federal government defining marriage at all? That’s a states’ rights issue, and the federal overreach is a distraction from the real erosion of liberty. He supports Ukraine funding—billions of dollars with no audit, no accountability, just endless money flowing into a black hole while our own border is a sieve. Every time he votes “yes” on a spending package, he’s signing a check that the central banksters cash to buy more control.
But here’s where it gets really deep, and you won’t see this on CNN or Fox. Tom Kean Jr. is the perfect “moderate” because he’s a tool for the uni-party. The Deep State needs the GOP to have a few Keans—just enough to provide “bipartisan cover” for the agenda that both parties really agree on: endless war, central bank digital currencies, and the dismantling of American sovereignty. They use him to say, “See? The Republicans are reasonable! They work with us!” Meanwhile, the real patriots—the ones asking about the Epstein client list, the ones questioning the origin of the Wuhan lab leak, the ones demanding we audit the Fed—are sidelined as “extremists.” Kean is the velvet glove over the iron fist of the globalist agenda.
Think about the committees he sits on. He’s on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. You know what that means? He’s in the room where they decide who we bomb and who we fund. And what does Kean do? He pushes for more NATO expansion. He pushes for more intervention. He never, not once, asks the tough questions about what the CIA was doing in Ukraine in 2014. He never demands the release of the Epstein grand jury transcripts. He’s a good soldier. Obedient. Safe.
And let’s not forget the family business. The Kean family is old money, old connections, old power. They are the embodiment of the Northeastern Establishment Republican—the kind that privately thinks the base is a bunch of rubes. Tom Kean Sr. was a board member of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a massive nonprofit that, coincidentally, was heavily involved in the global health response. You know, the same network of institutions that pushed the vaccine mandates and the lockdowns. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, and the tree is rooted in the swamp.
So why are they pushing Tom Kean Jr. so hard? Why is the media so quick to call him a “breath of fresh air” or a “sensible voice”? Because he’s the controlled opposition. He’s the guy who will vote for the “bipartisan border bill” that actually codifies the catch-and-release system while giving it a new name. He’s the guy who will smile and shake hands with the same people who are pushing to ban gas stoves and take away your guns. He’s a distraction. While you’re arguing about whether he’s a “RINO” or not, the real power is moving money through the Federal Reserve, building the digital ID infrastructure, and planning the next “unexpected” crisis that will let them take
Final Thoughts
As a veteran observer of Washington’s perpetual dance, it’s striking to see Tom Kean Jr. walk the tightrope between his father’s bipartisan legacy and the current GOP’s hardline demands—a balancing act that feels increasingly unsustainable. While his centrist instincts on issues like the environment and infrastructure suggest a genuine desire to govern, the political reality is that such moderation often gets swallowed by the party’s louder, more combative wing. Ultimately, Kean Jr.’s survival may depend less on his own convictions and more on whether his New Jersey district still values the art of compromise over the spectacle of conflict.