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Bipartisanship: The Ultimate PsyOp to Lull Patriots into a False Sense of Security

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Bipartisanship: The Ultimate PsyOp to Lull Patriots into a False Sense of Security

Bipartisanship: The Ultimate PsyOp to Lull Patriots into a False Sense of Security

If you’ve been paying attention—and I know you have, because you’re here—you’ve heard the mainstream media crooning about a “new dawn of bipartisanship” in Washington. The talking heads on CNN and Fox are practically swooning over the latest handshake between a Republican and a Democrat over a budget deal or a infrastructure bill. They’re selling it as the return of civility, the healing of the nation, the end of the “us vs. them” nightmare. But let me ask you something: Why are they so eager to convince us that the two-headed beast is suddenly holding hands? Because they need you to look away. Bipartisanship isn’t a solution. It’s a cover. It’s the ultimate psy-op designed to lull American patriots into a false sense of security while the real agenda slides through the back door.

Wake up. This isn’t about unity. It’s about control. And the deeper you dig, the more you realize that every time the establishment parades a “bipartisan” achievement, they’re hiding the fact that both sides are serving the same master—and it’s not the American people.

Let’s start with the most recent example: the so-called “bipartisan infrastructure framework” that has the swamp buzzing. Both parties patted themselves on the back, shook hands, and told us this was a victory for the country. But if you read the fine print—and I mean really read it, not just the headlines—you’ll see it’s a Trojan horse. Buried in that bill are billions for corporate subsidies, green energy mandates that benefit the billionaire elite, and surveillance expansions that make the Patriot Act look like a slap on the wrist. The bipartisanship is the smoke screen. While you’re cheering for Democrats and Republicans “working together,” they’re voting to give your tax dollars to BlackRock and Lockheed Martin. It’s a game of good cop, bad cop, and the prison is the American taxpayer.

Think about the history of these “bipartisan moments.” The PATRIOT Act? Bipartisan. The Iraq War? Bipartisan. The bailouts of 2008? Bipartisan. Every time the establishment needs to push through something that benefits the globalist elite—and screws the working class—they trot out the unity narrative. Why? Because a divided America is hard to control. When we fight each other over culture wars, we’re too distracted to notice the money flowing out of our pockets. But when they smell a threat—like a populist uprising on either side—they suddenly become best friends. Bipartisanship is the emergency brake they pull to stop the people’s movement. It’s not a bridge; it’s a cage.

Let’s look at the psychology. They want you to believe that compromise is a virtue. But compromise between two corrupt factions isn’t virtue—it’s collusion. The real bipartisanship, the one that matters, is between the D.C. elite and their corporate donors. You see it in the revolving door: a Republican leaves Congress to lobby for Pfizer, a Democrat leaves to lobby for Goldman Sachs. They’re not enemies; they’re coworkers in the same factory of globalism. The bipartisanship narrative is the PR campaign for that factory. It’s designed to make you trust the machine again after years of seeing the gears grind your family down.

And here’s the kicker: they’re using it to crush dissent. When a patriot—whether on the right or the left—stands up and says, “This bill is a poison pill for our sovereignty,” the media labels them an “extremist” or a “spoiler.” The bipartisanship narrative is a weapon to silence you. “How dare you oppose this? It’s bipartisan! It’s the will of both parties!” But both parties are the same party when it comes to the deep state agenda. The only difference is the flavor of the distraction. One side gives you cultural rage; the other gives you economic fear. But when the real vote comes—on everything from election integrity to foreign intervention—they lock arms and vote together.

Don’t take my word for it. Look at the voting records. On the FISA reauthorization, which expanded warrantless surveillance, it was a bipartisan lovefest. On the COVID-19 “relief” bills, which pumped trillions into the pockets of the wealthy while evictions soared, it was bipartisan. On the Ukraine spending packages, which funneled your money into a proxy war with no end in sight, it was bipartisan. The pattern is undeniable. The issues that divide them—like abortion or gun rights—are theater. They’re the sideshows that keep us arguing at Thanksgiving dinner. The issues that unite them—the ones that gut your privacy, your wealth, and your freedom—are always, always bipartisan.

So why are they pushing this narrative so hard right now? Because the American people are waking up. The populist wave on both sides—whether it’s the MAGA movement or the Bernie Sanders revolution—is a threat to the establishment. They need to merge the two parties into one “unity” front to prevent us from breaking their stranglehold. Bipartisanship is the antidote to the awakening. It’s their way of saying, “Don’t worry, we’re all friends here. Trust us. We know what’s best.”

But you know better. You’ve seen the dot connect. The same globalist think tanks fund both parties. The same Wall Street donors cut checks to both campaigns. The same media conglomerates that own CNN and Fox also own the narrative. Bipartisanship isn’t a meeting of the minds; it’s a meeting of the bank accounts. And the bill always comes due for us.

This isn’t a call to hate your neighbor or refuse to work with people of different views. True bipartisanship—real unity on the ground between ordinary Americans of all stripes—is beautiful. It’s the farmer and the factory worker finding common ground against the corporations.

Final Thoughts


Bipartisanship, as the article rightly notes, is less a lost golden age and more a tactical mirage—politicians invoke its name when it serves their interests and abandon it the moment the cameras turn off. In my years covering Washington, I’ve learned that genuine compromise rarely comes from noble appeals to unity, but from the cold, grinding necessity of shared survival, like a debt ceiling or a war funding bill. Ultimately, the public’s craving for bipartisanship is a wish for accountability and functionality, and until voters punish the theater of division as harshly as the substance of failure, the mirage will remain just that.