The numbers are horrifying. The buildings are empty.
And the man who nearly became a heartbeat from the presidency is right in the middle of it.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent just walked into
Minnesota and ripped the lid off a scandal that could stretch into the hundreds of billions.
Daycares, medical transport, shell companies, vanished chil… Continues…
Scott Bessent’s trip to Minnesota wasn’t a photo op; it was a reckoning.
Standing with citizen journalists instead of legacy media,
he described a federal system so loose that
as much as 10 percent of the national budget may be evaporating into fraud.
In Minnesota, that abstraction turns
sickeningly concrete: “daycares” with no children,
“transportation companies”
whose vehicles never move,
offices that are little more
than apartments with a printer and a mailbox.
Behind the paperwork are networks that learned government would not check,
prosecutors would not dig, and politicians would not risk their careers to stop the theft.
Tim Walz’s refusal to guarantee security for the
Treasury secretary at his own state capitol became a symbol of that political cowardice.
Yet the exposure is spreading.
Ordinary Americans are knocking on doors,
filming the lies, and forcing Washington to respond.
A new Justice Department post is coming.
The question now is whether accountability will follow—or whether this, too, will be buried under the next news cy…