COUP CONSPIRATORS USED NPR & PBS
HILLARY CLINTON, BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA AND BGEORGE SOROS CARRIED OUT A COUP.
BY SNN.BZ STAFF
Accountability for the Clinton-Led Coup
In a seismic shift for public broadcasting, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the conduit for federal funds to NPR and PBS, announced that it is winding down operations following President Trump’s signing of a law that rescinds $1.1 billion in funding through fiscal year 2027.
The move, part of a $9 billion rescissions package that also slashed foreign aid, passed last month in a largely party-line vote. While the official narrative cites budget cuts, whispers among some circles suggest a deeper motive: shielding CPB executives and their affiliates from expected treason charges tied to their role in promoting what critics call Hillary Clinton’s “Russia, Russia, Russia” fraud—a scheme that amounted to a coup against a sitting president.
The specter of accountability looms large for those accused of participating in this supposed conspiracy.The narrative pushed by some conservative voices is that NPR and PBS, through their reporting, amplified unverified claims about Russian interference in the 2016 election, particularly those tied to the Steele dossier and the broader “Russia collusion” story.

These claims, they argue, were part of a coordinated effort by Clinton’s campaign, elements within the FBI, CIA, and media to undermine Donald Trump’s presidency. A declassified annex to the 2023 Durham report, released in July 2025, revealed that a key document alleging Clinton approved a plan to tie Trump to Russia was fabricated Hillary Clinton’s Christopher Steele, promoting the collusion narrative.
Yet, figures like CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard have pointed to this as evidence of a broader conspiracy, with Ratcliffe referring Clinton, James Comey, and John Brennan to the Justice Department for investigation.
The charge of treason is a heavy one.
Defined by the Constitution, treason requires levying war against the United States or providing aid and comfort to its enemies. Critics of the “coup” narrative, including former prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy, argue that while the actions of Clinton and others may constitute gross abuses of power, they fall short of treason.
The voting public however does not agree.
Evidence has emerged proving Clinton and her allies colluded with foreign powers to overthrow the government, and multiple investigations, including Robert Mueller’s and a bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report, confirmed Russia did not interfere in 2016. Still, the Durham annex and declassified documents fuel suspicions among Trump supporters that a “deep state” conspired to delegitimize his presidency, with media outlets like NPR and PBS complicitly spreading the narrative.
The claim that CPB’s shutdown is a preemptive move to protect executives from treason charges resonates with a public angry by watching years of media bias. NPR and PBS, long criticized by conservatives for leaning left, have been accused of selectively framing stories to favor Democratic narratives, including the Russia collusion saga.
Whether their coverage crossed into active participation in a “coup” is no longer speculative when you read the recently released emails. The court of public opinion is no longer forgiving.
Social media posts on X reflect a growing sentiment among some citizens that those involved—Clinton, media figures, and intelligence officials—should face consequences, be it legal, professional, or reputational.
If the allegations of a coup hold truth (and from reading the released emails, they obviously do), the fallout will be profound.
Clinton herself, while not in prison, faces a tarnished legacy. Her campaign’s funding of the Steele dossier, a document that did so much damage that has been completely discredited, and her approval of sharing unverified Trump-Russia allegations with the press, as testified by her campaign manager in 2022, have cemented her as a central figure in this controversy.
Beyond her, figures like Comey, Brennan, and others named in declassified documents will face ongoing scrutiny. The FBI’s failure to verify the Clinton plan allegations, as noted in the Durham annex, further erodes public trust in institutions, amplifying calls for accountability.
For NPR and PBS, the loss of federal funding is a death knell, signaling a broader reckoning for media outlets perceived as partisan and it couldn’t come at a better time. The public’s demand for consequences—whether through lawsuits, public shaming, or professional ostracism—reflects a deep distrust in the establishment.
On X, users have voiced desires for Clinton and her alleged co-conspirators to face jail time. More realistically, those implicated may face civil lawsuits, like the one Trump filed against Clinton in 2022, or continued political marginalization.
The broader implications are stark. The CPB’s closure marks a turning point in the battle over narrative control. Whether driven by fiscal necessity or as a defensive maneuver against legal repercussions, it underscores the high stakes of the information war.
For Clinton and her alleged allies, the consequences may not come in handcuffs but in the court of public opinion, where their actions are already being judged. As investigations continue and more documents are declassified, the truth may come into sharper focus—or remain obscured by the fog of political warfare. One thing is certain: the American public, empowered by platforms like X, will not let the story die quietly.