Book Review
Deep State Errand Boy

Deep State Errand Boy

After being appointed as special counsel to investigate Trump-Russian collusion allegations, Robert Mueller became a household name, but he has been a Deep State lackey for ages. ...
C. Mitchell Shaw

Robert Mueller: Errand Boy for the New World Order, by John Milkovich, self-published, 2018, 205 pages, paperback.

In the 1991 comedy What About Bob?, Bill Murray plays Bob Wiley, a man who manufactures his own mental illnesses and eventually drives his psychiatrist, Leo Marvin (played by Richard Dreyfuss), completely insane. Bob has a self-serving nature, which is best depicted in a scene where Marvin throws Bob out of his house. Marvin’s young son asks, “Why’d you need to kick Bob out of the house?” Marvin asks, “You think he’s gone?” and opens the door to show that Bob is standing in the doorway, waiting to be let back in. Marvin answers his own question by saying, “He’s never gone!”

And that’s how it is with another Bob, Robert Mueller. Nearly two months after the completion of his investigation of alleged collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia and more than a month after the release of the final report, Mueller is not gone. He’s never gone. 

One reason Mueller is never gone is that he is the quintessential Deep State operative. He’s not gone because he has been right there — in the shadows — for decades. In his book Robert Mueller: Errand Boy for the New World Order, John Milkovich lays bare Mueller’s past, in the process revealing Mueller’s motives for the Trump probe. 

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