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WTF?! FEMA Employees Fired for Watching Porn, Including Bestiality, on Government Devices

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While hurricanes rage and floods devastate, Federal Emergency Management Agency employees — entrusted to protect Americans — are glued to their government computers, indulging in porn.

According to a statement from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, multiple FEMA employees were fired "for consuming pornographic content during work hours while on government issued devices."

Noem minced no words: "These individuals had access to critical information and intelligence and were entrusted to safeguard Americans from emergencies—and instead they were consuming pornography."

Shockingly, in at least one case, the material was "racially charged and involved bestiality," per the DHS announcement.

A recent DHS audit further revealed that nearly half of FEMA’s staff routinely log into social media during work hours.

One employee used a government device to type explicit phrases into a chatbot, craving the perverse thrill of hearing them read back in an accent.

Another, a contractor, accessed explicit content 578 times in a single month, engaging in online chats and viewing graphic videos—all on taxpayer-funded equipment.

Judicial Watch, a watchdog group exposing government misconduct for over 15 years, detailed this scandal in a report.

But FEMA is merely the latest in a parade of shame.

The Securities and Exchange Commission made headlines when high-ranking managers gorged on porn sites as the economy tanked in 2008.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture faced a "significant increase" in employees and contractors viewing unlawful content, including child pornography, according to its inspector general.

The National Science Foundation saw employees spend "significant portions" of their workdays downloading and emailing porn, undetected for years.

At the Environmental Protection Agency, a veteran employee watched up to six hours of porn daily, downloading thousands of files, while another used his official EPA email to access child pornography, per federal audits.

This crisis prompted action over a decade ago when then-Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., introduced the Eliminating Pornography from Agencies Act. Meadows, incensed by the EPA’s egregious violations, declared it "appalling" that Congress needed to legislate to stop federal workers from accessing porn on government devices.

Though the bill never passed, it spotlighted a pervasive problem that agencies have since tackled inconsistently.

The pattern is clear: from the SEC to the USDA, NSF to the EPA, federal employees have treated their workplaces as personal playgrounds for perversion, squandering public resources and trust.

Audits repeatedly expose this misconduct, yet the behavior persists, a stubborn stain on government integrity.

This isn’t just about rogue employees; it’s about a culture of entitlement that festers unchecked.

While Americans toil to fund these agencies, bureaucrats indulge in filth, some sinking to the depths of bestiality and child exploitation.

The gall of it — using devices meant for disaster response or financial oversight to chase lurid thrills — demands more than firings. It calls for a reckoning.

Why are taxpayers still footing the bill for this moral rot?

Alicia Powe

Alicia is an investigative journalist and breaking news reporter with RiftTV. Alicia's work is featured on outlets including The Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Townhall and Media Research Center.

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