General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWP Exclusive-Exclusive Tulsi Gabbard, her guru and the mysterious messages that helped shape her political career
I obtained hundreds of confidential memos detailing politics and policy guidance for Gabbard from her years in Congress, then embarked on a quest to identify who was behind them.
Link to tweet
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2026/06/21/tulsi-gabbard-her-guru-mysterious-messages-that-helped-shape-her-political-career/
Some former members, however, have called the group a cult and said disciples were isolated from the outside world, characterizations the group has denied. Former devotees had been telling me for weeks that Butler controlled his followers major life decisions and demanded total obedience and secrecy. They said he spent years working to extend his reach into politics and they suspected Gabbards rise in Washington was the culmination of that effort......
The memos covered a dizzying range of matters. I found a 173-page dossier from 2014 titled TG Issues. It compiled advice for Gabbard on dozens of topics from taxes to the mysterious disappearance that year of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 and more. The document was peppered with imperatives. Start introducing bills, it said on one issue. Need to get on it and hit hard. Stop being weak, it said on another.
Syria was the subject of many of the memos, including one from August 2016 that documented tactical advice on one of Gabbards signature policies: preventing the United States from ousting then-Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
The memo quoted an unnamed adviser saying she should reiterate her opposition to U.S. intervention in Syrias civil war, even as a shocking image of a wounded 5-year-old made headlines. The CIA is the one that started this thing, the person said. Gabbard made that claim publicly three years later.
As I examined the document, eight months after Gabbards confirmation as director of national intelligence, I found it striking that such deep suspicion of U.S. intelligence appeared to have been fed to someone who would later coordinate the CIA, the National Security Agency and more than a dozen similar agencies......
As the general election race got underway, transcripts show, an unnamed adviser spoke admiringly about Trumps campaign messaging. In one, the unnamed speaker said Trump had staked out the kind of maverick position that Gabbard might have taken.
This is right up your ally [sic], the speaker said about some of Trumps remarks on Islamic extremists in America. Too bad youre not running. Its all falling into place, but for the wrong guy. Now Trump is going to be the one, and hes a total idiot.....
Memos sent before Trump entered politics suggested an affinity for some of the ideas he would later adopt. In two of them, an unnamed adviser said the government needed to think America first, which famously became a slogan of Trumps movement. Another recommended occupying inner cities with the National Guard.
During the 2016 campaign, Butler devotees researched senior Trump advisers, including Stephen Miller and Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, emails show.....
After Trump won in November 2016, Gabbard shocked Democrats by meeting him at Trump Tower.
This is a long article but it is clear that that Gabbard was tied to and influenced by her guru.
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,882 posts)Gift link...
— Lola Gayle (@lolagaylec.bsky.social) 2026-06-21T11:40:52.157Z
WAPO - Tulsi Gabbard, her guru and the mysterious messages that helped shape her political career
wapo.st/4viLSnW
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,882 posts)No one knows who this guru really is, what his connections are and where the instructions came from, Chuck Schumer said. We need answers.
As Tulsi Gabbard faces a fresh round of exceedingly difficult questions about the influence of her âguru,â itâs also worth asking the 52 Senate Republicans (including alleged "moderates" like Susan Collins) who ignored every red flag and voted to confirm her to serve as DNI:
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-06-23T18:49:58.260Z
Any regrets?
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/tulsi-gabbard-guru-dni
Gabbard, who wrapped up her tenure as DNI last week, has long insisted that any suggestion that she was somehow enthralled to or controlled by this sect or its leader, whom she has referred to as her guru, is just bigotry against her faith.
But its against this backdrop that The Washington Post obtained hundreds of secret memos prepared for Gabbard during her congressional tenure, which were put together by members of the alleged cult and which included thousands of pages of specific directives to her on policy and politics.
After careful analysis of thousands of these documents, which have not been independently verified by MS NOW, the Post determined that they likely came from Gabbards secretive guru, a man named Chris Butler......
This week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer spoke on the Senate floor and commented on the reporting:
There are reports that Tulsi Gabbard was receiving instructions from a so-called guru and repeating them word for word. That ought to concern all of us if its true. No one knows who this guru really is, what his connections are, and where the instructions came from. We need answers.
.....It stands to reason, for example, that Gabbard has some explaining to do, but Im also interested in the answers from those who elevated her to an influential intelligence office in the first place.
In February 2025, confronted with an avalanche of reasons to reject Gabbards nomination, 52 Senate Republicans every GOP member except Kentuckys Mitch McConnell shrugged off every red flag and voted to confirm her as the nations DNI, including so-called moderates such as Maines Susan Collins and Alaskas Lisa Murkowski.
The question for these 52 senators seems obvious: Do you regret that confirmation vote and now recognize it as a mistake? Or do you still think it was a good idea to put Gabbard in this influential intelligence position?
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,882 posts)Gabbard was a puppet and obey the instructions of her guru
MS NOW's Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski expressed shock over a new report exposing the decades-long influence of Tulsi Gabbard's religious mentor over her political career. "It is a Hare Krishna-styled group that many people have compared to a cult."
— Raw Story (@rawstory.com) 2026-06-22T16:30:04Z
https://www.rawstory.com/tulsi-gabbard-cult-ms-now
Gabbard recently stepped down as President Donald Trump's director of national intelligence after serving as a Democratic congresswoman, but the Washington Post reported over the weekend that that she has been guided every step of the way by eccentric religious leader Chris Butler, head of a Hare Krishna breakaway group called the Science of Identity Foundation.
"Some people call it a cult," Scarborough said.
A former member of the group provided Post reporter Jonathan Swaine with thousands of emails and documents that revealed Butler's advisory role to Gabbard, who had been asked about her relationship with the guru during her confirmation hearings.
"Dozens of attached memos appeared to document directives and advice for Gabbard from her time in Congress," Swaine reported. "Some contained instructions on what legislation she should propose, which policies she should embrace, and how she should conduct herself on television. They had an air of authority."
The reporter compared Gabbard's remarks in 32 television interviews between 2014 and 2016 and found she used language that was nearly verbatim to Butler's talking points memos, and Scarborough was stunned.
"It is a Hare Krishna-styled group that many people have compared to a cult," he said. "People don't suggest that being in a Hare Krishna group is the same as being in a cult, but in this case, when you have something that may be a spinoff of that and a cult-like leader advising members of Congress how to speak, how to, how to put forward legislation, how how to style their hair. There's a problem here."