Jim & Bill

(It' Another Day) 

Podcast

 

 

We Speak Truth!

 

Truth be told, now — no filters, no fences, no fear.

 

Welcome to Right Side Shop 

 

At Right Side Shop, we’re all about bold choices

Stand Proud with Every Purchase

and patriotic pride!

 

 

 

On May 15, 2025, former FBI Director James Comey posted a seemingly innocent Instagram photo of seashells arranged in the shape of "8647," captioned "Cool shell formation on my beach walk." But for a nation still reeling from two assassination attempts on President Trump, the image ignited a firestorm. Trump supporters saw a sinister code: "86" as slang for "get rid of," paired with "47," a nod to Trump as the 47th president. Comey, who has a long history of clashing with Trump—fired in 2017 amid the Russia investigation—quickly deleted the post, claiming he didn’t realize the numbers could be linked to violence. Yet, the timing raises eyebrows: May 15 marks exactly 8,647 days since September 11, 2001, a date seared into America’s memory. For a man of Comey’s background, who once led the FBI through coded threats and intelligence puzzles, the coincidence feels too precise to dismiss as a beachside whim.

Enter Juan O. Savin, a shadowy figure in the QAnon orbit who’s been stirring the pot of conspiracy for years. Known legally as Wayne Willott, Savin has built a following with his cryptic, insider-style rhetoric, often hinting at deep-state machinations. Some of his followers cling to a wild theory that he’s John F. Kennedy Jr., despite the latter’s well-documented death in 1999. Savin’s alias, often interpreted as "John 007" for its James Bond flair, has fueled speculation about hidden meanings. But what if "107" isn’t just a spy reference? Could it point to a date—January 7, the birthday of JFK Jr.’s wife, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy? Savin’s history of pushing election fraud narratives and founding the America First Secretary of State Coalition shows he’s no stranger to playing long games with symbolic gestures. While the JFK Jr. rumors may stretch credulity, the date connection adds a layer of intrigue to an already murky puzzle.

The overlap between Comey’s "8647" and Savin’s "107" isn’t just numerical—it’s thematic. Both men, in their own ways, have positioned themselves as thorns in the side of the establishment, whether through Comey’s bureaucratic defiance or Savin’s fringe provocations. Comey’s post, now under investigation by the Secret Service and DHS, has drawn fierce reactions from Trump allies like Tulsi Gabbard, who called for his arrest, and Donald Trump Jr., who labeled it a direct threat. Meanwhile, Savin’s cryptic persona continues to inspire those who see hidden hands behind every political move. The fact that 8,647 days from 9/11 lands on the exact day of Comey’s post, paired with the speculative January 7 link to Savin, feels like a signal to those who believe the deep state operates in shadows—using dates, numbers, and symbols to communicate where the public can’t follow.

For conservatives, this isn’t about tinfoil hats—it’s about pattern recognition. The left might scoff at connecting these dots, but they’ve spent years ignoring the rot in their own institutions while crying "conspiracy" at anyone who questions the narrative. Comey’s history of playing fast and loose with power—think of his role in the Clinton email saga or the Trump-Russia probe—makes his "I didn’t know" excuse ring hollow. Savin, for all his eccentricities, taps into a real frustration with a system that seems rigged against the average American. Whether these numbers are coded messages, calls to action, or just cosmic coincidences, they reflect a deeper unease: a nation on edge, where trust in leaders is fractured, and every symbol feels loaded with intent.

So where does this leave us? Maybe Comey’s shells were just a fluke, and Savin’s "107" is nothing more than a clever alias. But in a world where political violence looms large and the deep state’s fingerprints seem to be everywhere, conservatives aren’t wrong to ask questions. The dates align too neatly, the players too controversial, for this to feel like chance. As Trump himself said on Fox News, “A child knows what that meant.” Perhaps the real message isn’t in the numbers, but in the uncertainty they breed—a reminder that in the fight for America’s soul, nothing is ever quite what it seems.

Jim And Bill  Jimandbill.com

 

Please like and share this story.  All we ask is credit for content.