Like most Americans, she bought into the hype [America, the land of the free], but eventually awoke.
It paints a truly sickening picture. Sibel provides details on FBI-Executive-Congressional-Judiciary lawlessness and deceit. Big time; decency and peoples' lives and welfare be damned; 'law' is what the deciders say it is, from one moment to the next. The U.S.A's congress & CIA are dealing drugs, weapons & nuclear secrets - all for personal gain; your dime. It's also your dime that pays for those militarized police that beat you up on the street, and lock you up for protesting (home-grown terrorism).

The" right-left",or better said Democrat & Republican's, dicotomy is a charade, a distraction for the DC pick-pockets - as Sibel finds in her journey thru the labyrinth. 

"The Book the Government Doesn't Want You to Read is a Book Everyone Must Read"

A Surreal Journey into the Heart of the Beast Called the Police State

"In this startling new memoir, Sibel Edmonds--the most classified woman in U.S. history--takes us on a surreal journey that begins with the secretive FBI and down the dark halls of a feckless Congress to a stonewalling judiciary and finally, to the national security whistleblowers movement she spearheaded. Having lived under Middle East dictatorships [Turkey], Edmonds knows firsthand what can happen when government is allowed to operate in secret.

Hers is a sobering perspective that combines painful experience with a rallying cry for the public's right to know and to hold the lawbreakers accountable. With U.S. citizens increasingly stripped of their rights in a calibrated media blackout, Edmonds' story is a wake-up call for all Americans who, willingly or unwillingly, traded liberty for illusive security in the wake of 9/11"
Democrackers, Repuglicans, Liberals  are All  partisan/election fixated citizens
"Edmonds must feel a bit like Alice at the tea party, where justice is not being served, and where a secret is a secret but why it's a secret or who says it's a secret is a secret, and we can't tell you why because it's a secret"
Editorial, Seattle Post