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Ex-CIA Operator Plans to Leave United States Between 2030 and 2035

Everyday Spy · Ultimate CIA Survival Guide: Top Mistakes To Avoid · June 26, 2026
Ex-CIA Operator Plans to Leave United States Between 2030 and 2035
Everyday Spy
Everyday Spy
Ultimate CIA Survival Guide: Top Mistakes To Avoid
"We know that come 2030, we're leaving. Not because we're waiting for some sort of tipping point, but because between 2030 and 2035, there will be a tipping point. And I would rather observe that tipping point from the stands rather than be on the field."
A former CIA officer announced his family is definitively relocating abroad by 2030, anticipating a major geopolitical or domestic tipping point within the following five years. He advised listeners not to wait for crisis signals but to set hard calendar deadlines for relocation, drawing parallels to Jews who waited too long to flee in World War II.

About this episode

In this wide-ranging conversation, a former CIA operative with his spouse still under cover discussed survival tactics, intelligence agency operations, and geopolitical preparation with the host. The guest, who now runs Everyday Spy teaching CIA methodologies to civilians, revealed that tier 1 operators are trained never to shelter in place during disasters—directly contradicting mainstream prepping culture—because mobility allows continuous resource acquisition rather than reliance on finite stockpiles. The discussion covered bug-out bag tiers for 24-hour, 72-hour, and indefinite escape scenarios, with practical breakdowns of contents and strategy for each. A major revelation came when the guest announced his family plans to definitively leave the United States by 2030, anticipating a geopolitical or domestic tipping point between 2030 and 2035, advising listeners to set hard calendar dates rather than wait for warning signs, drawing explicit parallels to Jews who delayed fleeing Nazi Germany. The conversation shifted to intelligence community structure, where the guest explained CIA has zero legal authority to collect on U.S. citizens, even radicalized ones, while FBI handles domestic threats. He exposed a critical flaw: the 18 intelligence agencies cannot effectively share information because each speaks incompatible internal languages, causing routine dismissal of partner intelligence. The guest compared modern peacetime intelligence operations to corporate business intelligence, arguing they prevent costly hot wars through strategic maneuvering and deterrence. The episode concluded with discussion of the guest's lifetime secrecy agreement, his ongoing legal obligations to protect classified methods and sources, and how Everyday Spy teaches CIA psychological principles across five life pillars: mindset, physical health, career, romance, and personal security.

Key takeaways

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