It is never the pretext—putative Russian collusion or protests at the Capitol—that is at issue but rather the ontological unacceptability of Trump and all he stands for.
The partisan antics of the January 6 committee should not be mistaken for a serious investigation to uncover why the Capitol was left so woefully unprotected by those in charge of Capitol security.
You know things aren’t right when even people who attempt to cooperate are attacked, and when documents given to the committee are leaked, and in some instances doctored, by the committee.
Americans feel that ordinary citizens like themselves who follow the rules are treated more harshly by their own government than are both noncitizens and our own progressive elites.
A sham congressional committee working with a corrupt Justice Department boosted by a dishonest national media can only be expected to create political propaganda.
Since the Tea Party arose in reaction to runaway spending and Obamacare, the U.S. national debt has more than doubled, from less than $12 trillion in 2009 to more than $30 trillion today.
Americans are craving genuine leadership. They won’t get that with weak-kneed Republicans who are looking for openings to compromise with the Democrats on our constitutional rights.
There’s only one rule in D.C. the Justice Department consistently enforces—all laws and norms exist to preserve and extend the Democratic Party’s monopoly over key institutions.
Rewarding the FBI with a half-billion in tax dollars would not just be a slap in the face to Republican voters but also to every victim of the FBI’s shoddy, unaccountable practices.