Closing the tabs ...
Congress quickly and smoothly certified President-elect Donald Trump’s election victory Monday, a contrast to four years earlier, when a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol and temporarily halted the confirmation of President Biden’s win.
Unlike in 2021, when the proceedings stretched out over two days, no objections were raised. No angry crowd gathered and no lawmakers were evacuated. The proceedings wrapped up in well under an hour. But tensions over the violence of that day, which led to Trump’s second impeachment, continued to simmer.
Ed: Only because Democrats and the Protection Racket Media have a vested interest in stoking those tensions. Everywhere one looks, both keep insisting on reliving it for political purposes, even after American voters just delivered their final judgment on a one-time riot that didn't do anything to stop the transfer of power. Congress addressed the statutory deficiencies that led to the dispute in 2022, and this election delivered a far more definitive result.
===
Election Denier Hakeem Jeffries invokes Pearl Harbor to commemorate J6: "A day that will forever live in infamy."
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) January 6, 2025
🥴 pic.twitter.com/F5fvTo7yga
===
“Pardoning such crimes would contradict Mr. Trump’s support for law and order ...”
On the contrary, it would fit quite well.
That’s because the political slogan signifies applying the law’s blunt force to certain people and not to others, rather than a straightforward application of the law to all people, in all circumstances, no matter the consequences.
So in the context of Jan. 6, relieving certain people (i.e., Trump supporters) of the law’s blunt force, even if they assaulted the law’s enforcers, wouldn’t therefore contradict the “law and order” mantra. If anything, it could be its ultimate application.
Ed: We've already seen this "not to others" in action. The DoJ dropped all charges against the Antifa rioter of January 20, 2017, not to mention had much less enthusiasm for addressing "insurrection" in cities during 2020, when rioters seized control of whole neighborhoods for months on end. The J6 rioters broke the law, but they have been singled out for very aggressive pursuit and prosecution, as the data below shows.
===
This is not a clip from four years ago or even four months ago. Sunny Hostin THIS MORNING compares J6 to WW2, the Holocaust, and slavery:
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) January 6, 2025
"J6 was one of the worst moments in American history, like World War Two, the Holocaust, slavery."
🤡🤡 pic.twitter.com/2JOAlH8Pmr
===
===
Enrique Tarrio, the former Proud Boys chairman who is serving 22 years in federal prison after he was convicted of seditious conspiracy in relation to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack, is asking President-elect Donald Trump for a presidential pardon.
Nayib Hassan, Tarrio’s lawyer, wrote a letter to Trump on the fourth anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack asking for “a full and complete Presidential Pardon” from the president-elect who has vowed to pardon some rioters after he takes office on Jan. 20.
Ed: Trump has been careful to watch his language on this question. He has hinted at broad clemency for non-violent defendants/convicts, but that doesn't necessarily mean full pardons. He might just commute those sentences, and may not do anything for those who organized the more aggressive parts of the J6 riots.
===
My gosh look at J6 2021.
— Insurrection Barbie (@DefiyantlyFree) January 6, 2025
Wait, nope just kidding.
This was Trump’s first inauguration.
Every charge against every one of the people who did this was dropped. pic.twitter.com/F3y4MlRzkq
===
===
We tallied the cumulative charges obtained by prosecutors. Cumulatively, Capitol riot defendants have been sentenced to:
- About 1,300 years in prison for more than 650 defendants
- An additional 1,100 years of probation and 1,100 years of supervised release
- A total of 55 years of home detention and about four years of community service
- More than $1.2 million in both restitution and fines
Those numbers, it’s worth mentioning, reflect defendants who were resentenced after the Supreme Court struck down the government’s use of an obstruction statute in Capitol riot cases. About half of those given prison terms were sentenced to nine months or less. The average sentence, though, is nearly two years, thanks to more than 200 sentences that exceed that duration.
Ed: And how many people were prosecuted and sentenced similarly for their roles in the Inauguration Day riots in 2017 that attempted to block Trump from taking office? Answer: zero. I don't have a problem with prosecuting people who break the law, but the problem is that these laws get selectively enforced, both at the state and federal levels.
===
I believe if we hadn’t gone through J6 and the ensuing 4 years of lectures about a fake insurrection, progressives would be rioting everywhere today. Democrats have even managed to neuter their insane base. It’s remarkable. pic.twitter.com/c3m2p1orlN
— Kira (@RealKiraDavis) January 6, 2025
===
Join the conversation as a VIP Member