Breaking: J.D. Vance Reveals J6 Prisoners’ Fate
With President-elect Donald Trump gearing up for his second term, Vice President-elect J.D. Vance is helping clear the air about Trump’s promise to pardon some of the January 6 protesters. Unsurprisingly, this has Democrats and their media lapdogs foaming at the mouth, clutching their pearls over the idea of accountability cutting both ways.
With President-elect Donald Trump gearing up for his second term, Vice President-elect J.D. Vance is helping clear the air about Trump’s promise to pardon some of the January 6 protesters. Unsurprisingly, this has Democrats and their media lapdogs foaming at the mouth, clutching their pearls over the idea of accountability cutting both ways. Vance, appearing on Fox News Sunday, broke down Trump’s approach to the pardons. “If you protested peacefully on January the sixth and you’ve had Merrick Garland’s Department of Justice treat you like a gang member, you should be pardoned,” he said. “If you committed violence on that day, obviously, you shouldn’t be pardoned.” In other words, common sense is making a comeback—something the left hasn’t seen since Reagan. The numbers speak volumes. Out of some 1,600 people charged for their actions that day, many were hit with minor charges like trespassing. But under Merrick Garland’s Justice Department, these people have been treated like hardened criminals, all for daring to question the establishment narrative. Meanwhile, violent offenders from 2020’s summer of riots got a pass. The contrast is glaring. Jan. 6 has become the left’s favorite obsession, a political weapon used to vilify Trump supporters while conveniently ignoring their own complicity in years of chaos and violence. Trump has remained steadfast, reiterating, “I didn’t do anything wrong,” and he’s right. The January 6 Committee, a partisan kangaroo court, spent millions trying to fabricate a case against him. Yet, in a poetic twist, special prosecutor Jack Smith dismissed his case against Trump just weeks after Trump crushed Kamala Harris in the November election.
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