Boy, I leave the mic for, what, a year, year and a half, and the whole country falls apart.
Have you seen this kind of chaos?
Really?
Pro-Hamas protesters at Yale, at Columbia, pro-Hamas protesters blocking the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, blocking the ability of people to go to O'Hare Airport in Chicago.
And the media are referring to them as pro-Palestinian protesters.
They're not.
They're pro-Hamas protesters.
When you demand a ceasefire without demanding that at least the hostages be released, you're pro-Hamas.
From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.
You go down there and you ask these protesters, what river are you talking about?
What sea are you talking about?
It rhymes.
And you got all these trials the former president now is enduring.
I mean, even the nitwits over at CNN and MSNB, he all can't figure out exactly what the one in New York is all about.
They're calling it a hush money trial.
Even if he paid hush money, is that criminal?
Now remember, this DA, Alvin Bragg, ran promising, promising to get Trump.
I'm a lawyer, and for a brief time I worked for the LA County DA's office.
And a prosecutor is supposed to do justice.
A prosecutor is not supposed to get certain people.
Alan Dershowitz, who's also been critical of these trials, wrote a book several years ago called The Best Defense.
And in the book he talked about the difference between a criminal defense lawyer and a prosecutor.
And he said a criminal defense lawyer's job is not to let the truth come out.
The job is to get the client the best possible deal, the best possible outcome.
A prosecutor is supposed to do justice.
And the canons of ethics require a prosecutor to avoid any kind of appearance of bias or conflict.
When you run promising to nail somebody, Before you've taken one word of testimony, it sounds to me like a bit of a bias here.
And both the AG of New York, Letitia James, did that.
Alvin Bragg did that.
Fonnie Willis, the DA in Fulton County, Georgia, did that.
All promising to get Donald Trump.
Now, this business about Donald Trump being an election denier is kind of the focus of what...
The January 6th trial is going to be about if it ever takes place.
As you know, there was a riot on January 6th.
About 400 people were arrested.
Not a single one was charged with insurrection.
Not one.
And certainly President Trump was not charged with insurrection, let alone convicted of it.
Yet he is routinely referred to by People on CNN, which I watch so you don't have to, as an insurrectionist, as an election denier.
Drives me insane!
2000. Al Gore loses to George W. Bush.
He now says, Al Gore, that he believes that the election was unfair.
And that Supreme Court essentially put George W. Bush there.
And that following January, there were about 12 House members that urged the vice president during the certification procedure not to certify the state of Florida, claiming that the count should not have stopped.
Four years later, same thing.
This time, 30 House members, including the insurrection chairman, Benny Thompson, Prevent Ohio from being decertified, claiming that the Diebold voting machine had been tampered with.
2016, they challenged more states, nine, than Donald Trump did following the election of 2020 when he challenged six.
Nobody called them insurrectionists.
Nobody accused them of being election deniers.
The double standard is so glaring it is insulting.
You'd think even people on the left would be offended.