Politics
J6 Pardons: Ending an Injustice
Thumbs up: Former Florida Oath Keepers chief Kelly Meggs gives a big thumbs up on his first day of freedom. He had served four years of a 12-year sentence.

J6 Pardons: Ending an Injustice

President Trump’s pardoning of the January 6 prisoners ends the “grave national injustice” committed by Democrats and others on the Left during Biden’s term in office. ...
William F. Jasper and Rebecca Terrell
Article audio sponsored by The John Birch Society

January 20 is our country’s new Independence Day. After endless hours of incessant inauguration festivities, sycophantic speeches, and ceremonial signings that evening, President Donald J. Trump made his way to the White House, where he issued pardons for those he accurately called “hostages.” 

“So this is January 6, and these are the hostages,” he said, opening one of the portfolios stacked in the Oval Office. “Approximately 1,500 for a pardon — full pardon.”

One by one phones started ringing — the phones of nail-biting friends and families across the country who had been waiting for this moment for four years.

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