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There were violent and rambunctious individuals who were overcharged and over sentenced. However, there is a lack of action against Antifa and those who attacked life clinics. They have even tried to infiltrate the Catholic church and targeted parents. One specific case involves a 70-year-old man with no criminal history who was charged with obstructing a congressional proceeding. He faces a 14-year prison sentence for this bogus charge.

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The speaker argues that the nation is heading toward a civil war due to irreconcilable political and ideological divides that are deepening. They claim the Democratic Party is becoming more radical and that every current issue hinges on illegal immigration. Specific points raised include the belief that Democrats want to spend a trillion dollars on healthcare, push for a census to counsel for congressional racism, and advocate electoral changes or mass deportations in cities like Portland, Chicago, and Los Angeles. According to the speaker, without illegal aliens or foreign entities in the country, Democrats cannot assemble votes, despite loving democracy, because the mathematical reality doesn’t work for them. The speaker notes contemporaneous political tensions, including a Supreme Court decision and redistricting fights, comparing those fights to “kids in this chat room.” They assert that with enough urgency and a maximal strategy, the 21 would already be on the table and a plan would be executed, but that the establishment resists because it wants to remain part of the established order. They claim this dynamic has persisted for forty to fifty years, and that although Republicans have won control of the House, Senate, and presidency at times, the country remains “on a cliff of an abyss.” They credit Trump with preventing the country from collapsing, suggesting that without him “the country be over.” The speaker predicts worsening partisan conflict, citing perceived left-wing escalation and examples like a Kansas dynamic where people are “thrown under the bus” and treated as unworthy of forgiveness. They describe the left as moving up an escalatory ladder, and refer to Mondami as a “Marxist jihadist” who might win by roughly 15 points. In New York City, they reference Sadiq Khan and describe everything the left has as more radical than anticipated, asserting a widening chasm and a lack of meaningful debate. Regarding strategy, the speaker criticizes the Trump administration, including Pam Bondi, for not moving quickly enough. They acknowledge a recent Oval Office discussion about stopping street violence as positive but insist the focus must be on the deep state: taking the administrative apparatus, leveraging a short window of time, prioritizing and expanding hires for U.S. attorneys, and ensuring arrests translate into durable outcomes. Without this, they warn, good arrests will be undermined by future waves of bad actors returning. The call is to maximize strategy, seize institutions, and act with urgency.

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The speaker, a former US congressman, believes that Congress needs to take action to reform the government. Currently, Congress either passes massive spending bills without reading them or relies on continuing resolutions to keep the government running. This lack of oversight allows administrative agencies like the DOJ and FBI to accumulate power without being held accountable. The speaker argues that these agencies should not be considered independent of the White House, as they report to the elected president. Congress has also failed to use its power of the purse to rein in these agencies. The speaker urges Congress to prioritize its duty to ensure constitutional accountability over concerns about government shutdowns or bad news cycles.

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"I think we'll eventually get there." "the folks who stayed up all night to go through the 34,000 individual pages have found that they're so redacted as to be useless and that many of them were already available." "the scope of their investigation is to investigate the investigators." "they don't ever intend to have any criminal referrals." "but they're not going in and trying to identify who these perpetrators were of these heinous sexual abuse crimes." "Well, I made the mistake of getting 12 cosponsors and the so the White House knew who to target." "So I'm not gonna name anybody who's thinking about joining." "They're literally calling it a hostile act to sign this discharge petition now."

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The White House has to be responsive to Congress. The speaker discusses working with Democratic allies to pressure the administration. The speaker also mentions appointees to top-level positions.

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The speaker accuses Mr. Graves of abusing his position by prosecuting over 1,000 people involved in the January 6th incident and planning to arrest 1,000 more. They highlight a specific case of Matthew Perna, who peacefully entered the Capitol for 20 minutes without assaulting anyone or causing damage. Despite cooperating with the FBI and pleading guilty, Mr. Graves requested more prison time for Perna. Tragically, Perna later died by suicide. The speaker argues that the Department of Justice should stop being weaponized and focus on prosecuting real criminals. They announce their intention to introduce articles of impeachment against Mr. Graves.

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I am introducing articles of impeachment on Mr. Graves for weaponizing the Department of Justice and refusing to prosecute real criminals in Washington DC. The abuse of power has made DC residents victims. I yield back my time.

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Marxists, Islamists, and the administration have convinced a Washington DC jury to convict 5 pro-life activists who now face up to 11 years in prison for protesting. Meanwhile, individuals with different political beliefs are being sentenced to 10, 15, and even 20 years in prison. Antifa and other groups have caused chaos in cities like Portland, Minneapolis, and Seattle, engaging in violence, looting, and even taking over parts of the city. This political repression is immoral, un-American, and dangerous. If elected, the speaker promises to appoint a special task force to review the cases of unjustly persecuted political prisoners and sign their pardons or commutations on day 1.

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- Kibbe on Liberty hosts Congressman Thomas Massey for part one of a mega episode focusing on the FBI-identified pipe bomber in the January 6 events and the anomalies in the official narrative; Massey argues he does not believe one loner acted alone. - Massey discusses prior coverage and context, noting a Steve Baker interview that documented inconsistencies in the official narrative. He points to fallout from that interview: a Capitol Hill Police official, who was third in command, resigned the day after the interview; another whistleblower contacted Massey about that officer, suggesting misconduct unrelated to the pipe bomb but part of a larger pattern of investigations. - Massey argues that the FBI’s announcement of a suspect came about a week after that interview and after reporting by The Blaze, and suggests the timing is suspicious. He says this coincidence is surprising and potentially a red flag, given that the investigation had been deemed inconclusive or dormant for years. - Massey emphasizes his own context: his staffer on the Hill watched hours of video to identify who found the second pipe bomb; he asserts that the individuals who found the second bomb should be considered suspects, and that the FBI admitted this to him. He recounts efforts with Kevin McCarthy to release video showing how the second pipe bomb was found, noting that those who found it were very lucky to locate it quickly. - He describes other connections and leads: his staffer now works for Kash Patel; Massey has spoken with a counter-surveillance officer who found the pipe bomb and with the officer’s handler, a Capitol Hill Police member who had previously worked for the ATF and later for Metro Police and Capitol Hill Police. He also mentions conversing with the assistant FBI director in charge of the Washington field office, in a transcribed interview with Jim Jordan about why cell phone data wasn’t used to geolocate the suspect (the provider allegedly corrupted data, which the judiciary committee and Barry Loudermilk’s committee disputed). - Massey references a 100-page report from Barry Loudermilk’s committee on the pipe bomb investigation, noting leads the FBI did not follow. He mentions a lead about an individual in Falls Church, Virginia (a former military man now in government service) whose metro card was used on January 5 and January 6; this person’s childhood friend allegedly used the metro card to approach the RNC/Capitol Hill Club area and take photographs near the pipe bomb sites. Massey asserts this person of interest, plus a neighbor who shared a wall with him, could be connected to others the FBI has not fully explored. - He contends that the arrest appears to derail other investigations and interviews that were being planned. He asserts that a “pro-Trump” motive has not been established for the suspect, contrasting the media’s framing with details such as the suspect’s My Little Pony interest and parental political donations. - Massey criticizes the prosecutor in the case, Jocelyn Ballantine, and recounts concerns about her track record (including involvement in the Flynn case, the Proud Boys case, and alleged attempts to obtain confessions implicating Trump). He questions why she remains at the DOJ. - They discuss broader concerns about FBI politicization and surveillance: Massey references reporters and contact with Kash Patel’s team to argue for cleaning house at the FBI, but notes Ballantine remains in place. He describes eight senators discovering they had been spied on, leading to a legislative push: in the last continuing resolution, lawmakers added a half-million-dollar payout and standing to sue the government for surveillance abuses, a provision he characterizes as carving exemptions out of the law; he says this was supported by most lawmakers, who voted for the CR due to Trump concerns. - They debate possible explanations for the pipe bomber case: the possibility that the FBI identified the suspect and cleared him, prompting no arrest due to exonerating information; or the possibility of a false narrative crafted by others to preserve the January 6 prosecution framework; or the involvement of a patsy or rogue actor. - Massey reiterates his three things he said on Twitter: the bomber was a lone wolf (which he disputes); the FBI was unwittingly incompetent for four years (which he says he questions and calls a cover-up); and it was not a Trump supporter. He stresses the need for more transcribed interviews and explanations from the FBI and ongoing oversight to uncover the full truth. - The discussion shifts toward Epstein files coverage and the broader goal of maintaining public pressure for transparency. They indicate a plan to release a separate bonus episode focusing on Epstein files.

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The White House has to be responsive to Congress. The speaker discusses working with Democratic allies to pressure the administration. The speaker also mentions appointees to top-level positions.

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I'm frustrated with Merrick Garland using the Department of Justice for political purposes instead of impartially enforcing the law. It's time to stop complaining and take action. I'm announcing that I will hold all Department of Justice nominees accountable, because Garland will use them to harass political opponents. We need to halt this department until Garland promises to do his job and stop targeting political adversaries. Donald Trump is just one example. We've seen Catholic fathers harassed for pro-life activism, while violent criminals walk free after the 2020 riots. Harassing Christian parents while letting criminals go is pure politics, not justice. Let's slow down this department until Garland changes course and does his job correctly.

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The speaker met with Mr. Martin, who seems like a good man. The speaker's concerns related to January 6th. Mr. Martin built a compelling case regarding some prosecutions that were heat-of-the-moment bad decisions. The speaker believes anyone who reached the perimeter on January 6th should have been imprisoned for some period of time and has no tolerance for anyone who entered the building. Mr. Martin explained how some people got caught up in it, making a stupid decision to enter a breached building. The speaker's issue isn't whether they should be charged, but by how much. The speaker believes what happened on January 6th was wrong, not prompted by others, and those involved disgraced the United States. Mr. Martin explained that some people were over-prosecuted, and the speaker agreed that some should not have been pardoned. The speaker would support Mr. Martin as a US attorney for any district except the one where January 6th happened and has indicated to the White House that they wouldn't support his nomination.

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The speaker discusses the January 6th committee's legitimacy and the need to hold members of Congress accountable for any criminal activity related to it. They suggest investigating those who aided in suppressing evidence. The speaker emphasizes defeating the deep state for accountability, mentioning issues like the 51 intel letter and Hunter Biden's laptop. They predict a significant change in Washington after the truth is revealed, leading to internal accountability for criminal behavior.

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Speaker 1, Julie Kelly, asserts that the new leadership at the DOJ and FBI may not be aware of who Jocelyn Ballantyne is, describing her as lead prosecutor who "led the team of government lawyers, DOJ lawyers, who went after the Proud Boys" and labeling her as "among the worst of the worst." Kelly references her experience covering the Proud Boys trial in 2023 and states that Ballantyne was near the top of Kelly’s list of j-six prosecutors who should be fired. Kelly recounts a scandal from the Proud Boys trial involving a spreadsheet of FBI correspondence in which agents discussed destroying evidence, surveilling, and eavesdropping on communications between Proud Boys who were in pretrial detention federal prison and their attorneys. She notes that the defense, during the trial, discovered this spreadsheet accidentally and intended to use the information as evidence. According to Kelly, the defense attempted to question an FBI agent who was a government witness and planned to present what they found in the spreadsheet. She describes that, as the defense began to present this evidence, Judge Tim Kelly—who, she says, is good friends with Jocelyn Ballantyne and had worked with her in the DC U.S. attorney’s office on cases—abruptly cut off the questioning. A day or two later, Ballantyne went into court and claimed that the communication represented classified secrets and should be withheld from the jury, a move Kelly characterizes as being aligned with Ballantyne’s actions. Kelly asserts that Judge Kelly went along with this claim to withhold the information. Kelly emphasizes that Ballantyne led the team of prosecutors against the Proud Boys, who were convicted of seditious conspiracy. She notes that Ballantyne then pursued severe sentences, including some defendants receiving life terms, such as Lindsay Attario, who Kelly says ended up with a twenty-two year prison sentence before those sentences were commuted by the president. Speaker 0 interjects multiple times with questions and expressions of disbelief, urging Julie Kelly to explain how such actions could be true and challenging the notion that Ballantyne’s conduct was inappropriate, while Kelly maintains that the described conduct and the actions taken by Ballantyne and the DOJ were part of the Proud Boys prosecutions and related cases.

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Right wing domestic terrorists are targeting us and plan to maintain power even after the president leaves office. We must prioritize diversity, inclusion, and community protection. I have to leave to testify on impeachment, something I've been advocating for since this president was elected. Thank you.

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The White House has to be responsive to Congress. The speaker discusses working with Democratic allies to apply pressure to the administration. The speaker also mentions appointees to top-level jobs.

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Congressman: The Department of Justice has unfairly treated whistleblowers like Mr. Allen. Mr. Allen: The treatment is unfair, and the process felt like the punishment. Mr. Horowitz: Putting someone like Mr. Allen on unpaid leave for over two years is unfair. Congressman: The process was to punish whistleblowers and make an example of them for reporting improper actions at the FBI and DOJ. Congress has not appropriately protected whistleblowers, and continuing resolutions put no consequence on the DOJ or FBI for their actions. Congress should ensure whistleblowers receive back pay; otherwise, maybe the FBI director and attorney general shouldn't get their paychecks or perks. Voting for these continuing resolutions perpetuates the punishment of whistleblowers, and Congress underwrites the weaponization of the Justice Department.

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Kash Patel is unqualified to be FBI director, having previously suggested shutting down FBI headquarters to open a museum for conspiracy theories. His rise reflects a troubling trend of rewarding sycophants. Regarding January 6 pardons, there’s deep concern about pardoning individuals who violently attacked police and tried to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power. This contradicts the public's desire for action against crime, not political revenge. As for potential prosecutions of January 6 committee members, there's pride in their oversight work, making preemptive pardons unnecessary. Setting a precedent for blanket pardons at the end of an administration is also undesirable. This message has been communicated to President Biden both publicly and privately.

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Speaker urges a safe city and capital, thanking the president and attorney general, and says criminals must understand they won’t get away with it. He cites violent crime by gangs, claims laws are weak, and that “I can't touch you if you're 14, 15, 16, 17 years old and you have a gun.” He recalls convicting someone who shot another person with an illegal gun on a public bus; “Intent to kill? I convict him. And you know what the judge gives him? Probation.” He calls to end “no cash bail” and to challenge the DC counsel, insisting the focus is on law-abiding citizens. He vows the president will “do everything we need to do to make sure that these emboldened criminals understand, we see you, we’re watching you, and we’re gonna change the law to catch you.” He notes “the jurisdiction is through the state attorney general, Brian Schwab” and references a poster about a beaten youth and family court “yoga and arts and crafts.” Enough. It changes today.

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Survivors in the room stood and raised their hands to indicate they have not yet met with the Department of Justice. The Congresswoman urges Attorney General Bondi to apologize to the survivors for the DOJ’s handling of the Epstein files, calling the release of the Epstein files and their information “absolutely unacceptable.” She asks Bondi to turn to the survivors and apologize, stating this is about Bondi taking responsibility for the Department of Justice and the harm it has caused. The exchange continues with the Congresswoman insisting that Merrick Garland has sat in that chair twice, and she questions whether Bondi will respond to the survivors, not to those who predated Bondi. The Congresswoman reiterates, “This is not about anybody that came before you. It is about you taking responsibility for your Department of Justice and the harm that it has done to the survivors who are standing right behind you and are waiting for you to turn to them and apologize for what your Department of Justice is.” The hearing appears to encounter procedural friction. The Congresswoman complains that the question is not being answered as expected, accusing the proceedings of theatrics, while another member clarifies that witnesses answer in the way they choose. The chair and other members intervene to maintain “regular order.” The Congresswoman asserts that the situation represents “a massive cover up,” accusing then-President Donald Trump of making the release of the Epstein files a center of his political campaign because he thought it would benefit him. She claims that Bondi’s office claimed to have a client list, but says there was no list, and alleges that Deputy Todd Blanche met alone with Elaine Maxwell and “transferred her to a minimum security prison.” She insists that Bondi should turn to the survivors who are standing behind him on a human level. The chair interrupts and remarks that time has been delayed, noting that the gentlewoman has time remaining but the session ends with a reflection that the general has done something, though the exact action is not specified in the excerpt. The session ends with an acknowledgment of the time constraints and appreciation for the discussion.

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The situation surrounding January 6 defendants has resulted in immense suffering, with some individuals taking their own lives and families being torn apart. There’s no way to compensate for the damage done. Accountability is crucial; for instance, U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves should face disbarment and potential criminal referrals for his actions against these individuals. Judges in Washington, D.C., have misused their authority, imprisoning people who weren’t even in the Capitol, labeling them as terrorists. Members of Congress involved in the January 6 committee, like Liz Cheney and Bennie Thompson, should also be scrutinized. While progress has been slow, there’s hope for more accountability now that there’s a shift in power. However, as one of 435 members, the ability to enact change is limited.

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The speakers discuss the impact of recent court rulings on January 6 defendants. They mention the misuse of a specific statute by the DOJ, resulting in unjust imprisonment. They predict that the DOJ may still pursue charges despite the court's ruling. Recommendations include investigating collaboration between the DOJ and courts and potentially impeaching judges involved. For more information, visit Julie Kelly's substack and social media. The conversation touches on the need for accountability and justice in the legal system.

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The speaker states there is a tremendous amount of fraud, waste, and abuse. Elon is thanked for his partnership in uncovering fraud in the government, and the speaker claims those who have committed fraud will be prosecuted. Thanks to President Trump's directive, the speaker says they are seeking the death penalty again for violent criminals. Drug dealers are told to leave, because the 94 US Attorneys around the country will prosecute everyone to the fullest extent of the law.

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The speaker discusses the importance of video evidence and suggests making everyone deputies to uncover undercover individuals. They mention the pipe bomber and the need to stand up for freedoms. They express concern about tyranny in Washington, DC and propose using the budgetary process to hold people accountable. The speaker mentions Alinsky's rule for radicals and why some people hate Donald Trump. Speaker 1 adds that the DOJ is already using videos to target individuals. They emphasize the need for citizen journalists to uncover the truth and mention reports of people putting on wristbands. They argue that waiting for the DOJ to take action is not effective.

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I am introducing articles of impeachment on Mr. Graves for weaponizing the Department of Justice and refusing to prosecute real criminals in Washington DC. The residents of DC are victims of his abuse of power.
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