Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Former President Donald Trump has pledged to quote free the
January six hostages as one of his first acts if
he returns to the White House, which he has returned to.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
The White House.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
This commitment has stirred significant debate and has been a
focal point of his campaign, where he has repeatedly referred
to the January sixth rioters as hostages, warriors, and unbelievable patriots.
Now the public has a reaction to this. Opinions on
this promise are deeply divided. Trump's supporters see this as
(00:41):
the act of justice for those they believe have been
unfairly prosecuted, while critics argue it could undermine the legal
consequences for those involved in the Capitol riot on January sixth,
twenty twenty one. As for legal context, over one thousand,
four hundred individuals have been arrested in connection with the
(01:02):
Capital so called attack, with hundreds sentences to prison terms.
Trump's promise of pardons has led to some defendants requesting
delays in their legal proceedings anticipating clemency.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Now here's a quote quote.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
I am going to be acting very quickly. I'm looking
first day, Trump said in a recent interview indicating his
immediate intention to address the issue upon reelection. Quote, I'm
going to look at everything. We're going to look at
individual cases, he added, suggesting a case by case approach,
but did not rule out partying those who assaulted police officers.
(01:45):
I for one know, and this is my personal opinion,
that although we talked about some of the Biden pardons,
all presidents kind of get to do this in this
case with January sixth, when you have people being prosecuted,
(02:06):
surely because of political partisan reasons this case, the left, Biden,
Kamala Harris, a failure of Nancy and a failure of
the Democrat Party to protect the capital, et cetera. The
blame blame, blame they put on Donald Trump over the years,
(02:30):
the considerable amount of partisanship when it came to calling
MAGA people terrorists, making people lose their jobs, going after
their documents. I for one, went to January sixth. I
(02:51):
left because of they had a curfew.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
I got out of town.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
I did not participate in the stuff that happened afterwards.
I did not go and breach any walls or go
inside of any capital. I didn't even set foot on
the steps of the Capitol. I stayed out in the
area witnessed what was going on. Most things that was
there was recorded, but I did have that council that
(03:19):
reached out to me, and I ignored them because, for one,
I am not off the record talking about what happened
that day, so they can come back and put you
on stand and say, oh, well, you said something differently,
and that's kind of what they've done to like Michael
Flynn and other people.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
They did, however, out of the blue.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Request my phone records from my cell phone company, and
I never got a chance to say, hey, no, of
course there was nothing that they found. I had a
permittent rally during the time, and that's probably why they
did reach out to me, and I don't know what
happened in the background. They never asked me to come
(04:04):
to court. I didn't break any rules or any laws,
so they didn't come to arrest me or anything. I did, however,
potentially lose one job because of it, and I believe
that all January sixth, people who have had problems or
have worried about being arrested over nothing, who have lost jobs,
(04:31):
and who have had their rights taken and harassed by this.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
So called committee should.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Be allowed to, I think, sue the government and there
should be reparations for the January sixth people. And I
do understand that there are some people who have done
some things that are probably warranted some charges, but a
have to compare these still called January sixth people, the
(05:04):
so called rioters, to the Antifa and other individuals who
destroyed Washington d C on the night of the inauguration,
who destroyed Washington d C on multiple places, the individuals
who went into the Heart building and would not leave,
(05:24):
the other protesters that went into government buildings and would
not leave, and thinking about cases like in Seattle where
they did not where they basically took over the capitol,
which is insurrection in my book.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
And to me, as we.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Talk about the demand for equal justice and like they
say no justice, no peace, I would say, if you
want the j six prisoners to be thrown away and
lockway to key one of them in there for one
proud boy member and there Enrique for what thirty five years,
(06:04):
who wasn't allowed to be in DC, who wasn't in DC,
who had a zoom call that people have seen. They
said it was to.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
Work towards trying.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
To conspiracize or whatever, which the Supreme Court had already
said that you can't prosecute on that, But yet that
man still in jail. There are so many people that
have been locked away and they're having their livelihood taken
from them and are going to be in dire straits
(06:40):
even afterwards, that there needs to be repercussions financially to
help those who had problems. And that's what I'm calling for,
and I hope that Donald Trump frees everybody, because at
the end of the day, if one side will condemn
(07:01):
you fully like this and then the other side has
to deal with it, it's not so much a non
it's it's it's real justice being played out because these
people would never have gone far. They would have got
to slap on the wrists like many people and and
riots and where they destroy your property and other places
(07:22):
where people got thrown the things, went to jail and
came right back and got to go right back to
where they were doing.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
And riot. There's so many cases over the.
Speaker 1 (07:31):
Years where it seems like the people who are on
the left get to do whatever they want, all the
people on the right get everything thrown at them.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
And that's that's messed up.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
That's messed up, and people on the left, you've got
to understand that is a tragedy of justice. That is
a tragedy of democracy or republic or whatever you want
to call it. So I think the only way we
can clean slate this is, yes, the January sixth. People
have got to be free, and I hope that Donald
Trump will do that.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Go right, go write news Repeter Boykin. We're making moves.
Freedom and liberty always on the rise. Tune into the
truth and open your eyes