Tag: donald trump
Sean Hannity

Fox Stars Said Don't Pardon Violent J6 Offenders, But Trump Did Anyway

Fox News stars have spent the months since President Donald Trump’s election assuring their audiences that Trump’s long-stated promise to pardon what he termed the “J6 hostages” would be limited only to nonviolent offenders who participated in storming the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. But on his first day in office, Trump pardoned or commuted to time served every person convicted in connection to their actions that day, including those who violently assaulted law enforcement and participated in seditious conspiracies.

Trump’s Tuesday night grant of clemency “to all of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the attack” includes pardons for “for violent offenders who went after the police on January 6 with baseball bats, two-by-fours, and bear spray and are serving prison terms, in some cases of more than a decade,” The New York Timesnoted. He also pardoned or commuted the sentences of several leaders of the Proud Boys and Oathkeepers who had been convicted of seditious conspiracy.

This is precisely what Fox hosts and loyal Trump propagandists Sean Hannity and Jesse Watters explicitly said should not happen.

Numerous Fox personalities condemned the Trumpist violence at the Capitol in its immediate aftermath and called for the perpetrators to face consequences, even as they avoided assigning Trump culpability for encouraging the mob to come to D.C. and inciting it with lies about the 2020 election being stolen from him.

“Those who truly support President Trump … we do not support those that commit acts of violence,” Hannity said on his show that night, adding that people should not “be vandalizing our nation's Capitol, attacking the brave men and women that keep us safe in law enforcement,” and concluding that “all of today's perpetrators must be arrested and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

“I want to speak to the people that think it wasn't that big of a deal,” Watters said on The Five the next day. “Yes, you’re allowed, as a member of the public, to go into the people's house, but you have to go through the front door and you have to pass through a metal detector. You can't smash windows, spray police with chemical agents, assault police officers, loot, and vandalize.”

Over time, as Trumpists led by former Fox host Tucker Carlson challenged the initial consensus around the events of January 6 with a conspiratorial counternarrative that the rioters had been victims, the right came to excuse or downplay their crimes. But as Trump floated pardons for January 6 convicts, Hannity and Watters continued to maintain that violent offenders would not and should not receive clemency.

Asked by a listener on his December 3 radio broadcast about Trump potentially pardoning all January 6 convicts, including violent offenders, Hannity commented that some had received excessive sentences “for trespassing.” But he highlighted “the few people that were involved in violence against police, or whatever,” and said that “the people that are responsible for acting in ways that were absolutely irresponsible and law-breaking, they’ve got to be held accountable.”

“Donald Trump, he has said those people that did not commit acts of violence on January 6, is he's going to pardon them,” Hannity added two days later. “Why were they sentenced to five years in jail? Doesn't it seem, like, a little excessive?”

Watters has likewise repeatedly said that presidential pardons should be limited to nonviolent January 6 offenders. “If I were president, I don’t think I would pardon January 6ers who were slugging cops,” he told his Fox audience last December. In May 2023, he similarly advised Trump “to be careful here. You can't pardon anybody that committed an act of violence.”

How can Trump’s loyal propagandists square the circle between their own explicit statements that Trump should not pardon people convicted of attacking police officers and the reality that he did just that? One option appears to be simply lying about what he did.

“He made it clear, and JD Vance kind of doubled down on it — if you didn't attack officers, if there wasn't any actual violence and you were caught up within the system, you were overcharged, you’ve done enough time,” Fox & Friends co-host Lawrence Jones said on Wednesday morning. “And promises made, promises kept on Day One.”

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters.

Trump's 'Law And Order' Means Freeing Terrorists And Neo-Nazi Criminals

Trump's 'Law And Order' Means Freeing Terrorists And Neo-Nazi Criminals

Donald Trump is being slammed for granting pardons to more than 1,500 people who violently attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. While Trump and other Republicans have frequently touted the Republican Party as the party of “law and order,” one of his first acts in the presidency gave a green light to the criminal element.

Trump’s pardon unravels hundreds of prosecutions that made their way through the Department of Justice and the criminal courts. Trump called the people who attacked Capitol police officers and were attempting to overturn the presidential election he lost “patriots” and “hostages” in the order.

Before taking office, Vice President JD Vance claimed that people who engaged in violence on January 6 would not be given a pass by Trump. “If you committed violence on that day, obviously you shouldn’t be pardoned,” he told Fox News Sunday on January 12.

That turned out to be a lie.

Among those who will be released thanks to Trump’s actions is former Proud Boy leader Enrique Tarrio. Tarrio was convicted of seditious conspiracy against the United States and sentenced to 22 years in prison in September 2023. U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly, who was appointed by Trump, oversaw Tarrio’s case and found that he had engaged in an official act of terrorism. He is expected to be a free man soon.

Another figure helped by Trump’s action is Robert Keith Packer, who attacked the Capitol while wearing an antisemitic shirt reading “Camp Auschwitz,” referencing the infamous death camp where thousands of Jewish people were executed by Nazis during the Holocaust.

Former Capitol Police Officer Aquilino Gonell, who served at the Capitol on Jan. 6, spoke out against Trump’s action.

“One of the first things that he does is pardon the criminals who nearly took my life,” Gonell told HuffPost. “It’s a desecration to our service and the sacrifices made to keep everyone safe. It’s a violation to our democracy and a disgrace to the title he holds once again.”

Gonell sent reporter Sam Stein photographs showing the pro-Trump mob attacking him on Jan. 6, as well as pictures depicting the serious injuries he received.

Former U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell sent me these pics of what happened to him on Jan. 6 as well as the injuries he endured that day

[image or embed]

— Sam Stein (@samsteindc.bsky.social) January 21, 2025 at 1:29 PM

Harry Dunn, another former Capitol Police officer, told the outlet, “This decision is a betrayal to the officers who were severely injured—and died—as a result of the insurrection. This decision puts Americans at risk as these violent criminals return to their communities. These pardons are a reflection of what abuse of power looks like and what we the people are bound to witness over the next four years.”

Democratic Rep. Maxwell Frost criticized Trump’s pardons, writing, “President Trump pardons Nazi & white supremacist that tried to overthrow the government. Fascists look out for fascists.”

President Trump pardons Nazi & white supremacist that tried to overthrow the government. Fascists look out for fascists.

[image or embed]

— Maxwell Frost (@maxwellfrost.bsky.social) January 21, 2025 at 4:39 AM

One the same day Trump issued the pardons, his administration released an executive order purportedly showing his opposition to criminal activity, promising to restore the federal death penalty. He criticized former President Joe Biden for commuting the sentences of 37 facing the federal death penalty and that his administration would take action to ensure that “these offenders are imprisoned in conditions consistent with the monstrosity of their crimes and the threats they pose.”

The administration also released a list of priorities claiming that crimes against law enforcement would be punished with the death penalty.

Simultaneously, Trump appointed conservative activist Ed Martin to serve as Washington, D.C.’s interim U.S. attorney. Martin served on the board of the Patriot Freedom Project, which advocated for the release of Jan. 6 offenders.

Despite the criticism from law enforcement and members of Congress, the administration continues to stand by the assistance Trump delivered to convicted criminals.

In an appearance on the pro-Trump Fox News Channel, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said, “I don't think it's causing much controversy.” She later added, “President Trump is restoring faith in our justice system.”

Brian Kilmeade: Does that have anything to do with President Trump pardoning all the J6ers, which is causing some controversy? Trump spox Karoline Leavitt: I don't think it's causing much controversy! ... President Trump is restoring faith in our justice system.

[image or embed]

— Justin Baragona (@justinbaragona.bsky.social) January 21, 2025 at 1:23 PM

Trump is the first convicted felon to be elevated to the presidency. On his first day in office, criminals convicted at the highest levels of the justice system received a gift from the most powerful position in the American government.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

With 'Memecoin,' New Trump Presidency Reworks An Old Con

With 'Memecoin,' New Trump Presidency Reworks An Old Con

Right before his inauguration, Donald Trump issued a $TRUMP meme coin featuring a defiant him pumping his fist after an assassination attempt. Shortly after their release, the market capitalization for $TRUMP coins passed $5 billion.

Oracle of Omaha Warren Buffett once called bitcoin "rat poison squared." Jamie Dimon, chief at JPMorgan Chase, noted that "it's got no intrinsic value," adding, "I remember when Beanie Babies were selling for $2,000 a pop."

Beanie Babies. Back in the 1990s, crowds pushed their way into toy stores to get in on Beanie Babies. TV hucksters would claim that a $1,500 investment in a Beanie Baby today could be worth $75,000 in 10 years.

What were Beanie Babies? They were cute animal dolls, basically pieces of fabric stuffed with plastic pellets. Most anyone with a sewing machine could make a Beanie Baby replicant. To protect against copies, creator Ty Warner had heart-shaped Ty tags attached to each. (Though tags were counterfeited as well.)

To drive up the prices of a $5 toy, Warner worked the psychology of scarcity through limited supplies and selective distributions. Bitcoin promoters likewise argue that the limited supply of the cryptocurrency maintains the investment's value.

Bitcoin's price is fueled by the Greater Fool Theory — that the fool who buys it needs only find a bigger fool to pay more for it than he did. That's how Beanie Baby mania worked.

"Is Trump's bitcoin embrace the biggest 'pump-and-dump' ever?" Economists Jeffrey Funk and Gary Smith, writing for MarketWatch, ask that question. Could Trump be pushing up crypto's value to unheard-of levels with the intention of dumping it at a high price and leave the greater fools holding the bag? And my question, could some billionaire pals be in on it?

Trump has been scamming the little guys for decades. In 1995, he got his fans to bail out his collapsing Atlantic City empire by selling them $140 million in Trump casino stock. (He had convinced them that he was a financial genius.) The investors were cleaned out.

Trump's army of lawyers are protecting him against a possible crash in the value of $TRUMP meme coins. The contract's small print strictly limits class action suits — and states that the coins are "NOT INTENDED TO BE ... AN INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY, INVESTMENT CONTRACT, OR SECURITY OF ANY TYPE."

But to muddy that idea for the rubes, the Trump memes website notes they are "freely tradeable on the blockchain." Buyers can thus pretend to be crypto bros, as the ads show, lounging at the pool, as perfect female bodies sun in the background.

People who bought Trump Bibles or Trump sneakers, never mind the price, at least had a Bible or sneakers to show for it. As for those who regard the $TRUMP coins merely as a memento of the Great God Trump, something to pass down to their heirs — they could be OK.

Crypto ringmasters, meanwhile, love Trump's vow to deregulate. Also his extravagant promises to have the Treasury Department — that is, the taxpayers — buy billions of dollars of the cryptocurrency for a "Bitcoin Strategic Reserve." It would supposedly be used to pay off the national debt.

"How would the U.S. government buying bitcoin at inflated prices pay off America's debt?" Funk and Smith ask.

Crypto is a crazy volatile investment. In 2022, the value of bitcoin plunged 80% from its high after the collapse of the FTX crypto exchange. If inflating the price of crypto is part of a Trump scheme, we can assume the players will have dumped it in time for any crash. The greater fools would suffer: That's their lot. But please, please leave we taxpayers out of it.

Reprinted with permission from Creators.

Donald Trump

Why Trump Will Fail In So Much Of What He (And His Gang) Try To Do

We begin today with Trump’s scum-spray of executive orders, because they are not only in the news but indicative of everything he and his followers get so wrong about this country.

We are a democratic republic with a founding document, the Constitution, frequently described as the supreme law of the land. All other laws, including those passed by the Congress and in the various states, are subservient to the Constitution, which is responsible, we have heard again and again over the past 24 hours, for “the rule of law” in this country.

I am here to argue that we are much, much more than our founding document and the system of government and laws it establishes. This country is a living, breathing organism. It existed even before the Constitutional Convention in the minds of those who dared to dream of what it would take a revolution and a political coalition to bring to life. At an elemental level, the United States is thus comprised of ideas. Some of them have been written down over the last 250 years, but most of the ideas that helped to form this country are still evolving.

We are thus in a constant state of flux. We interrupt this organic process every few years with elections, which put into place at least some new people to contribute to what is already underway. But the elections and the representatives they produce do not stop the constant state of becoming that is our nation and its citizenry. Elections change the cast but not the words of the play or their meaning.

Change continues to take place every day as a matter of what we might call, for want of a better description, the course of human events. It is because we are human that we change and the world changes with us.

All this change extends into every aspect of our personal and national lives. New problems arise. New solutions are sought. There is resistance to change, and change is not perfect when it comes. An injustice comes to exist. There is a correction written into law and put into exercise in physical ways, such as building integrated schools or putting into place polling places that are open to a race of people who were not permitted to vote before.

A disease arrives to disturb and destroy. Some among us get sick and some die. A cure or a preventative is developed and deployed. We move on beyond that disease to a new one and hopefully repeat the process.

One of the ways our systems of government and laws are constantly refreshed is through our courts. With Trump’s executive orders, today we see the beginnings of the exercise of that system with lawsuits filed by 18 states against his stated aim of overturning birthright citizenship. It is not normal for a president to seek to overturn a clause of the Constitution by executive fiat, but it is normal for lawsuits to be filed in the courts as a correction.

This will happen again and again in the coming weeks and months. Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo wrote that lawyers reading the executive orders found them to be largely “sloppy and contradictory, often doing things the authors hadn’t intended.” To which the only response can be, “duh?” Did we expect anything different from Donald Trump?

So, some if not many of Trump’s blizzard of rhetorical desires will fail upon scrutiny by the courts. I am now going to tell you why I think this will happen: Because we are human, so are our laws and our system of government human.

Trump’s mistake, which has become the mistake of the entire Republican Party, is to believe that power is immutable. It is not. You don’t get power forever, and you cannot do with power anything you want to do. This is because the system which yields power to one group or another group exists through respect for precedent and for each other.

Allow me an illustration. I shared the barge on the Hudson River in 1971-72 with my friend and West Point classmate, David Vaught, who had moved to New York to attend NYU Law School. One night as we were driving back to the barge in New Jersey from the Village, Vaught announced that he had figured something out about the law. “It’s like the human body,” he said. “It’s even got a circulatory system and a nervous system.”

It made sense that the law would resemble the body because humans make the laws, Vaught explained. He had been working on a typical first year law school problem – tracing the solution to a legal issue back through the history of court decisions through which it came into being. I don’t remember the case exactly, but I’m pretty sure it was a thorny tort case that presented a seemingly intractable problem: Two people have come to an agreement over some goods that were sold by one and purchased by the other. But then came the details, in this case involving delivery. Who is responsible when goods are damaged in delivery? A contract cannot foresee every eventuality, so at some point, a lawsuit is filed and the courts get involved. Vaught’s task was to trace back to find the root decision that governed such contracts.

He descended down into the pit of the NYU Law Library on Washington Square. It was a time when you still looked up stuff in law books. He would find one case and decision involving transportation by truck from, say, 1920, that would refer back to a previous decision from the 1890’s that had to do with transportation of goods by rail. That case led back further.

Vaught told me as he went through the decisions, he could see not only patterns in the law, but human patterns. The judge who decided an early 20th Century case had been a clerk for a judge in the late 19th Century. That judge had had a series of disputes on appeal with a judge who wrote the appeals decisions that overturned the first judge’s decision, until finally a case came along that the first judge won because technology had overtaken the law and X’ed out a series of decisions that involved trains and tracks and who was responsible for laying the tracks that buckled and caused an old accident which birthed the delivery dispute that was at issue. Subtract trains and tracks and enter trucks and roads; change the tracks from privately owned to roads that were publicly built, and the whole structure underlying the series of decisions changes along with it.

In reading the decisions, Vaught said he could see the judges getting upset with each other, especially when one “lost” and his decision was overturned. But Vaught said a thread of respect for each other and for the law and the court system kept producing decisions that advanced the law from one century to another, through the series of decisions that finally resulted in the solution to the issue of the case at hand.

I can’t recall exactly how Vaught described the similarity to the human body, although I think he analogized the nervous system to the series of lawsuits themselves and the circulatory system to the bloodstream of language of which legal decisions are comprised. Whatever his exact analogies were, his conclusion stood, that the seemingly dry process of tracking back through densely written court decisions on complex cases involving complex issues held his fascination because he could see the human element all the way through it. Some decisions that resulted along the way were overturned, some led to changes in the way future cases were filed and the different decisions they yielded. The whole system was a moving, breathing, sometimes bleeding organic thing, and it was able to survive because it adapted.

Seemingly from another time and place, that story is just as alive today as it was in 1971. A series of court decisions that are said to “make law” continues to describe the way our system works, how it works, and why. Trump’s mistake, and the mistake of what the Trumpists see as their “revolution,” is that you can’t parachute into a system that has existed for nearly 250 years and simply announce a halt to everything so that a new regime can be put in place by executive fiat.

The system is big and old and flexible, so much so that it can absorb whatever craziness Trump thinks he can impose on it. They have already made mistakes that are potentially deadly to their aims. In one of the two transgender orders, the one that seeks to establish just two genders for the purposes of Trump’s government, they defined “male” and “female” as beginning at “conception,” probably as a sop to the religious right that has been obsessed with conception, defining a human being as a single cell on a uterine wall so they could call abortion the murder of that single cell.

It won’t wash. Gender is not evident in a fetus for weeks after conception.

Ironically, Trump is on his most solid ground with his 1,500-plus pardons of the January 6 felons because his pardon power is written into the Constitution. What he did was wrong and despicable and what will flow from it will create problems but thankfully, not precedent. A pardon does not influence the law in the way a court decision does because although the pardon power is in the Constitution, it is not part of our system of laws. It is a thing wholly unto itself, and because of this, problems will flow. Just wait until one of the felons Trump has pardoned beats someone to death in a bar fight or is charged with rape or child abuse. It will happen, and the resulting tragedy will belong to the one man who has the power of the pardon, Donald Trump.

We face dark times with Trump in the White House. His powers as the executive go beyond his executive orders. Some of what he has already ordered will have deleterious effects and may not be easily challenged, such as his desire to ban transgender people from serving in the military. The courts over the years have yielded to the executive when it comes to the military and issues of national security, and it may be that they will do it now. But with some 8,000 transgender people currently serving in uniform, the Pentagon will run into real problems throwing so many well-qualified people out of the service. Some are no doubt experts in specialties that cannot be easily replaced. Some have distinguished careers and awards for heroism and service that will make it difficult for the Pentagon to dismiss their years of service and dedication to duty. The practical effects of prejudice will be, as they always are, difficult to ignore and to justify.

And then there is the absolutely amazing thing of Trump giving aid and comfort and power to a lunatic like Elon Musk, who in turn has actually executed the Nazi salute in triumph, or whatever he thinks he’s doing. I think we can count on Musk getting worse, not better, as a public face of Trumpism because it puts a face, and an ugly one, on Donald Trump’s desires as president. Musk in his arrogance and drug-fueled mania will make more public mistakes until Trump tires of having to share the spotlight with him and explain him away.

All of this is good for those who stand in opposition to Trump because it connects Nazism to his movement, and not through a connection to or allegation from Democrats and the Left. Musk is Trump’s animal, or Trump is Musk’s. At this point, with the right arm of a Nazi salute in the air and caught on camera, who is worse than who almost doesn’t matter.

So, as grim as prospects seem on this second day of the Trump presidency, do not despair. There is much to be done, and with the lawsuits against Trump’s attempt to amend the Constitution by fiat, we have already begun to fight. We have a nation to defend that we love. The fact that Donald Trump is incapable of loving anything other than himself will be deadly to his cause.

Lucian K. Truscott IV, a graduate of West Point, has had a 50-year career as a journalist, novelist, and screenwriter. He has covered Watergate, the Stonewall riots, and wars in Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan. He is also the author of five bestselling novels. You can subscribe to his daily columns at luciantruscott.substack.com and follow him on Twitter @LucianKTruscott and on Facebook at Lucian K. Truscott IV.

Reprinted with permission from Lucian Truscott Newsletter.

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