Hello Mr. Clinton,
I'm not going to extend to you the courtesy that your paragraph about lawfare extends to Trump supporters. Because I've studied enough of you, to know what you are truly about.
You were President during the post-Cold War sugar high. I have it thoroughly documented that you and your administration met with George Soros frequently, and in short term changed your policy positions to fit whatever George Soros proposed.
Which was: continuous military intervention all over the world. Starting with the bombing of Yugoslavia. You were the original neoconservative. Madeline Albright used "open society" phrasing in communicating your foreign policy documents. You are a part of the long string of failures of nation-building in the name of democracy, the Western interventions that resulted in millions of mass migrants overwhelming our borders, artificial famines, and us building the infrastructure that enabled China to take over the Africa continent and extract African resources for themselves.
But. Most of all. Those of us -- and there are a good deal many of us -- who have been ruined by lawfare. @GenFlynn sacrificed everything. @JeffClarkUS has had his life ruined and is still rebuilding. At the end of the day, only one President has been the subject of repeated assassination attempts and eighty-plus indictments - and it's President Trump. Not anyone in your orbit.
Seriously, Bill. What do you think when you see that a Democrat gets indicted by a grand jury, and a judge inevitably overturns that indictment on grounds that nobody has heard of? "Oh wow the judges are so wise and saw right through a jury of peers! And that wisdom coincidentally happens to always fall on party lines!" Give me a break.
Every single one of us on the right-wing side knows that when your side regains power, your side will turn the full might of lawfare on us. You will cheer on mass incarcerations. You openly brag about that. You even toe the line of threatening to jail current military members if they don't refuse orders from Pete Hegseth.
You are the evil one here. You cheer on the burning of our cities. You cheer on lawfare of Republicans. You never apologized for the millions of lives disrupted all over the world. You never say a word about the billions or even trillions of dollars that have been robbed by your friends through corrupt NGOs.
The fact that none of you are in jail, proves that we are the powerless ones here. You're just afraid that someone sees you for you who are, and you secretly know that image is ugly.
We now have American hospitals putting up billboards in other countries to promote anchor babies.
These medical centers should be defunded if they are receiving any tax dollars.
You want to do this junk then you can be a private business .
This is why it's important to be involved in your local politics. Watch the zoning board especially. My husband chaired a zoning board in our community in NC, and they can rearrange your community in a heartbeat. You need to know what's going on if you don't want a Dearborn coming to a town near you!
God Bless Florida!
Mamdani’s speech criticizing America sitting behind George Washington’s desk flanked by women in hijabs is not coincidental. This is what conquering foreign powers do after gaining control.
Let me be clear… on this Independence Day celebration of 250 years of freedom, we must also call out those who are hell bent to destroy the next 250. Mamdani, and those like him, are America’s enemy because their allegiance is to a foreign political and military ideology known as Islam.
NYC is a harbinger of what’s to come if we don’t stand up now.
Happy 250th Independence Day!
May God bless the United States of America, the great State of Indiana, and every one of you and your families as we celebrate this historic milestone.
https://t.co/8wwtWsOkir
🚨 🚨🚨
Update:
I just drove past the marketing sign for the proposed development.
They have now painted over the "Indiana's First Sikh Community Development"
🇯🇵🇺🇸 Happy Independence Day to our friends in the United States!
This song is very popular here in Japan and many artists often cover it. I particularly love this one.
Tomorrow is also a great day for Indiana because so many bad Democrat bills will NOT be going into law.
Here's some of the craziest things that Republicans thankfully killed this year:
❌ HB 1011 would have legalized “assisted suicide” in Indiana.
❌ HB 1338 would have softened Indiana’s protections against “gender-transition” operations on minors.
❌ SB 82 would have let Indianapolis pass gun-control rules more restrictive than state law.
❌ HB 1394 would have created computer kiosks for welfare benefits.
❌ HB 1323 would have taken Indiana back toward no-cash-bail policies by limiting when courts can require bail.
❌ An amendment to SB 76 would have deleted language that stops companies from hiring illegal aliens.
❌ HB 1089 would have let local governments ban guns in public parks.
❌ SB 17 would have authorized local air-pollution-control agencies.
❌ HB 1413 would have created an annual abortion-restriction impact report.
❌ HB 1148 would have allowed same-day voter registration at the polls.
❌ HB 1067 would have required grocery chains to report staple-food pricing data to the state every month.
❌ HB 1430 would have allowed local property tax referendums for a new preschool tax.
Starting TODAY the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) is banned from giving out tax credits to Chinese companies.
I was proud to lead the fight on this 🇺🇸
🚨 Governor Braun is again suspending ALL of Indiana’s gas tax.
I'll be filing a bill next session to tax the money sent out of our country by foreign workers and use that to permanently cut gas taxes on Hoosier families.
Fix our roads and let Mexico pay for it!
The median salary for an entry-level software engineer in the Indianapolis area is $90,000/yr. Indiana University is getting a $20,000 discount hiring H-1Bs.
🚨 Democrats just announced a FAR left candidate to run against me in the fall.
He says he supports:
❌ abolishing ICE
❌ abortion
❌ Medicare for All
Help me keep the Southside red: https://t.co/RIPlN5uQIz
Buzz Cut: 'SERE,' Prepping for the Soviets
(A Thread)
2 of 2.
2) Then came the hard part: Resistance and Escape. Once we’d successfully navigated and evaded capture, the unfun part was next. Instead of a shower and a warm meal, we were rounded up and captured in a mock raid. We’d been trained on interrogation techniques; now was the time to practice them.
The Soviets hooded us in burlap bags, stripped our dignity immediately, and tossed us into freezing, concrete bunker cells in a POW camp simulation. Interrogators screamed questions under blinding lights. “Name, rank, serial number,” you repeated through chattering teeth, clinging to the Code of Conduct like a rosary.
The captors played really loud, dark music and babies crying in the cells, 24/7. I still clearly remember a scratchy recording of some guy reciting “Boots,” by Rudyard Kipling, over and over and over. The cold cells, the stress positions, the interrogations, the “good cop/bad cop” approach they used, the psychological games—they tested your soul.
After a few days of solitary confinement in concrete cells you couldn’t stand up in, and eating some sort of gruel (which I couldn’t stomach), they moved us into a “camp” to organically create camp leadership in a hostile situation. In the cell, we were punished if we didn’t finish whatever it was that they were trying to serve us, so I stuffed mine into the many pockets of my dirty flight suit.
In the camp, after a couple of grueling weeks, we were all tired and ready for a shower. The entire experience comes to a fitting patriotic ending! We raised the American flag over the camp, and helicopters with American flags adorning them swooped in for the rescue! We all faced the flag and sang the National Anthem as the sun set. More than a tear was shed…by men who would one day fight our wars.
In the darkness, I found steel I didn’t know I carried. That was the idea.
When the ordeal ended, I stood taller on that Washington field, mud-caked and exhausted, the young C-141 pilot forged into something unbreakable. The war might never come (it did, frequently), but if it did, I knew I’d bring myself home. SERE wasn’t just training—it was manhood under the Washington pines.
I hadn’t read the Declaration of Independence since high school history class. Ah, yes, history class! In fact we had American history throughout the tenth grade, then world history during our junior year. When I listen to the TikTok crowd spew the nonsense they champion today, I think how easily their knuckle-headed thinking could have been cured with a few good history classes. Alas, I don’t see much hope for the future, as long as the teachers in our urban areas are in the clutches of politicians and unions with a far different agenda from real education.
Now rereading the document for the first time in decades (shame on me for taking so long), I had forgotten that the bulk of the text is a list of grievances suffered by the American colonists at the hands of the king and various elements under his tyrannical regime. What has truly stunned me these 250 years later, however, is how familiar these grievances feel in our contemporary situation. Let’s take a peek at the exact text, and see if anything feels uncomfortably close to home (the “He” refers to King George, of course, and I will use the original spelling and punctuation):
“He has refused to Assent to Laws”
Hmm, every “sanctuary state” governor today for starters…
“He has made Judges dependent of his Will alone”
Hmm, activist judges anybody?
“He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people”
Hmm, 87,000 new armed IRS agents. Ring a bell?
“For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent”
Hmm, ever looked at your tax bill?
“…transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny…”
Hmm, thirty million military-age males pouring across our open borders from 2020 to 2024…
“He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us”
Hmm, BLM and Antifa riots…
SHORT VERSION: LEAVE US ALONE!
The very essence of the Declaration of Independence is a concerted celebration of God’s gift of our “unalienable” right to “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” It was argued, researched, debated yet again, drafted by Jefferson, then edited by Adams, Franklin, and others. Together the bravest men stood together against the storm of tyranny and gambled it all. As I reread it today, I literally shed tears at those miraculous words:
“And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortune and our sacred Honor.”
And then, of course, there were those who shed more than tears. They shed their blood, watched their homes burn, and too many gave the ultimate sacrifice. Whether they formed local militias or joined the Continental Army, colonists now dedicated to the cause, gambled their very lives. One of those Americans was my ninth generation ancestor. He fought in one of the most consequential battles of the American Revolution, the Battle of Cowpens. I am forever honored that his blood runs in my veins.
I know that this will be a joyful and glorious weekend for all of you, God willing. It should also be, if I may presume to say, a solemn one as well. The sacrifices made by simple men and women those many years ago have made these precious rights and this glorious day possible. Take a moment and honor them in your heart. I know I will.