Biden’s Potential Pardons For Corrupt Bureaucrats Expose ‘Nobody’s Above The Law’ As A Lie
Democrats' so-called 'standard' of upholding 'justice' was just a way to justify their use of lawfare against their political enemies.
The left loves to slap the term “public health crisis” on things like climate change because it paves the way for government overreach and the erosion of our freedoms.
Yesterday, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy formally declared gun violence as a public health crisis and called for a ban on assault weapons and civilian use of large capacity magazines.
EVERYTHING Is A Public Health Crisis Now! This Time It's Guns!youtu.be
Murthy also attests that “gun violence is the leading cause of death for children and adolescents ages one to nineteen,” which is simply “not true,” says Sara Gonzales.
“That in itself should disqualify anything that he's going to say on the subject because that is a lie,” adds Rippaverse Comics’ Eric July. “The fact that people keep pedaling that stuff and it goes unchecked blows my freaking mind.”
According to July, this gun violence public health crisis nonsense means one thing: “What they’re gonna do is punish free people ... people who have used no aggression on anybody and have not committed any actual crimes.”
Sara agrees and makes a fantastic point: “If they were actually serious about gun violence, they would do something to clean up the streets of Chicago," "they wouldn’t be releasing violent criminals into the streets,” and they “would probably do something about the cartels coming in and out of our country.”
But the point, of course, isn’t protecting Americans from gun violence. The point is control.
Jaco Booyens points to New York City as a prime example — Currently in NYC, if someone commits a “sexual offense ... to a disabled person,” they will “walk the same day.”
“Don’t come to me with your want to fight violence,” Booyens says. “This is about taking power away from good American citizens to silence them into submission so Big Daddy Government can rule and rob your life from you.”
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Right after Julian Assange — founder of WikiLeaks who’s responsible for one of the biggest government leaks in U.S. history — took a plea deal that resulted in his freedom, the entire archive of 20,000 leaked DNC emails suddenly disappeared.
Coincidence?
Glenn Beck thinks not.
Could This WikiLeaks ‘Server Error’ Be Connected to Julian Assange’s Secret Plea Deal?youtu.be
“My Spidey senses are tingling,” he says.
How is it possible that someone who “just plead guilty to espionage” walks away a free man?
“Espionage is a really big deal,” says Glenn, adding that the crime “can actually carry a death penalty,” making Assange’s plea deal look remarkably “magnanimous.”
While Biden, per his typical character, has denied having anything to do with Assange’s freedom, Glenn finds it “hard to believe,” considering the deal “was made in secret.”
According to a report by the New York Times, “A secret hearing paved the way for [Assange’s] release. In the end, the choreographed, multinational dance that led to his release took place behind closed doors at a secret bail hearing in London last Thursday, according to British officials.”
If that wasn’t suspicious enough, “The X account @endwokeness noticed something odd early, early this morning ... all 20,000 leaked DNC emails have just been removed from Wikileaks,” which they speculate “is part of the deal with Biden's DOJ.”
“My team did verify that while other hack archives on WikiLeaks are still up, including Hillary Clinton's emails, when you click on the DNC archive, it does produce a server error,” says Glenn, showing the white screen with “Internal Server Error” displayed at the top.
“Is this proof the DOJ coerced Assange to cover up their embarrassing secrets in exchange for his freedom?” asks Glenn.
What do you think? Let us know in the comments below.
To enjoy more of Glenn’s masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis, and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
Julian Assange, 52, will likely soon return to his native Australia as a free man, but not because of President Joe Biden, a White House spokesperson said.
Court papers released Monday night revealed that Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who has spent more than a decade either holed up at an embassy or locked away in prison, had finally reached a plea deal with U.S. officials. In 2010, Assange had coordinated with Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to release information about U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
'There’s nothing to be gained by his continued incarceration and we want him brought home to Australia.'
A few years later, Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison, but President Obama commuted his sentence before leaving office in 2017. Meanwhile, Assange languished at the Ecuadoran embassy in London, attempting to avoid extradition to Sweden on allegations of sexual assault.
The statute of limitations on the sexual assault allegations — which Assange always denied — eventually expired, but Ecuador withdrew its offer of asylum in 2019, the same year the Trump administration indicted Assange in connection with the disclosure of U.S. military information. Assange then attempted to take refuge at the embassy but was arrested by British police and thrown in jail for skipping bail, the AP reported.
He then remained behind bars for five more years until reaching the deal with U.S. officials.
On Monday night, Assange reportedly flew from London to Saipan, the capital of the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. commonwealth. He is expected to appear in a U.S. federal court in Saipan on Wednesday, when he will likely plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defense information and receive a sentence of time served.
Assange is then expected to return to his family in Australia, where leaders are almost assuredly celebrating this sudden turn of events. Earlier this year, the Australian House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to urge the U.K. and U.S. governments to let Assange return home.
"Regardless of the views that people have about Mr. Assange’s activities, the case has dragged on for too long," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at the time. "There’s nothing to be gained by his continued incarceration and we want him brought home to Australia."
As the U.S federal government secured a conviction and Assange will likely soon have his freedom, both sides can credibly claim victory in this case. However, the Biden administration is not taking any credit for it.
"This was an independent decision made by the Department of Justice, and there was no White House involvement in the plea deal decision," said Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council.
The New York Post sought comment on the subject from the DOJ but did not receive a response. The outlet also cited a source who "said they were unaware of what if any role Biden may have played in the final resolution of the case."
Back in April, Biden told reporters that he was "considering" bringing Assange's case to a conclusion but did not comment further.
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Earlier this month, a shadowy group used Bitcoin in a mysterious way. Through a special computational protocol that had gone underutilized until this year, the group added some controversial information to the Bitcoin blockchain, protecting it from editing, deletion, or removal.
It now appears that information was part of America’s so-called Afghanistan War logs, a trove of classified information that Wikileaks posted on the internet back in 2010, touching off a firestorm and a considerable, ongoing government backlash. An individual involved in the group, calling itself "Project Spartacus," reached out to Bitcoin magazine to claim responsibility.
In effect, the protocol, called Ordinals, is being used to make Bitcoin work as a publishing platform free from the controls of the major institutions that shape the official and unofficial rules of the traditional publishing game – ranging from the big New York publishing houses and the journalism industrial complex to Wall Street, the Federal Reserve, and the online and offline political groups bent on policing content.
With so much attention – and computing power – shifting this year from cryptocurrencies like Ethereum to the training and utilization of artificial intelligence, most Americans haven’t had their attention drawn by tech or media to the way Bitcoin’s use cases have expanded rapidly beyond peer-to-peer digital currency.
But Bitcoin developers themselves are partly to blame for the ignorance. Much of the work in Bitcoin has focused disproportionately either on encouraging people simply to buy, driving dollar-denominated spot prices up, or adding more layers to the original protocol to reduce fees and encourage Bitcoin’s use as online money.
Neither of these two approaches has been particularly successful or groundbreaking. But Bitcoin’s cash value has not suffered like many cryptocurrencies, and interest in using Bitcoin as something other than a store of value remains strong in the community.
Whatever you think about Wikileaks, and whomever Project Spartacus might turn out to be, the reality of the freedom Bitcoin confers in an increasingly oppressive digital world is considerably more important than the now-stereotypical “crypto” hype about getting rich quick or replacing the dollar.
And for some – myself very much included – that fact, driven today by Ordinals in the news, was clear enough years ago for me and others to act on in a powerful way. In 2021, I published my most recent book, "Human Forever," on the Bitcoin blockchain and priced it exclusively to sell in Bitcoin. (Through Canonic, the platform I used, you can do this too.)
No classified information or pseudonymous monikers were necessary for me to publish and sell "Human Forever" direct, free from all but the remotest risk of any tampering, editing, deletion, cancellation, or other 21st-century nonsense from the myriad institutions using the internet to impose a post-American social credit system on every facet of our lives. While, theoretically, a very highly motivated organization with extremely deep pockets and access to copious amounts of electricity could at least attempt the digital equivalent of a “hostile takeover” of the Bitcoin blockchain, even under those circumstances, the prospects of forcibly breaking into and altering or destroying the on-chain text of my book are remote.
That’s to say what we already should know: No technology, however “advanced,” is a silver bullet capable of perfectly neutralizing all potential threats to our free way of life. For that, as always, we have to rely on human beings, however imperfect, specifically ourselves and one another.
But it’s also to say that Bitcoin currently offers Americans a lot more immediate access than AI to the kinds of tools we need to build commercial markets and cultural institutions we can profit from – while protecting what we hold most dear.