Traitor Josh Hawley

Traitor Josh Hawley Josh Hawley betrayed America by siding with Donald Trump & his insurrectionists over our democratic

The family of the singer behind the classic tune, “This Land is Your Land” has a message for Sen. Josh Hawley: This song...
03/14/2023

The family of the singer behind the classic tune, “This Land is Your Land” has a message for Sen. Josh Hawley: This song is not your song to “co-opt.”

The Missouri Republican referenced the 1940 folk music hit by Woody Guthrie last week when introducing the This Land is Our Land Act, S. 684, which would “ban Chinese corporations and individuals associated with the Chinese Communist Party from owning United States agricultural land.”

In a Monday statement to The Kansas City Star, Guthrie’s daughter said the late performer’s family rejected Hawley’s use of the song in legislation.

“In this particular case, the co-opting or parodying of the lyric by those not aligned with Woody’s lyrics — i.e. misrepresentation by autocrats, racists, white nationalists, anti-labor, insurrectionists, etc. — is not condoned,” Nora Guthrie said.

While saying she accepted “This Land is Your Land” being used for political purposes from time to time, Guthrie explained, “We do not consider Josh Hawley in any way a representative of Woody’s values therefore we would never endorse or approve of his reference to Woody’s lyrics.”

Her father’s song, Guthrie said, is “more of a vision of democracy.”

“The song simply reiterates the concept, ‘By the people, for the people,’” she said.

Woody Guthrie died in 1967.

By Judy Kurtz

The family of the singer behind the classic tune, “This Land is Your Land” has a message for Sen. Josh Hawley: This song is not your song to “co-opt.” The Missouri Republican referenced the 1940 fo…

Thanks to Tucker Carlson, we finally know Josh Hawley's defense to accusations that he ran like a coward after inciting ...
03/07/2023

Thanks to Tucker Carlson, we finally know Josh Hawley's defense to accusations that he ran like a coward after inciting a mob on January 6: Other people ran faster.

Using 40,000 hours of new footage released thanks to House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, Carlson last night attempted to attack the House Select Committee and vindicate Hawley. Think of it as the FoxNews remix — edited to suggest Hawley was falsely accused of inciting a riot and rank cowardice, and Ashli Babbitt was murdered.

"There's quite a bit of video you haven't seen," Carlson intones, "video that tells quite a different story about what happened on January 6."

You may wonder ... what is this "quite a different story"? Did Hawley not raise his fist and encourage the people gathered outside the Capitol to turn militant? Did Hawley not soon after run from the same mob he helped to incite?

Nope and nope.

He just ran more slowly.

Here's Carlson:

"In fact, the surveillance video was reviewed shows that famous clip was a sham, edited deceptively by the January 6 committee. The video was propaganda, not evidence. The actual videotape shows Hawley was one of many legislators being ushered out of the building by Capitol Hill police officers — and in fact, Hawley was at the back of the pack.

"The 'coward tape' was a lie — one of many from the January 6 committee."

That's all they got? Forty-thousand hours worth of tape handed to you by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, and all you can say is that when danger reared its ugly head, Senator Hawley bravely turned and fled behind his colleagues?

By Sarah Fenske

"In fact, he was at the back of the pack!"

By George F. Will, In autumn 1941, a few German units in Hitler’s drive toward Moscow reached the city’s outer suburbs, ...
02/22/2023

By George F. Will, In autumn 1941, a few German units in Hitler’s drive toward Moscow reached the city’s outer suburbs, close enough to see the Kremlin’s spires. Then Soviet forces counterattacked against a German army that lacked winter clothing because the high command had promised that the Soviet Union would fall before snow did.

A year ago, Vladimir Putin launched what he believed would be a quick dash to Kyiv. A few army units briefly touched the city’s suburbs.

Russia’s estimated 60,000 military deaths so far are more than U.S. deaths in eight years in Vietnam, and four times what the Soviet Union lost in a decade in Afghanistan. The “Putin exodus,” which began well before the invasion and is accelerating, has cost Russia hundreds of thousands of mobile, educated young civilians. Strategy scholar Eliot A. Cohen writes in the Atlantic that elements of Putin’s army “have to be kept at the front by the fear of blocking units that will gun down soldiers fleeing the battlefield.” Putin’s gangster regime has scrounged for cannon fodder in Russia’s prisons, finding criminals to wage a war conducted as a war crime.

Hence the pertinence of Nuremberg, where in 1946 the first of the charges against some N**i defendants was of aggression, which the tribunal called “the supreme international crime” because “it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.” Other charges included war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. These categories are capacious enough to include Putin’s indiscriminate rocket and artillery attacks on civilian concentrations and infrastructure, and the rapes and tortures inflicted by his rabble soldiery.

Wartime atrocity charges often merit skepticism. When, however, Ukraine says Russians are scattering booby-trapped — explosive — toys to maim children, who then require caregivers, remember that Soviet forces did this in Afghanistan. And Putin’s abduction to “re-education camps” in Russia of unknown thousands of Ukrainian children is an attempt at cultural erasure akin to what his Chinese soulmates are doing to the Uyghurs, which U.S. policy has branded genocide. Putin is refuting his war rationale that Ukrainians are culturally Russians.

Putin can win only by Ukraine’s allies choosing to lose by not maximizing their moral and material advantages. He is counting on Western publics’ support for Ukraine being brittle, and especially on the multiplication of Josh Hawleys.

This freshman Republican senator and probable presidential aspirant exhorted the Jan. 6 mob moments before he did what it demanded, trying to block some states’ electoral votes. Now, continuing his pandering to the most primitive portion of the GOP base, this Missouri Metternich is opposing what no one is proposing — giving Ukraine a “blank check.” He evidently has not noticed the excruciating incrementalism of NATO allies’ aid to that valorous nation. Perhaps Hawley, advocate of nanny government “conservatism,” has been too busy promoting his plan to make the federal government not Big Brother but Big Parent, taking over parenting with a law against children under age 16 using social media.

Hawley, a caricature of a (rhetorically) anti-Washington demagogue, is a human windsock, responsive to gusts of public opinion. An Associated Press poll shows that public support for aiding Ukraine militarily has declined from 60 percent last May to 48 percent today, and to 39 percent among Republicans. So, Hawley says the U.S. policy of supporting Ukraine’s survival “has to stop.”

The invincibly ignorant Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) has 10 co-sponsors, all Republicans, for a resolution calling for an end to aid for Ukraine. Their geopolitical thinking probably is of Tucker (“Has Putin ever called me a racist?”) Carlson sophistication. They might eventually join hands across the barricades with some progressives who begrudge every federal nickel not devoted to feeding government-dependent Democratic factions. But Putin’s congressional caucus will remain a mostly Republican rump.

Putin will be disappointed by the caucus’s anemia. Few Republican legislators would be comfortable in the company of the likes of Hawley and Gaetz. And as Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said last week, “Don’t look at Twitter, look at people in power. … Look at the top Republicans on the Senate and House committees that handle armed services, foreign affairs, appropriations, and intelligence.” They support Ukraine.

In 1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower ran for president primarily to protect the Republican Party and the Republic from Robert A. Taft, who had been wrong about prewar preparedness and about postwar collective security. Taft was a formidable intellect and legislator whose views resonated with the many Americans who were isolationists before the war and nostalgic for isolationism’s comforts afterward. He sought the presidency three times (1940, 1948, 1952), winning it as often as Hawley will.

It's lucky for valorous Ukraine and disappointing for the Kremlin that the Republican caucus opposing military aid for Kyiv is so anemic.

It’s been two years since Jan. 6, 2021. We all know what Josh Hawley was doing the day of the assault on the U.S. Capito...
01/09/2023

It’s been two years since Jan. 6, 2021. We all know what Josh Hawley was doing the day of the assault on the U.S. Capitol: Pumping his fist in solidarity with the gathering mob early in the afternoon. Then sprinting away from the building as insurrectionists smashed through doors and windows, sending him and other lawmakers scrambling for safety. And finally, just hours later, returning to the Senate floor to play to the cameras as the face of the theatrical, futile attempt to overturn the election Donald Trump had just lost.

Now, thanks to new documents released over the weekend by the House committee investigating the plot to overthrow the government, we have a clue about what Missouri’s then-junior senator was up to the day before, too: playing phone tag with the Trump White House.

“POTUS instructed operator to call back with Senator Josh Hawley” reads a switchboard record from 9:37 a.m. The same notation appears again at 10:04, then once more at 10:11. At 10:22, the operator told Trump a message had been left for Hawley. That evening at 9:21 p.m., Trump had the operator “call back with” Hawley, and at 9:52 the operator reported that another message had been left for the senator.

And those are the communications we know about. There’s a curious, extended break in the logs, with no calls at all listed from 11:20 a.m. to 8:18 p.m. That’s a lot longer than the 18-1/2 minute gap in the Nixon tapes that became part of Watergate lore.

You may remember that in March 2021, Hawley appeared unsettled as he quizzed FBI Director Christopher Wray about how the bureau might use geolocation data and other information from rioters’ cellphones in its investigation. We wonder whose privacy he was concerned about most.

Today, we’re well aware of the events leading up to the coup attempt, documented methodically by the House committee and unfurled publicly in real time to any observer of the mighty MAGA-world online machine. Starting with Trump’s now-notorious Dec. 19, 2020, tweet — “Be there, will be wild!” — his supporters began openly sharing their plans for the insurrection in social media. Hawley and 11 other GOP senators announced on Jan. 2 that they’d object to certifying the Electoral College tally (though the “Sedition Caucus” had shrunk to only eight by the day of the vote). Among them was Kansas freshman Roger Marshall — making the charade his first official act as U.S. senator.

♦️SHAME OF CAPITOL INSURRECTION WILL LIVE IN HISTORY♦️

The scenes from the putsch — would-be revolutionaries scaling the exterior walls of the Capitol, panicked lawmakers ducking for cover in the House chamber, shirtless “QAnon shaman” Jacob Chansley shouting through a megaphone from the Senate dais — are still fresh in our minds.

But posterity will forever remember those images, as potent as any recorded in the arduous road toward forming the union that seems increasingly imperfect these days. The enormity of the lawlessness will only grow as we learn more about it. Donald Trump, and his erratic four-year term of deceit and division, will not be rehabilitated with time.

Hawley, meanwhile, is unapologetic for his role in bringing us to that shameful day (and has proudly boasted that it helps raise campaign cash). Today, he continues to echo right-wing attacks on the FBI, while brazenly violating U.S. copyright law by selling mugs and T-shirts stealing photojournalist Francis Chung’s iconic picture of his salute to the mob. Marshall has adopted a less defiant stance, saying in 2021 that the American people want to “move on” from the insurrection — yet he’s still vowed to help “get people out of jail from the Jan. 6.”

Hawley is a Yale- and Stanford-educated lawyer. Marshall’s a physician. Surely neither can believe the increasingly unhinged ravings of a reality TV star who pulled off a hostile takeover of their party by bashing Ivy-educated elites. Surely neither can continue to stand by their baseless claims of fraud in the 2020 election — but only for president. Could they really have imagined that if they’d somehow reinstalled a man who lost the popular vote by more than 7 million, it all would have worked out in the end?

On this somber anniversary, we probably can’t ask for Hawley, Marshall and their GOP fellow travelers to reveal fully what they knew and when they knew it about planning the riot that left people dead and our democracy as fragile as ever. Their continuing reticence helps further the chaos that continues to manifest in their party’s humiliating meltdown as seen in the in-fighting in the House this week.

But for the good of the nation — and for their own chance at rehabilitation, not to mention their consciences — Josh Hawley and Roger Marshall should come clean about one thing: They should apologize to every honest Republican voter for not telling them the truth about the leader of their party. That he lied to them directly about subjects big and small throughout his presidency, and that they defended and deflected those lies for short-sighted political advantage.

That may be their last, best chance to land on the right side of history.

You can’t blame people for being deceived by a dishonest president they voted for. But members of the Senate Sedition Caucus need to come clean.

Missouri U-S Senator Josh Hawley is blasting a ruling by a Cole County judge that says the state Attorney General’s offi...
11/22/2022

Missouri U-S Senator Josh Hawley is blasting a ruling by a Cole County judge that says the state Attorney General’s office violated the open records law when Hawley was in charge. He describes it as a partisan witch hunt:

"The Democrats have attacked me on this going back to the last campaign with Claire McCaskill. For four years now, I have personally – personally – been investigated twice by the Secretary of State in Missouri and by the Democrat auditor in an investigation that went on for years into my personal conduct, both of which, all of which exonerated me completely.”

However, the judge that made last week’s ruling, Circuit Judge Jon Beetem, is a Republican. He ordered the attorney general’s office to pay a $12,000 fine and to pay attorney’s fees and costs associated with the case.

(Missourinet) - Missouri U-S Senator Josh Hawley is blasting a ruling by a Cole County judge that says the state Attorney General’s office violated the

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who has spent the past six years proudly cheerleading Donald Trump’s extreme right radicali...
11/22/2022

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who has spent the past six years proudly cheerleading Donald Trump’s extreme right radicalism, now acknowledges that something isn’t working with that GOP formula. His acknowledgment follows a dismal midterm performance in which Trump-backed candidates were repudiated by voters across the country, with exit polls indicating that political violence and democracy denialism were among the primary voter turnoffs. Hawley, Missouri’s junior senator, served as the poster child for violence and democracy denial with his fist-pump encouragement of Capitol insurrectionists and his fiction-based Senate-floor challenge of the 2020 election results.

But rather than acknowledge how his own errors contributed to his party’s loss of voter confidence, Hawley is pointing the finger everywhere else. Our longtime policy is not to give Missouri politicians — Democrats or Republicans — unfettered access to our op-ed pages unless they also agree to a sit-down meeting to answer our questions directly. We ask difficult, uncomfortable questions, and Hawley joins the likes of St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones and Missouri Representatives Cori Bush and Ann Wagner in refusing to answer our questions.

Notably absent in comments Hawley has made since the election — including his Washington Post op-ed — is any semblance of personal accountability. It’s all about what others did to spoil the GOP’s chances and zero acknowledgment of what the party’s leadership actually accomplished. Doesn’t he stand for tighter restrictions on abortion rights? He sure did back when Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell single-handedly manipulated successive Supreme Court confirmation votes to create the conservative majority that overturned Roe v. Wade this year. And yet Hawley was one of 10 Republicans who voted last week against McConnell continuing as leader. Perhaps Hawley realizes that wholesale revocation of abortion rights wasn’t what American voters wanted.

He told KCMO radio that he thinks there needs to be a leader who “actually gets what voters want.” Everything that Hawley stood for on Jan. 6, 2021, was exactly the opposite of what voters want. He’s the one who rolled the snowball of election denialism down the hill with his baseless challenge of the 2020 vote in Pennsylvania. He’s the one who fist-pumped encouragement to the gathering mob outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, shortly before they stormed the building, attacking police and chanting threats to hang Vice President Mike Pence and hunt down House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

This was the very violence and denial of democracy that caused millions of voters to reject right-wing extremists at the polls on Nov. 8. But to read Hawley’s op-ed version, it’s as if Jan. 6 never happened: “Many Republicans are primed to learn all the wrong lessons from this cycle. Over the past week, we’ve heard this election is about nothing more than candidate quality or turnout operations. Wrong. The problem isn’t principally the tactics; the problem is the substance,” he writes.

Wrong. The election was about candidate quality (a phrase coined by McConnell). The candidates who came off as right-wing loonies were the ones voters specifically rejected as the low-quality politicians they proved themselves to be. What planet is Hawley living on?

He continues: “For the past two years, the Republican establishment in Washington has capitulated on issue after issue, caving to Democrats on the Second Amendment and on the left’s radical climate agenda.”

The only “Second Amendment” measure approved by Congress was a bill designed to keep guns out of the hands of deranged individuals by offering incentives — not requirements but incentives — for states to pass red-flag laws. Hawley apparently thinks Americans want more deranged people to shoot up schools, synagogues and shopping centers with military-style weaponry. He proposes to fund the hiring of 100,000 more police officers for American cities. Why are they needed? Because the guns he wants to put in the hands of more and more criminals and deranged people are making the streets more and more unsafe. Voters do not want this.

As for the “left’s radical climate agenda,” we will grant him an acknowledgment that Republicans are finally recognizing that wildfires raging across the western United States, more powerful hurricanes bashing the eastern United States, and deadly polar vortexes dumping sub-zero temperatures and snow across the middle United States are all connected to global climate change. Addressing climate change isn’t leftist radicalism; it’s mainstream American survivalism.

Hawley wants to boost tariffs on goods from China, conveniently sidestepping the fact that tariffs aren’t paid by foreign countries. They’re paid by U.S. importers and passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. By supporting tougher tariffs, Hawley is offering a fist-pump to higher inflation. No, this is not what American voters want.

He talks a good game about canceling foreign production in favor of consumer goods made in America while improving pay for American workers. What he doesn’t dare talk about are the astronomical prices American consumers would pay if that happened. Think inflation is bad now? Under the Hawley plan, add a few hundred percentage points to get an idea of how much worse it would be.

Hawley, an elitist Yale Law and Stanford graduate, asserts himself as spokesman for “America’s working people” as if he’s ever earned a paycheck digging a ditch or swinging a hammer.

This man is a fraud and a chameleon. He fist-pumps insurrectionists, then runs for his life as they swarm through the Capitol. He fist-pumps the American workers with hands so soft they would blister at the mere thought of performing the kinds of work that blue-collar workers and immigrants do every day.

The truth is chasing Sen. Hawley. So yes, run, Josh, run.

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who has spent the past six years proudly cheerleading Donald Trump’s extreme right radicalism, now acknowledges that something isn’t working with that GOP formula. His acknowledgment

A Cole County judge ordered the Missouri Attorney General to pay $12,000 in penalties for violating the Missouri Sunshin...
11/15/2022

A Cole County judge ordered the Missouri Attorney General to pay $12,000 in penalties for violating the Missouri Sunshine Law when it failed to turn over public records that were potentially embarrassing to then-attorney general Josh Hawley.
A judge ruled on Monday that the Missouri Attorney General’s Office “knowingly and purposefully” broke state public records laws when now-U.S. Senator Josh Hawley was in charge.

Cole County Judge Jon Beetem ordered the Missouri Attorney General to pay a $12,000 penalty for failing to turn over public records requested by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) in 2017.

Beetem found that employees in the attorney general’s office used private email accounts to discuss public matters, and then tried to excuse themselves from producing those records by claiming they were not in the attorney general’s office’s custody.

The ruling is troublesome for the Missouri Attorney General’s Office because it has the responsibility to enforce the state’s public records law, known as the Sunshine Law. And the office’s policy prohibits its employees from conducting public business on private emails.

Yet that’s what Beetem found that employees of the Missouri Attorney General’s Office did when they corresponded about public business on private email addresses with political consultants hired by Hawley as he prepared to launch a bid for U.S. Senate in 2018.

“[T]he fact that this public business was conducted through and stored on private email accounts — in direct contravention of the AGO’s official policies prohibiting AGO employees from conducting public business on private emails … — is itself evidence of ‘a conscious design, intent, or plan’ to conceal these controversial records from public view,’” Beetem wrote in a ruling on Monday.

Hawley himself in 2016 criticized Hillary Clinton for her use of a private server to store emails during her tenure as Secretary of State.

Mark Pedroli, a St. Louis attorney who represented the DSCC in its lawsuit against the Missouri Attorney General’s Office, said on social media that Beetem’s ruling was a victory for public transparency.

“Attorney General Hawley’s office illegally concealed public documents immediately prior to a U.S. Senate election against Senator Claire McCaskill for the sole purpose of preventing damage to Hawley’s campaign and affecting the outcome of the election,” Pedroli wrote on Twitter. “Concealing public records in order to prevent damage to your campaign is cheating, it deprives competing candidates of a level playing field, and it’s illegal.”

Hawley’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Missouri Attorney General’s Office said it is reviewing the decision and would not comment further. The Missouri Attorney General is currently run by Eric Schmitt until January, when he gets sworn into office as Missouri’s other U.S. Senator.

*‘No such records’*

The litigation involved a request for records sent by the DSCC late in 2017 seeking from the Missouri Attorney General’s Office correspondence between its employees and OnMessage Inc., a political consulting firm.

Daniel Hartman, the custodian of records for the Missouri Attorney General’s Office at the time, told the DSCC that no such records existed. But they did, just on private email addresses, including on one belonging to Hartman.

A few months later, the DSCC sent another request for similar records between the attorney general and OnMessage, but Hartman replied that the volume of records involved would take time to produce but never gave the organization the records.

Reporters for The Kansas City Star later obtained copies of written communications between employees of the Missouri Attorney General’s Office and OnMessage and published a story in October 2018. The article described how political consultants hired by Hawley shaped and influenced how the attorney general’s office operated as they helped prepare him to run for Senate.

Hawley responded to the article by telling a Kansas City television station that it was “one of the most absurdly false stories” he had ever read and insisted that “nobody ran that office but me.”

When Hawley ran for attorney general in 2016, his campaign included an advertisement criticizing other Missouri politicians for using their elected offices to seek higher offices while pledging not to do the same if voters chose him for attorney general.

The Star’s article, coupled with a subsequent complaint filed by the American Democracy Fund, caused the Missouri Secretary of State to launch an investigation. The Missouri Attorney General on Dec. 21, 2018, produced records to the secretary of state, including ones from private email addresses of its employees to OnMessage.

By then, Hawley had defeated McCaskill in the 2018 general election and was on his way to becoming U.S. Senator.

In addition to the $12,000 in penalties, Beetem has asked attorneys for the DSCC to submit their legal bills to the court sometime in the next two months, which he will then have the attorney general’s office pay.

By Steve Vockrodt

A Cole County judge ordered the Missouri Attorney General to pay $12,000 in penalties for violating the Missouri Sunshine Law when it failed to turn over public records that were potentially embarrassing to then-attorney general Josh Hawley.

Senator Josh Hawley insisted that Democratic officials are waging war against “Christian culture that they don’t like” d...
10/29/2022

Senator Josh Hawley insisted that Democratic officials are waging war against “Christian culture that they don’t like” during a Thursday night appearance on Fox News, a comment host Tucker Carlson let go unchecked.

The segment started with a clip of Vice President Kamala Harris publicly admitting her fondness for electric school buses during an event announcing a $1 billion grant for them, during which she also shared her dislike of diesel fuel. There is currently a shortage of diesel fuel, which Carlson blamed on the international intervention in Ukraine against Russia’s invasion.

Carlson then suggested that Rep. Jamie Raskin said in writing that we must go to war with Russia because it’s a “Christian conservative country.”

It’s not clear what Carlson is referring to, but Raskin recently wrote about the importance of supporting Ukraine’s sovereignty against Russia, which included this passage:

"Moscow right now is a hub of corrupt tyranny, censorship, authoritarian repression, police violence, propaganda, government lies and disinformation, and planning for war crimes. It is a world center of antifeminist, antigay, anti-trans hatred, as well as the homeland of replacement theory for export. In supporting Ukraine, we are opposing these fascist views, and supporting the urgent principles of democratic pluralism. Ukraine is not perfect, of course, but its society is organized on the radically different principles of democracy and freedom, which is why Russia’s oligarchical leaders seek to destroy it forever. I am proud to have been banned from Putin’s Russia for my pro-Ukrainian legislative activism, and I look forward to visiting Ukraine."

Carlson painted Raskin as talking about a religious war before asking Hawley to comment.

“You know, you wouldn’t want to take him seriously, except for the fact that this is the majority party in control of the entire United States government right now,” the Missouri senator replied. “Both Houses of Congress and the White House.”

“But here’s the thing, Tucker, that they won’t quite say out loud, but absolutely true is that the war they are waging, a cultural war they’re most interested in, is right here in the United States of America,” Hawley added. “It’s America’s, let’s be honest, Christian culture that they don’t like. It’s the way that we live. It’s the way that working people and middle-class folks live. It’s the values that we hold. They don’t like any of those things, and they want to destroy the economic underpinnings of America’s middle class and working class. That’s what this is about.”

“That’s why Joe Biden says stuff like this is a necessary transition. Transition to what? To their secular progressive utopia,” he concluded. “In the meantime, we all just have to suffer the consequences.”

For those playing at home, Carlson and Hawley took a throwaway line from Vice President Harris about diesel fuel and arrived at a “war against Christians” in about three minutes, devoid of any actual logic or reasoning, but instead appealing to a dark fear that some Americans have that “they” are out to get you. Judging by the ratings and reported revenue, it’s a lucrative approach. But what cost victory?

By Colby Hall

Senator Josh Hawley insisted that Democratic officials are waging war against "Christian culture that they don't like" during a Thursday night appearance on Fox News, a comment host Tucker Carlson let go unchecked. The segment started with a clip of Vice President Kamala Harris publicly admitting he...

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