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International

Trump campaign says he will pardon Jan. 6 prisoners on ‘case-by-case basis’ if re-elected

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5 minute read

From LifeSiteNews

By Stephen Kokx

When I look at Portland, when I look at Minneapolis, where they took over police precincts and everything else, and went after federal buildings, when I look at other situations that were violent, and where people were killed, nothing happened to them. Nothing happened to them. I think it’s a two-tier system of justice

Donald Trump has clarified that if he is re-elected, he will pardon January 6 prisoners on a “case-by-case basis” instead of acquitting them en masse, as he previously suggested he might. 

Trump sat down for an extensive interview with Time magazine last month. It covered everything from abortion  and Operation Warp Speed to foreign policy and what a potential second term would look like. 

Time asked Trump if he would “consider pardoning every one of” the more than 800 persons imprisoned for their actions in Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021. He responded that he would “absolutely” consider doing that for the “J-6 patriots” but added, “if somebody was evil and bad, I would look at that differently.” 

Trump also noted that “many of those people were ushered in [to the Capitol]. You see it on tape, the police are ushering them in. They’re walking with the police.” 

The day the Time interview went to print, Karoline Leavitt, the national press secretary for the Trump campaign, issued a statement to NBC News. 

“As President Trump has promised, he will pardon January 6th protestors who are wrongfully imprisoned by Crooked Joe Biden’s Justice Department, and those decisions will be determined on a case-by-case basis when he is back in the White House,” she said. 

Trump has commented on how he would handle January 6 detainees on multiple occasions. In a Truth Social post on March 11, he said one of his first acts as the 47th president would be to “Free the January 6 Hostages being wrongfully imprisoned!” At a rally in Conroe, Texas, in January 2022, he announced that, if he is re-elected, “those people from January 6” will be treated “fairly,” and “if it requires pardons, we will give them pardons because they are being treated so unfairly.”

At the Pray Vote Stand Summit in September 2023, Trump vowed to pardon or commute the sentences of recently jailed pro-life advocates as well as “every political prisoner who’s been unjustly persecuted by the Biden administration.”  

GOP Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor-Greene has been one of a few elected officials on Capitol Hill to draw attention to the human rights abuses carried out against detainees over the past several years.  

Trump told Time that the way January 6 protesters have been treated is far different from the way Black Lives Matters and Antifa rioters were in years past. 

“It’s a two-tier system” he noted. “When I look at Portland, when I look at Minneapolis, where they took over police precincts and everything else, and went after federal buildings, when I look at other situations that were violent, and where people were killed, nothing happened to them. Nothing happened to them. I think it’s a two-tier system of justice. I think it’s a very, very sad thing.” 

Trump also said that he “tried to stop” protesters from entering the Capitol. “I offered 10,000 soldiers and Nancy Pelosi turned me down. So did the mayor of Washington, she turned me down in writing,” he said. 

Trump will face off against presumptive Democratic nominee for President Joe Biden this summer in a re-match of the 2020 race. At present, most polls show Trump is ahead in a number of key swing states. 

DEI

Lawmakers press investigation into DEI agenda at the Pentagon

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Marines in amphibious task force gunnery exercise in the East China Sea.   

From The Center Square

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A Department of Defense official recently reported that in fiscal year 2023, all branches collectively fell short of their recruitment targets by more than 40,000. But that shortfall came even after recruitment targets were lowered significantly.

A coalition of lawmakers is pushing forward the ongoing investigation into just how much taxpayer money Pentagon officials are taking away from national defense and putting toward diversity, equity and inclusivity initiatives.

The Pentagon has been under increasing scrutiny for its focus on DEI, even as the Ukraine-Russia and Israel-Hamas wars continue.

The lawmakers sent a letter to the Defense Advisory Committee on Diversity and Inclusion Chair General (Ret.) Lester Lyles expressing concerns that the focus on DEI was a distraction and was hurting recruitment.

“DoD’s emphasis on diversity and inclusion over mission effectiveness and capability concerns our nation’s national security and safety,” the letter said.

The letter comes ahead of an expected report from that committee on its work for DOD.

Military branches have struggled to meet recruitment goals in recent years. A Department of Defense official recently reported that in fiscal year 2023, all branches collectively fell short of their recruitment targets by more than 40,000. But that shortfall came even after recruitment targets were lowered significantly.

“Stand Together Against Racism and Radicalism in the Services (STARRS), an educational organization that includes retired military members, assembled a study of over one thousand unsolicited comments from military service members, veterans, and their respective families,” the letter said. “Their findings showed that many did not feel comfortable recommending military service because of the DEI policies instituted throughout DoD.”

As The Center Square has previously reported, the Pentagon has embraced an array of equity initiatives, from training on white privilege to guidelines on gender pronouns. Recently, the DOD asked for more than $100 million just for DEI initiatives, sparking backlash.

House Oversight Subcommittee on National Security, the Border, and Foreign Affairs Chairman Glenn Grothman, R-Wisc., and House Armed Services Subcommittee on Military Personnel Chairman Jim Banks, R-Ind., led other Republicans on the letter.

The lawmakers want a full explanation of what the DEI efforts at the Pentagon are, in detail.

“The Subcommittee remains concerned that under the guise of DEI, promotions are being rewarded based on sex, gender, ethnicity, and race at the expense of merit,” the letter said.

The lawmakers expressly called for transparency in the upcoming report.

“Americans have the right to expect that their sons and daughters in uniform are led, trained, and equipped by the very best,” the letter said. “The Subcommittee understands that the STARRS report was provided to DACODAI, but it is unclear the extent to which DACODAI will incorporate that information into its final report.”

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International

Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi, who oversaw mass executions, dies in helicopter crash

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Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi

From LifeSiteNews

By Matt Lamb

Ebrahim Raisi, a Muslim cleric expected to eventually replace Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, oversaw the execution of thousands of dissidents and supported Hamas in its terrorist attacks.

The president of Iran died in a helicopter crash Sunday evening.

Ebrahim Raisi was a Muslim cleric who claimed his family descended from Muhammed, the founder of Islam. He died near Azerbaijan along with other officials who were visiting the country for an event celebrating a new dam, according to Reuters.

Raisi was a Shiite leader who served on the 1988 commission that sentenced thousands of political prisoners to death. He was expected to eventually replace the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“Human rights organizations estimate that between 4,500 and 5,000 men, women and children were killed in the summer of 1988 in prisons across Iran,” according to Amnesty International’s summary. “The pattern of political executions changed dramatically from piecemeal reports of executions to a massive wave of killings that took place over several months.”

“The true number of dead, however, is still unknown as the executions were carried out in secret. In fact, many relatives were never told about the killings or where their loved ones had been buried,” Amnesty International reported.

In September 2022, his government killed hundreds of protesters against clerical rule, according to the BBC.

“The ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ movement was sparked the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a young woman who had been detained by morality police in Tehran for allegedly wearing her hijab ‘improperly,” the BBC reported. “Authorities denied she was mistreated, but a UN fact-finding mission found she was ‘subjected to physical violence that led to her death.’”

Raisi oversaw Iran’s further enrichment of uranium and attacks on Israel, according to the Associated Press. He was “a hard-line protégé of the country’s supreme leader who helped oversee the mass executions of thousands in 1988 and later led the country as it enriched uranium near weapons-grade levels and launched a major drone-and-missile attack on Israel,” according to the AP’s article on his death.

“An Israeli official told Reuters it was not involved in the crash,” the news outlet reported. “It wasn’t us.”

The terrorist group Hamas also mourned Raisi’s death and that of Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, who also died in the plane crash. Hamas thanked them for supporting them in the terrorist attacks against Israel on October 7, 2023, and the ensuing war.

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