Piers Morgan Uncensored - QAnon Shaman Debates Capitol Riots Cop | Feat Victor Davis Hanson
Episode Date: January 23, 2025One of the first and most controversial things that Donald Trump has done since returning to the presidency has been to pardon the participants of the notorious January 6th Capitol attack of 2021; eve...n the ones who attacked the police. As it was happening, Republican politicians condemned the rioters in the strongest terms, but four years on, they’ve changed their tune. Was it a protest? A riot? Or a genuine attempt to overthrow American democracy? Pardoned protestor Jacob Chansley, also known as QAnon Shaman and former Capitol police officer Winston Pingeon go head-to-head on the subject, joined on the Uncensored panel by Vinny Oshana from the 'PBD' podcast and Wajahat Ali from the 'Democracy-Ish' podcast. Piers Morgan also speaks to historian and political commentator Victor Davis Hanson and formerly imprisoned Democrat Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich, who was freed by Trump. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So this is January 6th.
And these are the hostages.
So this is a big one.
Biden is pardon more people than all the prior presidents put together.
I don't know what to make of it.
They lost, as you said, the moral high ground.
I agree with J.D. Vance that anybody who hit a police officer should not be pardoned.
I never thought I'd share a panel with a violent insurrectionist.
But this is America.
Dude, dude, I didn't storm anything.
I entered the building illegally to stop vandalism, violence and theft.
And I literally stood in front of an angry mob and told everybody to go home.
everybody to go home because Donald Trump said to go home.
I played his video tweet on my megaphone.
None of this was said in the media.
The narrative was the House of Cards.
Trump says they're hostages.
They're only victims of their own actions.
When you put a blanket pardon like this,
it is offensive.
My heart goes out to him because to me, he was a victim.
Allow me to apologize to the police on behalf of all
J-Sixers and all Trump supporters
for what happened to you guys on that day.
I've met Jacob in person.
What the media told us about this guy,
he's a monster, he did this.
I met him in person, I interviewed him.
amazing guy.
You are condemning the rioters who committed acts of violence.
Now you're starting to think for yourself.
Yes, Pierce.
It looked bad.
But you know what?
You believe the system's cheating you.
You go to the system and you protest.
These people felt like they were cheated.
And you know what?
They were.
No, I applaud President Trump for doing that.
They were political prisoners.
There will be from time to time
stupid, crazy people who overdo it
and they should be held accountable.
Trump saw that it was all bullshit.
Can you say that on your show?
You can.
It's unconsensit.
You say what you like.
And, you know, Trump is fucking cold.
Well, we British take a lot of flack from across the pond
for our peculiar system of government.
The king is our commander-in-chief,
and he ultimately gets the final say on every law and every government.
But, of course, it doesn't really work like that.
Politicians call the shots,
and the monarch pulls the trigger.
He has no direct power that comes anywhere close to the presidential pardon.
A positively kingly command was a dominant debate in America
in the final days of Biden and the first days of President Trump.
The new president is delivered on his promise
to pardon what he calls the hostages of January the 6th.
About 1,500 defendants are cleared,
including, wrongly in my view, the violent offenders.
It ends what became the biggest criminal investigation
in FBI history.
I've already served a long period of time,
and I made a decision to give a pardon.
Joe Biden gave a pardon yesterday to a lot of criminals.
These are criminals that he gave a pardon to.
And you should be asking that question,
why did he give a pardon to all of these people
that committed crimes?
Why did he give a pardon to the J6 unselect committee?
Well, that gets to the heart of the debate here.
I've made my feelings clear on January 6th many times.
Those were deeply unedifying scenes for America.
There's no doubt that some people who found themselves in the wrong place at the wrong moment
were very harshly treated, overly harshly.
There's also no doubt that some of the rioters behave like viciously violent thugs
and deserve to be sent to jail for considerable periods of time.
But as Trump says, they were sent to jail for their crimes.
Joe Biden's vast wave of parting pardons, including a notorious cop killer.
I mean, we can never find out if some of his allies and relatives ever committed crimes in the first place.
First there was Hunter, his son, completely insulated from prosecution in the matter that Joe Biden swore he would never do.
Next in his final moments came most of Biden's family, along with the J6 committee and Dr. Fauci, too.
Biden says this was necessary because he fears the weaponization of a justice system for political means.
But maybe the reason he fears it is the four years.
lawfare on Trump, which came from Democrats.
Well, the J6 pardons are worth debating, and we will,
but Democrats might find that the moral high ground has fallen beneath them
and that Joe Biden has dunk the hole.
Now, we'll debate with my panel a moment,
which includes a former capital policeman served on January 6th
and someone who's just been pardoned by President Trump.
But before that, I'm joined by the historian and author of The End of Everything,
Victor Davis Hanson.
Victor, great to have you back on Uncensored.
Thank you.
There's a lot going on with these pardons.
Obviously, the actual idea of a presidential pardon is not new.
Every president does it in varying degrees and varying numbers.
But what do you make of two things here?
Well, we'll start with Biden.
Biden doing all these preemptive pardons.
Before we've even seen any evidence of crimes being committed
or potentially court cases to adjudicate whether they've been committed
or any potential prosecutions.
What do you feel about that as a principle
and how much of that has gone on in the past?
Well, that's only happened one time in American history.
That was Jerry Ford's preemptive pardon of Richard Nixon.
And so if you look at all of the pardons through the Biden tenure,
Biden has pardoned more people than all the prior presidents put together.
So it's not just the nature, but it's the magnitude.
Some of them, as you pointed out, were egregious.
Mr. Peltier killed, murdered two FBI agents,
And that sentence was commuted.
So, and then the same people who are damning Trump right now for pardoning people were the ones, of course, that said preemptive pardons were a violation of the spirit of the Constitution.
So I don't know what to make of it.
They lost, as you said, the moral high ground.
There's another issue, though, on that on the January 6th is that from May 28th all the way to October.
there was almost 120, 30 days of continuous riot, arson, $2 billion in property damage.
35 people were killed.
And we talk about police officers.
1,500 police officers allegedly were injured or reported injuries.
And we had $2 billion in damage.
And of those 14,000 people who were arrested, about 90% of them were not even charged.
And so that was an egregious, I think, kind of...
You're talking about the BLM protest after the murder of George Floyd.
Yes.
They even tried to, people talk about the Capitol, but unfortunately, these iconic monuments
are not sacrosanct.
They tried to rush the, they burned, they tried to burn down the historic St. John's
Episcopal Church across from the White House.
They tried to go into the White House grounds.
They put the president into a bunker with the.
the Secret Service at that time. The New York Times the next day said, cowardly Trump flees to bunker.
So there is an asymmetry about the whole discussion. And Ms. Talib took over the rotunda
in connection with the demonstrations on October 11th, and she had all of her supporters
swarm into the capital retunda, and then she gave a fiery denunciation of Israel. I think a
person could legitimately call it pro-Hamas, disrupted everything. No one ever said,
this was a forced takeover of the rotunda, which it was.
So we're seeing a radical asymmetric.
And that's the, I'm not sick.
I agree with J.D. Vance that anybody who hit a police officer or used violence should not be pardoned.
Yeah.
But that was a very small minority.
And what has gone on in this country on the unequal or asymmetrical application of justice from law
to trying to remove the president off the ballot,
to impeaching him twice, to trying him as a prize.
All of this has never happened before.
And so you can see that we'll see what there's going to be.
And just today, Congressman Comer said that they have uncovered new information
that directly ties Joe Biden to being a recipient of maybe not just $20 million,
but $30 million.
And so all of these Biden family members have been given preemptive.
pardons. I don't know if it's going to help all of them because under our law, once you have a
preemptive pardon, you are not excused from crimes that are committed after, knowingly after that
pardon. And you cannot plead the fifth. So if one of these people has brought in and testifies
falsely, then they could be charged with perjury. But any crime that is found, we didn't know about,
but it's discovered up until the time of the pardon,
they're pardoned from.
It's a fascinating overview of it all.
I mean, in terms of Joe Biden's legacy,
do you think the scale of his pardoning
and the extra dimension of all these preemptive pardons,
do you think that's trashed his legacy?
Yeah, I think he was in big trouble before that
because it's pretty clear that people who were disparaged
and slandered for saying that there was a strange way,
in which he was nominated. In other words, within about 30 days, all of the primary candidates in
2020 dropped out. Many of them, like Cory Booker or Pete Buttigick, had said on the debate
stage that he was cognitively challenged. Then he came into office, and then for the next four years,
that dementia accelerated. But anybody who wrote, and I can speak personally about that,
was severely attacked by suggesting that you were agist or you were engaging in deep fakes.
which is, you know, I can understand that they want to protect the president, but then as soon as the election was over, then we had this outpouring from the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, 50 sources. They all knew about it. So it was a more egregious cover-up than what Edith Wilson did in the last year and a half of the Wildred Wilson when he was non-composementes with a stroke, no president. We thought we never do that again. That was an infamous incident in U.S. history. But we Trump,
that, so to speak.
It is staggering.
That's what led into this.
Even without this, that would have been bad.
Right.
This was a force multiplier.
When you see the state of Joe Biden now, where he really, every public appearance is kind
of cringe-worthy because of his cognitive and physical state, the idea that he could
have run for another four years is absurd, isn't it?
I mean, that was clearly just a massive lie that the Democrats perpetrated on the American
people for a conservative.
period of time. There's absolutely no way that man could have been the commander-in-chief of the United States for the next four years. And they knew that for, I would think, up to two years before.
They did, but they had used him as sort of a waxen effigy. In other words, people from the Obama administration and the circle of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, what I would call the hard left of the country, actually enjoyed the fact that he was not cognitively alert. Because he had, we remember, had,
campaigned as the uniter and a return to moderation in the end of the chaos. And then when he came in,
he was no longer Ojo from Scranton, the moderate. He was the most radically progressive president
we've ever had since FDR, more so. And he opened, it wasn't the border, it was porous, it was
non-existent. We had the Soros crime wave, Afghanistan, two theater wars, hyperinflation one year,
nine percent. So, and that was all the result of people putting policies in on
under this image or veneer.
And I think he was sort of appointed
by the insiders of the Democratic Party.
He lived by an appointment and he, so to speak, metaphorically,
he died by an appointment, a deposal by the same people.
You're a constitutional expert.
Are all these pardons both by Biden and now by Trump?
Are they all actually constitutional?
Yes, they are.
And it's under our system.
We've had people who've kind of winked a nod.
I think Liz Cheney and General Millie and others have said, well, I wouldn't want one.
Why would I need it?
Because if I, because the left, remember when Trump threatened to do this when he was leaving office.
And they said, do not preemptively pardon these people are being arrested the last two weeks of his tenure.
So he didn't do it.
But the left came out on record and said, if anybody is pardoned by Donald Trump under this new preemptive pardon, it is an admission of guilt.
And so that came up again.
And they said, well, we don't really want it.
But the nature of American pardons are, it doesn't matter what the recipient says.
He can say, I don't want it, I don't accept it.
But legally, he is pardoned.
And no prosecutor will touch him.
So they try to, I think another thing people don't realize, they say, well, Trump is going after the J6 committee.
But if you look at very carefully what Liz Cheney did, and I liked, I've met her, I liked her,
I like her.
I'm not trying to.
You don't, under American jurisprudence, you cannot call a witness up and ask if their lawyer is in the room
and then try to question her about her upcoming testimony.
That's called, you know, tampering with a witness.
And that is a felony.
There is the allegation by Trump, and no one has adjudicated exactly what records were destroyed or missing.
So there was legitimate concern.
And General Millie is the same question.
We have a law, it's on statute, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 88, which
retired and present flag offers.
You shall not disparage the commander in chief.
Well, General Milley called him a fascist in the greatest danger.
I could go on.
There's about 11 officers who did that.
But more importantly, when he contacted his Chinese counterpart to warn him that in his diagnosis
of Donald Trump, he felt Donald Trump as commander-in-chief was too unstable.
And he would warn.
that in two occasions, his Chinese PLA counterpart first before he carried out an order.
That was, I think, bordering on treason, and more importantly, he violated the chain of command.
Under the Joint Chief statute, a chairman of the Joint Chief is an advisory role.
He cannot interfere legally with the chain of command, and the theater commanders report
directly to the Department of Defense head.
and General Millie said to all the theater commanders,
if we get in a crisis, you come, you talk to me first before they,
and that was a violation of code.
So he could be, he would have been, I think,
if there was a disinterested, he would have been court-martial for that.
He should have been before.
Fascinating.
And finally, Victor, you started by saying that there's only been one preemptive pardon.
It was Ford to Nixon.
I want to end with another president-to-president,
moment that didn't happen, but many things should have happened. Should Joe Biden have pardoned
Donald Trump, given that most people view his criminal conviction for the Stormy Daniels business
as ridiculous? I think he should have. I'll just end with this fact totem that almost within 48 hours,
Fannie Willis's Paramour, who was a lead prosecutor in Georgia, was in the White House, meeting with
the White House counsel within a 48-hour period in which Jack Smith was appointed a federal
prosecutor within a 48-hour period that Mr. Coangelo, who had come from the Latita James
prosecution in New York, came in as third ranking in the DOJ, and that 48-hour period left to go
back to Alvin Bragg. And so when Joe Biden was complaining that they weren't doing enough
to prosecute, actually what was happening, his White House counsel
and his DOJ were coordinating these local state and federal prosecutions.
And just to finish, there were three things about all of them, I think, in retrospect,
any historian who's honest will, and that those crimes, quote-unquote,
will never be applied to anybody else about real estate evaluations on a loan that was functioning
and the bank had no problem or what.
Every disgruntled candidate calls up the register and says,
I know there's votes there, can you recount them?
And then two, had Donald Trump just said, you know, I don't want to run for a third time, he would have never been in any of these courtrooms.
And third, if he hadn't been Donald Trump, he would.
And everybody knows that in the United States now, and it's going to be a stain.
And I hope that Donald Trump, when he said he doesn't want to do that to his enemies, I hope if there are any investigations, they don't come out of the Pam Bondi Donald Trump connection.
If they are, they're going to have to be independent, local or state or a special prosecutor.
But I think that was wise of him to say it, and I hope he keeps to it.
Yeah, I agree.
Victor Davis Hansen, great to have you back.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Well, to debate all this, I'm joined by PPD podcast Angry Patriot, Vinnie Oshana, by Rajahat Ali,
is the host of Democracy Ish, by Jacob Chansley, formerly known as the Q&ON,
shaman, who was just pardoned by Donald Trump, and by a former capital police officer who was attacked
on January 6th at the capital, Winston Pigeon.
So thank you all for joining me.
I greatly appreciate it.
But Jaha, let me start with you.
How hamstrung do you feel
about launching a full-throttle attack
as I know you've been doing
and an itching to do about Trump's abuse of the pardon system
as you see it, given Joe Biden's obvious,
blatant abuse, which we've just heard from Victor Davis-Hansson,
unprecedented, apart from when Ford pardoned Nixon.
We've never seen preemptive pardons like this.
How new did you feel?
Do you feel like every time you try and go after Trump for this,
everyone on the right will go, hang on.
What about your guy?
No, I'm not worried about that at all.
And it's interesting that I never thought I'd be old enough
to share a panel with a violent insurrectionist
who voluntarily joined a mob inside by Trump
to overthrow a free and fair election,
but this is America.
And to answer your question, Pierce,
I actually want to read very quickly
some words by an author
who I agree with,
who shares my sentiments.
I'm going to quote them very quickly.
The Republican Senate cowards
should hang their heads in shame
pretending the capital riot
wasn't a Trump-inspired insurrection
is as deluded as saying 9-11
had nothing to do with bin Laden's terrorism.
The author continues,
and I completely agree with this author,
that Donald Trump was the man
whose ugly, violent rhetoric directly led to what happened on January 6th.
He took the most powerful megaphone in the world, and he screamed at his enraged, unhitched,
diehard fan base to go to the Capitol that day and fight for his presidency that he lied about
being stolen from him.
So that's exactly what thousands of them did.
Many of the writers have said in their own words that it was Trump's command that drove
them to the Congress.
And finally, shame on Donald Trump for continuing to perpetuate.
perpetuate a grotesque, inflammatory lie that threatens to imperil the very foundation of American democracy, end quote.
That was you, Pierce Morgan, four years ago in the Daily Mail.
I share your sentiment.
Yeah, it was me.
That is what I wrote at the time.
That is what I felt at the time.
And I didn't think we'd ever see Donald Trump run for office again.
I was wrong.
Not wrong about it.
But what changed?
What changed?
I was saying.
I thought it was horrendous.
However, the pardons have happened.
Jacob Chansley, you became incredibly well known
because of the image of you as a Q&N shame on at the time.
I believe you've now renounced Q&N.
You're no longer a Q&O identifying person.
A, is that correct?
Can I just verify that with you?
Q&O is a fiction created by the mockingbirds in the media
to discredit Q and the anons that follow Q.
So I was never a part of any Q&N on, you know,
community, I've always just followed Q.
What do you say to Wajah, who's just obviously let you have it with bells on and things that
dangerous insurrectionists, as he put it, should never be pardoned in the way that they have been?
What's your response?
He's entitled to his opinion.
I believe in freedom of speech, even if I disagree, especially if I disagree with what he says.
He isn't allowed to be wrong in America.
That's perfectly fine.
I really don't care what he think.
I know what the day was.
I know what it was for me personally and what it's been for literally thousands of American families across this country.
Having the government weaponized against you is the very thing the people on the left used to cry about all the time until they got in office and they were able to weaponize the government against their political opponents, which is exactly what happened.
And the media did their bidding too.
They were their handmaiden.
The real question we have to ask ourselves is what is the devious and nefarious hand.
inside of the government glove
or has been inside the government glove
for the last several decades
and the last four years
that's doing all this to the American people
and circumventing the Constitution
in the name of a state of emergency.
Okay, I mean, my question for you,
watching those scenes on January 6th that day
was surely no American,
no American could watch those scenes
and not think it was a shameful moment for America.
Whatever the motivation
for what was behind it,
whatever people felt they'd been encouraged
or otherwise to do by Donald Trump,
the fact that a very large group of people
basically tried to ransack the capital
in the way that that happened,
the home of democracy in America,
those images went around the world
and the world was genuinely horrified, Jacob.
How do you feel when you look back to those images?
Can I ask you a question?
Sure, sure.
Can I ask you a question?
Sure.
What would you do if you found out
that the whole thing could have been prevented was actually government orchestrated,
and all the blood that happened on January 6th is on the hands of people like Nancy Pelosi,
Yogananda Pitman, Mark Millie, all the people that Victor David Hansa just talked about,
they're the ones that set this whole thing up. This thing has the fingerprints of regime change all over it,
and our government has become expert level of regime change. The media wasn't talking about
Sergei and DeBinan, the known Ukrainian spy that was in the crowd on that day,
and actually has to take a picture with me, as funny as that is, the FBI asked me, do you know who this is?
I said, no.
Jacob, hang on.
Jacob, before I go to Winston to respond, because he was there, he was a police officer that day at the Capitol.
But why were you doing it then?
I mean, presumably you weren't told to do it by somebody from the FBI or any of these other theories that were being propagated since.
What was your purpose in storming the Capitol that day?
What did you want to achieve?
You're asking me?
Yes.
What my purpose of storming the Capitol?
Look, dude, I didn't storm anything.
I entered the building illegally to stop vandalism, violence, and theft, which was proven all on video by me stopping somebody from stealing 30 seconds getting into the building, volunteering to help the police.
That's why I was escorted to the Senate chamber.
And also saying a prayer inside the chamber and then stopping people from breaking in when I was outside the building.
I literally stood in front of an angry mob and told everybody to go home because Donald Trump said to go home.
I played his tweet.
I played his video tweet on my megaphone, told everybody to go home.
I stood in front of an angry mob trying to break into the Capitol.
And none of this was said in the media because their narrative was the House of Cards.
I was there Achilles heel.
And Tucker Carlson knew that.
And that's why he aired that footage.
And he totally destroyed the Mockingbird Media's narrative about January 6th.
Okay.
Let me go to Winston.
You were there that day.
You're a capital police officer.
What are your feelings about the fact that everyone is.
involved as being pardoned, even the ones who were violent to police officers?
I think it's very unfortunate that particularly those that were violent and who attacked
both me and my fellow officers that day are able to walk totally free.
It sends a horrible message to Americans, to the world, to law enforcement, you know,
not only Capitol Police, D.C. police, who have continued to show up every day, do their
jobs in service to others and service to the American people, to Congress. And, you know, it basically
says that it's okay to do political violence against and, you know, beat police officers.
There's, it says that there's nothing wrong with that. Do you think there's a...
No, what says that that's okay is the BLM riots. It says that's okay is the Antifa riots and there
being no prosecutions. That's what says that's okay, is attacking federal buildings and no
prosecutions. That's what says that's okay.
Forgive me for saying, I don't mean interrupt,
but the double standard, what Victor A. Davis-Hansson was talking about,
the asymmetrical justice system is on full display.
And to deny that the Antifa and BLM riots didn't play a role in the demoralization of our police officers
and the allowance of this crime spree all across the country is just absolutely silly.
The idea that that is not to blame is silly.
Well, it's an interesting point, Winston.
So what about ism, though?
It's horrible.
What aboutism?
I was a police officer for five years.
I worked in 2020 the summer in D.C.
I will not condone any violence against police for whatever political cause, whether it was then on January 6th.
And I'm glad we can agree on that.
But the difference is that on January 6th, it was not just a riot on the street.
There were those like yourself that entered this building illegally and others who were violent against us.
and it had never happened before.
Not since the war of 1812 and 1814,
when the British stormed the Capitol had this ever happened,
not since the war had been so divided.
Allow me to apologize.
Please allow me to apologize
on behalf of all January 6ers
and all Trump supporters for what happened to you guys.
I don't know if that's happened on live television yet,
but allow me to apologize to the police
on behalf of all J-6ers and all Trump supporters
for what happened to you guys on that day.
It's absolutely terrible.
And if you find out that your own Capitol police people,
like Yogananda Pitman or, you know, Tom Major covering up what actually happened and the fact that they put you in harm's way.
I think you guys have a vested interest in a class action lawsuit for your own work environment putting you guys in harm's way.
I appreciate that.
Apology.
I think, though, the bigger picture is, you know, as an officer, we never victim blame.
You know, when a crime is committed against somebody, it is not their fault.
And it's more important to look at the bigger picture.
Why was that crowd there that day?
Who sent them?
who, what, you know, I remember people telling me that day on January 6th, President Trump sent us here,
we are going to get in that building and thinking there's no way they're going to be so violent,
so brutal to actually get past us and break inside until very shortly after.
I'm seeing for my own eyes that I was wrong and that the mob, you know, was.
And again, could Capitol Police have been more.
Were you talking to Ray Epps?
Is that who you were talking to?
Well, let me, I want to ask Winston a question, which is this.
Winston, do you see a difference between people that day who committed acts of violence against police officers
and people like Jacob here who did not?
I mean, do you see a qualitative difference between the two?
J.D. Vance said he could see an argument for pardoning the nonviolent rioters.
And I see that argument.
They'd all been imprisoned, almost all of them.
and many people felt some of the sentencing was way over the top for non-violent acts.
Do you see a difference between the two?
I do see a difference, of course.
Somebody who just entered the building illegally did not commit as bad an act as those who used a stun gun against, you know,
my fellow officers who used bats and two-by-fours bear spray against us.
Of course, there is a difference there.
You know, I like to think some people there that day normally would respect police.
They had Blue Lives Matter flags.
I like to think that some of those people just perhaps got caught up in the moment and make mistakes.
However, no, you know, we all make mistakes, but we must be held accountable for our actions.
The justice system imposed, you know, these people got due process.
You know, Trump says they're hostages.
It acts like they, you know, were victims of this.
They're only victims of their own actions.
And so, sure, I can see a difference.
But again, when you put a blanket pardon like this,
particularly those who were violent, you know, it is offensive.
And I know Capitol police officers today who are still working,
very upset by this action.
Why should they continue to do their jobs every day if violence against them is just not going to matter?
Right.
And Jacob, before I go to Vinny, is that rationale applies to Joe Biden
and all the pardons he just put out.
Yeah, yeah, we're going to come to that, Jake.
Jackie, before I go to Vinny for his response,
would he be waiting patiently?
I would just ask you the same question.
Do you see a difference yourself?
I mean, what do you say about those on the day
who did commit acts of violence against police officers?
Do you see a difference to them of people like you?
Yes, I do, to be perfectly honest with you.
But I respect the president's decision to pardon those people,
and I'll tell you why.
Because what happened in 2020 with the riots
and what's happened with the pardons that Joe Biden has put out there, attention has to be drawn to that.
And Donald Trump pardoning some people that a small, small, small percentage of people that harm police officers or committed acts of vandalism on that day is nothing compared to the damage that was done by the pardons that Joe Biden did or by the PSYOP that was perpetrated on the American people by Russia, Russia, Russia for four years, by the Hunter Biden laptops suppression by these 51 intelligence.
agents lying, then going after all these people because of January 6th, all the lives that were
destroyed.
Like, I would really rather have J-Sixers on the street that hit a cop than I would a child molester
from Nicaragua.
Okay.
Look, you make a lot of points there, some of which...
I would have neither.
Well, yeah, exactly.
That's what to be my point.
But before I go to Vinny, Jacob, just to be clear, it seems to me like you would unreservedly
condemn the rioters that day who committed acts of violence against police officers, would
you?
I believe in non-violent, non-cooperation with evil.
If you cooperate with an evil system, you contribute to its evil.
That's Gandhi right there, and that's truth.
So I believe in non-violent, non-cooperation.
So you would condemn the people who committed acts of violence against police officers.
I believe that they have served their time enough,
and they've felt the full way to the government, which is something that's very, very few people.
I condemn violence that happened on January 6th, but I also agree with the partons.
That's fair enough.
But just to be clear, you do condemn the people who committed acts of violence that day, the rioters who did, who were violent.
I just answered your question.
It's a yes.
I don't want to misquote you.
So I'm just pinning you down to say yes.
I've already, well, then play the tape back, buddy.
Well, you said you condemn acts of violence.
So by definition, I'm assuming you are condemning the rioters who committed acts of violence.
Now you're starting to think for yourself.
Well, can you just say yes or no?
Yes.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Listen, you know what?
I actually appreciate that honesty.
I appreciate the candor.
I think it moves the debate to a better place
when people on all sides of this can concede things
which actually we should all agree on.
There can be an argument about whether Trump should have pardon them.
There should be no argument,
especially when we have one of these police officers sitting in this panel,
that violence against people,
police officers is never acceptable and should always be condemned.
Vinnie, you be very patient.
100%.
Vinnie, let me bring you in.
Actually, a really interesting debate of this.
And honestly, all of it has been fascinating to me
and to actually have one of the people who's been pardoned
next to one of the police officers
and reaching some points of agreement, I think is a really important thing.
Vinnie, what do you feel about this?
The Republicans were split.
Many Republicans, clearly JD Vance,
did not want the ones who were violent against police officers
to be pardoned.
It does seem to fly in the way.
face of what most Republicans would think, which is if you commit an act of violence against
police, you should not be pardoned. What do you think?
Well, first, peers, I want to congratulate you. Your friend finally inaugurated into the White
House. He's going to stop this bleeding that's been happening with this country. I was there,
peers. I sent your producers a bunch of videos. The guy's done more in three days than Joe Biden
has done his entire career. The moment we saw him at the Capitol One arena, he sat down and started
deciding executive orders and got to business.
Number one, number two, peers, in regards to the Jan 6 and all the partners and everything,
I've met Jacob in person.
What the media told us about this guy, he's a monster, he did this.
I met him in person, I interviewed him, amazing guy, great heart, he's intellectual,
he knows what he's talking about.
He loves this country, okay?
And what happened on January 6th, I know, why it said something about free and fair election.
That's what you believe.
The American people don't believe that.
The majority of us, 81 million votes, all the discrepancies, FBI at Twitter, all the cheating or election interference.
I think that day, in regard to Winston about January 6th, my heart goes out to him because to me, he was a victim for Nancy Pelosi and all of them holding back 10,000 National Guard troops, all the gainsplank.
He was a pawn in the game of destroyed Donald Trump no matter what, okay?
Oh, Vivini, but Vinny.
Let me ask you, though, Vinnie, but Vinny, I mean, look, that may well be the case.
That may well be the case.
But it doesn't change the fact that thousands of people, as part of a large group of people,
did storm the capital and many of them broke in, and some of them committed acts of violence
against police in the process.
None of that, I mean, all of it looked appalled.
To the rest of the world, it looked like America had lost its mind, right?
When you look back on it now, we can debate the nuances of who should have been pardoned and so on.
I do think some of the more peaceful protesters got way too big sentences for what is worth.
I don't think they're all violent.
They shouldn't be treated the same way.
But I do think any violence against police officers, I'm staggered that Donald Trump has pardoned them.
Honestly, I am.
I wouldn't have done it if I was there.
I agree with J.D. Vance's position on that.
Yeah.
Yeah, but peers, okay, and peers, I'm, by the way, I was a military police in the United States Air Force.
Any violence, period, I'm not for it.
But that day, Peirce, let's think about it.
Where was the insurrection?
Who had the guns?
Who was violent?
The FBI, Christopher A, we don't even know how many FBI agents, how many informants, how many people,
you're shooting rubber bullets in people's faces and acting as if they're not going to be upset.
Okay, we saw the footage of everybody inside.
Who was shooting?
Who was taking over?
Where was the insurrection?
Where was it, Pierce?
Donald Trump didn't say, go in there and do all of this.
A big group of people came in there.
Who knows how much they were freaking too.
But Vinny, they were all breaking the law.
Vinny, Vinny, they were all breaking the law.
Yes.
We have to agree that, right?
Yes.
And do you, okay, Pierce, I agree.
And do you think, who died that day, Pierce?
Who was actually, the highest crime is murder, okay?
A Capitol Police, Michael Bird, shot Ashley Babette and murdered her, okay?
Unarmed United States Air Force veteran.
He got pardoned as well, okay?
And yes, Pierce, it looked bad.
But you know what?
When the system, you believe the system's cheating you,
you go to the system and you protest.
And when he was talking about BLM and all the riots,
everybody burned down their own city.
Why the hell would you do that?
If you have a problem with the police department,
go to the police department.
Why are you burning down black-owned businesses?
Why are you burning down black-owned businesses?
Why are you burning down your city?
Okay, these people felt like they were cheated.
And you know what?
The facts have come out.
They were, so they went to protest.
And unless we find out with all the evidence that was destroyed,
who was involved, who was in there,
Antifa people dressed as Trump supporters,
FBI agents inside the Capitol.
Unless we have all those fax peers,
you don't know who was actually a fault and who was doing what.
Okay.
I mean, what I would say about, you know,
we now know that they were cheated.
Actually, we don't,
because there's never been any evidence produced
that that 2020 election was rigged.
Donald Trump keeps saying he, I wish he wouldn't.
He doesn't need to say it.
He's one big now.
He doesn't need to go back over that again.
but actually, including Republican judges,
nobody has ever found any concrete evidence
that that election was rigged.
So the reason why people...
Well, hang on.
Hang on, minute.
Hang on, honey.
The reason why people were protesting in the way they did
was because they believed it.
I certainly believe that.
But the reality is it's never been backed up
by actual hard evidence,
even by Republican judges who've studied it.
So this premise that somehow it was illegally stolen
from Donald Trump,
Trump the first time. I've said it to his face, and I believe it now, just as I still believe
what I wrote in that column that Bajah quoted from earlier. I just think that you've got to,
there are certain things where people can continue to say it was stolen and rigged and so on,
but you've got to actually at some point stump up the hard evidence, and it's never happened.
May I say something, Pierce?
Yeah.
Hang on, hang on, Ben. I'll come back to you. Let the Bajahat respond, and then I'll come back to you.
Yeah, Pierce, look, you know.
and I have disagreements, but we have agreements.
And I read that part of your
column, because I agree with it. Shame on Donald
Trump for continuing. This is a key word.
Continuing to perpetuate
a grotesque, inflammatory lie
that threatens to imperil the very foundation
of American democracy. What is that lie?
That he won the 2020 election that he lost.
And you and me, we've been on your show before.
We've talked about it. It's time for him to
move on. He won 2016.
He won 2024.
He continues to perpetuate
this lie. To the point, Pierce.
where now 80% of Republican voters believe the lie.
And some of them were incited by that lie,
invited by Donald Trump.
In fact, Jacob's former attorney said that Jacob was a guest of Donald Trump,
that he was duped by Donald Trump,
that he apologized for being there.
That was Jacob's former attorney, right?
These people were there.
These are regular Americans.
Former attorney.
I said former attorney.
Former attorney.
These people are fellow Americans.
These people were fellow Americans.
They weren't evil.
They didn't have horn on their heads.
they truly thought that this election was stolen, which it wasn't.
No proof has come out that it was stolen.
Joe Biden won, just like Donald Trump won in 2024.
But do you accept, all right, but what Jahad, do you accept the argument?
Hang on, hang on, guys.
Sorry, go ahead.
Sure.
But Jahad, do you accept, because I do,
that there was a clear double standard
in the way that people who protested through the BLM months
of extreme violence in many cases,
trashing institutions and buildings,
you know, attacking police.
I mean, a lot of people were involved in this,
that there was a clear double standard
in the way that they were collectively treated
by the justice system
and the way that the 1500 January 6th protesters were treated.
Do you accept there's been a clear double standard here?
I think there's been an obscene double standard,
and I'm so glad you brought it up,
because if BLM members,
if black, Muslim, indigenous Americans were to do
what manga members did,
First and foremost, we wouldn't even got into the Capitol because we would have been shot dead.
And secondly, the fact that Donald Trump, wait for it, Donald Trump and his fans celebrate the January 6th insurrectionists, right?
These are people, wait, wait.
Why don't you answering my question?
I will.
I kept quite well.
It's a bad answer.
He doesn't want to answer it.
No, I am.
January 6 violent insurrectionist, MAGA members attacked Capitol Police, number one.
They invaded the Capitol.
They smeared shit in the capital.
Some of them came with weapons
with the intention to assassinate
Mike Pence and Nancy Pelosi
and some of the violence
that was done against 140...
But why aren't you asking my question?
Hold on a second.
But John, you're going to answer my question.
Jacob, I will come to you, Jacob.
Jacob, I'll come to you.
The moment he's answered my question,
I'll come to you, Jacob.
Yeah.
So no BLM protesters
or Antifa protesters
participated in a violent insurrection.
Number one, none of them attacked the police.
like generous six insurrectionists who were praised by Donald Trump.
And number three, if they did, can't tell you the death of standard?
They did a tight police.
They did a tight police?
What are you talking about?
Did they did they take flag polls and beat the police?
Sorry, many, many, many,
many cocktails happened actually by what we're still in the building.
On that point, on that point, let me bring back Winston.
I mean, you know more about this problem than we do, but this idea, I, I, I, I,
certainly think there's merit to it. But this idea that there was a double standard in the collective
way that the BLM protesters were treated compared to the collective way January 6th protesters
were treated. What do you feel about that? Well, here's the difference. Again, I'm glad we all can
at least agree that violence on law enforcement is not okay. But here's the difference. Those riots,
again, I'm not condoning what happened to, you know, across any major city that experienced those
in the summer of 2020.
However, a city block in Minneapolis, even in downtown D.C., is very different than the United
States Capitol, which is our sacred hall of democracy and this temple that, for me, personally,
I spent years making so many personal sacrifices in service to Congress and service to our nation.
And so the difference there is, you know, what happens rioting on the street, of course,
that's not okay, but that is very different than attacking on a specific day.
when a presidential election is being certified,
the actual results.
You know, again, we have not seen any credible evidence
that the election was stolen besides the president's claims
that it was in 2020.
I mean, I would say to that, okay,
I would say, Winston, before I go to Jacob to respond,
he wants to respond.
And all I would say to that is, you know,
I get your point that it happened at the Capitol
and therefore to the world watching it was worse in a way.
But in the end, violence is violence is violence.
And statistically, there was a lot more violence collectively
over the period of these BLM riots
through that long, hot, very difficult summer
than there was on January 6th.
No, there wasn't, Pierce.
Well, there was.
There was. A lot more people died.
Yes, it was.
A lot more people died.
Yes, it was. It went on for months.
A lot more people died.
A lot more police officers were attacked, right?
I mean, every statistic would suggest
that there was a lot more violence
over a longer sustained period of time.
And all I would say, Winston, is, in the end, violence is violence,
particularly against police officers.
You know, more police were attacked over that summer.
When you have violence with a political goal, that's the definition of terrorism.
You know, so again, I hear you, violence is violence.
So Winston, are you saying this?
So Winston, would you categorize, hang on, Jacob, I will come to you.
So Winston, would you categorize what happened on January 6th is an act of terrorism?
Well, you know, I mean, certainly by some, yes. And I think, you know, what the challenge here is in this conversation, the summer of 2020 has been so lumped in with this general thing. We can't talk about what happened that summer because each city was different, each experience of each officer was different. And so to sort of lump it all in together isn't really factual, you know, it's not fair to actually the facts. And again, I respect all those law enforcement officers who,
were injured that summer and who continue to serve. Same with Capitol Police too. But we can't,
we cannot lump in riots that happened in Minneapolis versus other cities and then sort of compare,
oh, and then use that to justify what happened on January 6th. That's absolutely false.
Jacob, your response to that. Yes. Okay, first of all, the media lied. What we saw with January 6th was a
massive, massive, politically motivated sciop that was based on a politically motivated setup. All right,
all with fingerprints of regime change, all with the hallmarks of regime change here.
Now, look, when the media said that this was the worst attack on the capital in our nation's history,
they were wrong because Weather Underground literally bombed the Capitol.
That's the left.
Oh, and by the way, the guy Bill Ayers that was a part of the Weather Underground, the bombing of the Capitol,
he was pardoned by Obama and later actually got involved with the Department of Education
in the Obama administration.
Oh, there's also the time that a bunch of Puerto Ricans actually shot congressmen inside
the Capitol.
I believe that was also a leftist cause as well.
So what has happened and what we've seen with this J6 narrative is that the media has pushed this insurrection narrative over and over again.
They've used trigger words and trigger images to create an instinctual and an emotional response in the subconscious mind, telling people their country and their democracy is under threat.
And they made people like me their SIOP poster boy, which was a very large mistake because the fact of the matter is nothing that they said.
about me on January 6 was true.
They had the audacity to say that I call myself the Q&N shaman, for God's sake.
None of that's true.
So, like, every bit of the narrative of J6 is a lie.
They told us that police officers died.
That's not true.
They knew it wasn't true.
They avoided the fact of talking about the fact that actually four protesters died on that day,
not just Ashley Bavitt, but Rosalind, and two others,
many of which were victims of police brutality.
Okay, they didn't talk about the cover-up with Yogan Nondipitman or Tom Manger when he came
this thing stinks to high heaven.
And anybody that can't see that it stinks
and how it involves like nefarious agents
within our own government
or 51 intelligence agents or something,
you got another thing coming.
Jacob, what were you actually convicted of?
I pled guilty to the 1512 charge,
which is the obstruction of an official proceeding
that the Supreme Court said
was not applicable, and it's clearly it was being used to bend the law and gain convictions
out of people that just trespassed into the building. Vinny, you know, it's fascinating to talk
to Jacob. I have to say, I wasn't, I didn't know which way the interview would go. It's been
really interesting, very interesting listening to Winston and hearing that perspective as well.
What should we learn from all this? Obviously, nobody ever wants to see what happened that day,
happen again. This is one of the great symbols of American democracy, the greatest, arguably,
the capital. You don't ever want to see that kind of thing again. No, no, you don't. And the thing is,
we have sorry, sorry, that's not what it is. That was for Vinayashi. Sorry, I'm sorry.
Thank you. Yeah. No, it's all, it's all good, Jacob. Well, Pierce, I mean, at the end of the day,
this, this, you know, violent rhetoric that, that Wadde was talking about, like, the violent rhetoric,
The majority of it, the 99% of it was from the other side.
And, peers, you guys keep talking about free and fair election and there's no evidence.
You want me to believe the same justice system that has been trying to destroy Trump for freaking nine years to believe them when it comes to an election, peers.
I don't. The irregularities were all over the place.
Your guys are circle, your bubble. You don't see it. We've seen it.
Well, no, what I would say, Vinnie, to be clear, what I would say is even Republicans,
judges have not established that.
So even the judges on your side
have not been able to establish
what you're saying.
He lost with me, it's okay.
I don't have a side. I'm not a Republican.
Pierce, Pierce, peers, I'm not a Republican.
I'm not a Democrat.
I'm not, Pierce. I vote for what's right, okay?
I vote for what's right and what's wrong.
And when you say Republican, you label him Republican,
Liz Cheney's a Republican.
Who the hell in the Republican Party?
trust her, Pierce. So yes, Pierce, the day was ugly. I guarantee this guy can't even define
insurrection. Nobody was shooting. Nobody was doing anything. They were pissed off, Pierce,
and they had a right to be pissed off. And like, I said it again, if you have a problem with the
system, Pierce, you go to the system. You don't burn down your city. And he would say, how long did the
BLM rides go for? Cops were murdered, and he's saying nothing violent happened. They were throwing
Maltov cocktails that were hitting police officers.
And if we don't want it, Piers, we don't want this to ever happen again.
Okay, we have to be open.
We have to be transparent.
Okay, when questions are asked, the government has to answer them, peers.
And when the president, the sitting president requests, 10,000 National Guard troops,
they should, his request should be answered.
Okay, peers, it was a shit show from the beginning to the end.
And Pelosi and them wanted it, let me finish.
And they used it, peers.
They've been using it.
Just like Russia collusion didn't work, Pierce.
This was their Russian collusion of 2000, for this election.
They thought this was going to be the, oh, got you.
Okay, would you all have?
You got literally like 30 seconds to respond quickly.
Yeah, a thing is very important that Enrique Tario and Stuart Rhodes are coming home.
These are people who said they were part of a violent right-wing group.
They said that they're the army of Donald Trump, and Stuart Rhodes said that he is for a civil war.
14 people were convicted for seditious conspiracy, more than any other time since the
civil war. These are the people that MAGA, Vinnie, and Donald Trump are celebrating as patriots
and hostages who wounded 140 capital police officers and engaged in a violent insurrection
to overthrow our free and fair election, which Joe Biden won in 2020.
But you know the difference between the pardons that Trump did and the pardons that Biden did,
is that we don't even know what Biden was pardoning, even with his own family.
We don't know what crimes they all got up to if they did, because we'll never know.
because they've got a preemptive get out of jail free card.
On the side of the protesters, they all went to prison pretty much, right?
It's a different situation.
There's only ever been one preemptive pardon in the history of America,
and that was Gerald Ford with Richard Nixon, as Victor Davis-Hanson said.
An amazing stat that Biden has broken all records for preemptive pardons and for pardons.
And that trash is his legacy, but it also makes it very difficult, very difficult to.
to then take the high moral ground with all of this stuff with the Biden ones,
with the Trump ones.
I've got to leave you there.
Thank you particularly to you, Winston.
Thank you for your service and for what you went through that day.
Thank you, Mr.
For all the years that you worked to the Capitol, we can all agree on that.
And, Jacob, I'm actually pleased you are out.
I think that you're an interesting person to talk to about all this,
and you weren't violent on the day.
I think those who were violent, it's a different situation.
but it's good to see you on Uncensored
and I hope that you,
and now you're out again,
you can be a force for good
as I'm sure you'll try to be.
And to Wajah,
good luck with your new podcast,
which is you and one of my other favorites, Francesca,
I'm sure that will be one of the,
how can I put this delicately,
one of the least partisan podcasts
in the history of podcasts.
I look forward to it.
Well, I just want to say,
Jacob, be easy on those mother-effing guns
that you promised to go get.
Well, you want them in my hands.
not yours.
I'm not a violent insurrectionist.
It's okay. I drive a minivan.
Neither am I.
Well, to be fair, to be fair with Jahed, nor was he.
Or do you think he was?
Yeah, but he was there. He was there, and he still believes in QAnon,
a conspiracy theory that radicalized people to commit violence.
So you're praising a man, peers, and you're platforming a man who, to me,
has, seems to have very little regret about what happened on that day.
So I think that's shameful, but to you, yours, to me, mine, and I agree with you.
when he said, shame on Trump for perpetuating that grotesque, inflammatory life.
All right.
He actually did.
He actually did what I, okay, but he did.
The very foundation of American democracy.
You know what?
You know what?
Jacob did actually condemn those who committed an acts of violence against police officers that day.
And I'm pleased he did.
I think that's an important part of this debate.
And for that, I'm pleased to have him on unscensored.
You may not like it, but I'm happy to do that.
And Vin, good to see you too.
Thank you all very much.
I love you.
Well, Jeremy now is one of the most notable.
recipients of a president Trump clemen seat, the former Democrat governor, Illinois,
Rog Blagojevich, who was sentenced to 14 years in 2012, convicted of trying to sell Barack
Obama's vacated U.S. Senate seat. Trump committed his sentence back in 2020. He joins me now.
Rod, thank you very much and Dave for joining me.
Thanks for having me. I just want to correct you, the so-called attempted sale of the Senate
seat was reversed by the appellate court. It was never a crime. The prosecution against me
was a big corrupt, weaponized prosecution. And little by little, as Dr. Martin Luther King
used to say, truth crushed to earth will one day rise again because no lie can live forever.
So the fight continues, and I appreciate the chance to be here to set the record straight.
Winston Churchill said a lie could travel halfway around the world before the truth has a chance
to put its pants on. And that lie against me that happened on the 9th of December 2008 is still
swirling around. My pants are halfway up. I hope over time to get them all the way up and let people
know how dirty and rotten some of these prosecutors are in the United States who turn themselves into
political weapons and who did to a Democrat governor back then what they've been trying to do to
a Republican president since President Trump decided to run for president again.
So if you had your time again, you'd do exactly the same thing?
Say it again, Pierce.
Well, if you had your time again, then, you'd do exactly the same thing?
Yes, I would respond to President Obama's request to make a political deal.
The whole thing that happened to me started with him on election night.
He sent an emissary to me to talk about making a political deal.
He had a candidate that he wanted for the Senate.
We discussed those deals.
The prosecutors criminalized it against me.
me, they made a deal with Obama.
And when the heat happened and they arrested me, Obama ran away, protected himself.
I understand his politics.
And he ended up going to the White House for eight years, and I went to the Big House for eight years.
Obama didn't break any laws.
It's political horse trading.
And that's what the Appellate Court eventually said it was.
Nothing more than routine political log rolling.
But when they tell that big lie like they do, and they have the authority that they have,
and most of us, including myself, regrettably, believe them, it's awfully hard to fight against that.
And so it's been a long, hard battle.
it's been a marathon.
And little by little, though, I'm getting there.
More and more people are realizing
that you can't really trust some of these prosecutors.
And the one area in America that understands that best
is the African-American community
because they've been on the wrong end of law enforcement
lying about them in too many cases.
For those who don't know the intricacies of your case,
but just remember the tape that came out saying,
I've got this thing and it's effing golden.
I'm just not giving it up for nothing.
How do you explain that?
Very easy. We had a discussion the day after I was approached by Obama's emissary on, you know, what kind of political deals we can make. One of our, my political advisors had suggested, well, maybe we just give him whatever he wants and make him happy. The others advising me, and I agreed, suggested that would be political malpractice because I had this thing and it was effing golden, and I'm not just going to give it up for nothing. We're going to make a political deal. And in the end, I was about to make a deal that would benefit the people of Illinois. And the next day, when it was
decided and they were hearing all those telephone calls, they arrested me to stop it.
And since that happened, they've been covering up those tapes.
98% of the FBI tape recordings with me have been covered up and are under a gag order
to this day.
And hopefully now with President Trump and the administration, perhaps some of those tapes
can be released and show how they lied, how they lied to the public and how they lied in court
and how they lied on me and how they sent me to prison for 14 years.
And it would have been 14 years had President Trump not reached in and rescued me eight years
into that very long and unhappy journey.
Why do you think Trump did that?
Because Trump saw that it was all bullshit.
Can you say that on your show?
You can't. It's uncensored.
You say what you like.
No kidding.
Well, I'm, you know, because Trump is fucking golden
and he saw through what happened.
And I think he appreciated the fact that I was fighting back.
I think he appreciated the fact so much
that he invited me on Celebrity Apprentice
to show that apparently you did a lot better on than I did
because he fired me on that show correctly.
But then who would have thought,
when he did that. Many years later, he would actually free me. No, he saw what was wrong. And that says
something about Donald Trump. People don't realize what a kind person he is and how courageous he is.
He's willing to do things that don't even benefit himself. Pulling me out of prison, the first Democratic
governor who endorsed Obama did nothing for his politics. In fact, he had a lot explaining to do
with members of his own party, but he did it anyway because he saw something that's wrong.
And that's why, as we move forward here in the United States, we've just elected him president
a second time around.
I have great confidence and great hope
that he's going to be really a transformational president
and a truly great president.
Let's talk about the pardons
that have been a huge number of them,
of course, in the last few days.
First of all, Donald Trump pardoning
all of the 1,500 January 6th protesters.
Even J.D. Vance, and I agreed with him,
said that the pardon should not extend,
this before the announcement,
to those who committed acts of violence
against police officers.
What do you feel?
I mean, do you feel that those people
who did the actual acts of violence,
should they have also been pardoned,
along with those who were actually non-violent that day?
Well, I think President Trump was right to provide clemency
to all of the January 6 protesters,
including those who committed acts that they shouldn't have committed.
There were certainly laws that were being broken
by some of the crazy people that went and did their own thing.
Those who committed the violent acts,
my understanding is they've already done prison time,
and they've probably done, what, four years?
You know, the punishment's supposed to fit the crime, and I have to believe that in those cases,
those were carefully reviewed and the decision was made.
But with regard to sweeping clemency and most of them being pardons for the protesters,
no, I applaud President Trump for doing that.
They were political prisoners.
We have a right here in America, as you do in England, to march on City Hall and protest.
There will be from time to time stupid, crazy people who overdo it, and they should be held accountable.
And I think those that did that have already been held accountable.
for all the time they've done in prison so far.
And one thing I learned about the criminal justice system
in America appears because of my hard, long hard journey,
is in too many cases, justice is not tempered by mercy.
You know, you're from England and you're not smarter than I am,
and you know Shakespeare better than I do,
but I can't tell you how many times I've re-read Portia's speech
about tempering justice with mercy,
and how important that was as I was sitting in prison,
getting absolutely no mercy and being treated in an unmerciful way.
And so you can put it in a merciful way.
punish people and rightfully hold them accountable and put them in jail as we must in many,
many cases. But I think we have to be smart and realize that there's a necessary component
of morality involved when you do punish someone, that you temperate with mercy and that each case
is different. They should be judged individually on a case-by-case basis.
So what do you feel about the Biden preemptive pardons, which are pretty well unprecedented?
There's only ever been one, which was when Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon, president-to-president,
Many think Joe Biden should have done that with Donald Trump's conviction,
including I think he should have done as well
because all that was conviction was absurd.
But putting that to one side,
there's a huge number of people that Biden has preemptively blanket pardon,
including a lot of his family, including his son, his brothers and so on.
That sets an extraordinary precedent where they didn't actually end up going to prison at all.
Many of them, we don't even know what alleged crimes they may or may not have committed
because they've never been properly tested in a courtroom on.
So on. What do you feel about that?
I think that's a classy example of projection.
I mean, President Biden weaponized the Justice Department against Donald Trump.
And so he just assumed Trump's going to do the same thing to his people that he did the Trump and the Trump's people.
To me, that's just proof almost an admission by Biden that what he did with the Department of Justice was weaponized it against his political opponent.
So, no, I think those were the wrong things to do, those preemptive pardons in those particular cases.
because there's no evidence that President Trump's going to do anything,
but actually try to end lawfare like he said the other day.
So I think that, frankly, is an admission of guilt by Biden.
And, you know, this is no small thing, peers.
This goes to the heart of our freedoms in America.
If our prosecutors become political weapons,
we're not the United States of America anymore.
We're the Soviet Union.
We're Russia.
That's KGB Soviet-style police state politics.
And they brought that to America.
And it has to end.
And I truly believe that because of the heart of it,
circumstances that President Trump faced by Biden and his politicized and weaponized DOJ,
I think President Trump is going to reform the system and make it work for all Americans.
And I think he's going to end lawfare and end the weaponization of prosecutions that I don't
believe he's going to go after his political opponents.
And we have a precedent for that.
And you know what that was?
His first term.
He didn't do that.
They did it to him.
You know, I completely agree that he should just not go down that road.
Finally, you were a high-flying governor of a big state in America.
You had it all.
You lost it all.
You go to prison.
When you're sitting in there year after year, as you say, nobody's showing you much mercy
or even caring, really, what was going on with you.
Two questions struck me.
I'd be interested to get your quick answer to.
One, what did you learn about yourself during the period of incarceration that may be surprised
And secondly, what did you miss most about not being a free man?
Well, I'm writing a book about it, and it'll come out this year.
And I talk about that.
I would say a couple of things.
First, there was no way, what I learned about that experience was there was no way I could have endured it, persevered through it or overcame it,
had it not been for faith, hope, and love.
You know, my faith in God and the strength that that gave me, actually having the chance to read the Bible in prison in ways I never read it before,
because I was so alone and so desperate.
but I didn't mess around with Genesis where people are beginning all kinds of people.
I would always get stuck in that in my life when I was a free person.
No, I went right to the things that I thought could help me, like the Psalms and the Proverbs,
and Isaiah and Jeremiah and the Gospels.
And of course, Jesus, you know, I observed the Christian faith.
I'm not proselyizing it on anybody.
But there was Jesus in the Garden of Githmet, and he praised to God because he knows us coming his way.
Oh, Father, lift this cup from me.
Then he realizes it's God's will and says, not my will.
thy will. So I learned that, and I learned that, as Victor Frankl writes in his book, Man Search for Meaning,
which I read three times during those 2,896 days in prison, which is one month short of eight years,
I learned that it's true that the last of the human freedoms, even when everything's been taken from you,
is your freedom to choose your own attitude in any given set of circumstances. And I was able to find
strength by reminding myself of that, and then believing and recognizing that I did have purpose.
If you can find the why to live, you can find the how.
And my purpose was my little girls at home.
My little one was eight years old when they took me away.
My older one was 15.
I missed my girls growing up.
But the one thing I could do for them was to be strong
and to never give in, to never give up,
and to try to turn what was a rotten situation
into a place where I could grow,
where I could learn, where I could get stronger and better and wiser.
Now I'm not saying I'm necessarily wise,
but I am stronger and I'm fitter because I worked out every day.
You ought to see me compared to the current governor of Illinois.
it's night and day. But I had that opportunity. And I, uh, anyway, I learned that love conquers all.
And my love for my daughters and my wife and my determination to come back someday and not let them
destroy me and to somehow come back better and that I can show my daughters that even in the
hardest circumstances you can overcome and grow. I felt like that was my purpose. Um, so that's what
I learned and that's what I learned about myself. And I, I, I write about that in this book that I'm
writing and I hope that maybe one day, you know, I could elaborate on that further because I feel
like I can help people who go through their hard times get through it because it's helpful to see
where the other guy was able to get through something that was difficult. Well, then I can do it
myself. Well, come back, I mean, I'd love to talk to you in more depth when the book comes out
about all that. Sounds fascinating. And just very finally, the thing you miss most outside of family
and, for instance, the tangible thing perhaps that you miss most when you were languishing.
in prison? Well, my daughters, my wife, and banana splits.
Banana splits, yeah. I think I'd miss a Big Mac. I have one about every seven weeks.
I've often thought if I ever went to jail, I'd miss my every seven week Big Mac.
Rod, thank you very much indeed for joining me. I appreciate it.
Thank you, Peers, and congratulations and your success.
Thank you very much. And come back when your book comes out. I'd be really interested in talking to you in more depth about that.
I think when people go to prison for a long time,
who've had it all and then lose it all, it gives you.
and then lose it all, it gives them a fascinating perspective on life.
And often they talk in a very different way
to how they would have done before it all happened.
So I've been interested to talk to you about that.
Thank you very much.
