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Month: June 2024

Garland Won’t Prosecute Himself for Exact Crime That Sent Navarro, Bannon to Jail…

In a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Justice Department official brazenly cited the department’s longstanding policy not to prosecute for contempt of Congress officials who don’t comply with subpoenas because of a president’s claim of executive privilege.
( Headline USA ) In a surprise departure from his normal insistence that the Justice Department applies the law equally, without fear or favor and regardless of politics, Attorney General Merrick Garland has let himself off the hook for the very crime against which he previously prosecuted two top advisers to former President Donald Trump.

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Supreme Court Ruling Makes It Harder for Illegal Immigrants to Oppose Deportation

‘This reading aligns with common sense,’ Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the majority in a decision that could have big implications for deportation proceedings.

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Bill Advocating National Popular Vote Draws Support and Criticism in Michigan

A proposed bill could change the way Michigan votes for president.
House Bill 4156 would enter Michigan into the National Popular Vote Compact, an agreement among participating states to elect the president by national popular vote.

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Criminal government power: Spying for them but not for us

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – Government power is expanding, spying on citizens without probable cause, while withholding information from the public. Illegal immigration is at record highs, and states prioritize serving illegal aliens over their citizens. The federal and state governments use surveillance to monitor us, but resist transparency about their actions. It’s a troubling trend of overreach and secrecy in the…

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Federal Judge Overturns ATF ‘Pistol Brace’ Rule

The judge granted the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and ordered the rule vacated.

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CBO: U.S. Budget Deficit at $1.7 Trillion over Past Year

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office this week revealed the magnitude of the federal deficit, growing to $1.7 trillion in one year, as the national public debt reached $34.7 trillion for the first time in U.S. history.
On Monday alone, the national public debt grew by $37 billion. By Tuesday, it surpassed $34.7 trillion overall.

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Believing the lie

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – Trust in our institutions is crumbling as lies are often accepted as truth. Millions follow falsehoods without hesitation, leading to grave consequences. Echoing Edmund Burke and Winston Churchill, this piece underscores the importance of truth in a world where “personal truths” dominate. The battle for truth is ongoing, and silence allows lies to prevail.

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