
We are not obligated to take the edge off our speech when it comes to the preponderance of evil that was on full display against American reformers during the Biden administration. We witnessed a government that did not feel it had to report to the American voter perform a coup against a popularly picked president, our representative in government, which was a significant crime. An unforgivable crime. In every way possible, the protestors, known now as the J6 prisoners, had a right to storm the capitol and water the tree of liberty with the blood of the deceivers. History under any other consideration would not frown upon it. We had a case on January 6th 2021 where our government had become so big and bloated that they could hide their crimes behind their ability to make laws up as they went, and could ignore the rules we had on the books, so in many ways, the government in my view got off lucky that a very small percentage of Trump supporters came uncorked and stormed the Capitol to show the government who was boss. As I have said, I would have done things differently, and I did. There are other ways to handle those kinds of situations legally. But the government needed to feel the sting of a slap in the face, and the J6 protestors did a crucial job. They needed to let the government know that they weren’t in charge, that it was the people who were. And I think what happened that day scared the government in a way that makes all the good things happening now possible. Trump and all of us have earned the right to rip the scab off the wound that the government created for the preservation of the government at our expense. So let’s start there with that premise of authenticity.





On day one of President Trump’s I return to the White House, he signed pardons for most of the J6 prisoners who were arrested for their involvement in storming the Capitol four years earlier and not given any kind of due process. Their Constitutional rights were violated grotesquely up to that point, so it was good that Trump did the right thing and signed an executive order letting them out of prison. I watched those ceremonies with some satisfaction because it was the result of a minor miracle. The reform movement needed people like the J6 prisoners to shake up the comfort level of an out-of-control government. And it also took the massive work of people like I know, who work things out legally behind the scenes, and was able to prove election fraud way beyond a reasonable doubt during the 2020 election. The culmination of all those events led to a miracle in many ways, such as Trump getting back into office after winning the election of 2024, way beyond a reasonable doubt, and putting law and order back on the side of the Constitution. It was a razor’s edge that we had all been walking on, too much one way or the other, and we probably wouldn’t have had a country left. We had to play by the law to enforce the law, and that was the only way that the J6 prisoners were ever going to get out of jail. They had been detained for years and had lost all their personal freedom just for protesting a government that had grown out of control and turned into a menace against its own people. And here was Trump, probably the most tormented soul of them all who had been tossed into exile, returning on the strength of our law and order to turn the tables on the bad guys without violence, but with the rule of law. And I thought it was quite extraordinary.



So much so that my wife and I, early in 2025, went to Washington, D.C., to heal a bit. These last four years have been difficult, especially for my family. I live these issues full time, so it makes it impossible for my family to escape them. So, going to Washington D.C., the Imperial Capitol as they call it, and reclaiming it as our own was a big step for us. For many years, I have seen Washington, D.C., as a separate place owned and operated by the globalist opposition, which it was never supposed to be. It is considered to be the stronghold of self-government. So for our needs, my wife and I visited Washington D.C. and the Capitol Building as a kind of resurrection exercise to put everything in context. We were there for Trump’s magnificent speech and to witness the town as a place dealing with the inevitable turn of tables on the day that J6 happened, when our President had been removed from office, cast away, and rejected by an administrative state that thought it had the power to do it. It never did; we had to go back to the crime scene knowing what we do now to see how the future would be built in the context of history. It’s nice to see everything and reflect on the Constitution’s importance. And to see Trump back in the White House with Elon Musk running up and down Pennsylvania Avenue using D.O.G.E. to make permanent spending cuts to that same bloated government. We all did a lot to get this chance at an American resurrection, and for us, it felt like we were planting the flag of victory onto a vile enemy and were retaking our Capitol from hostile foreign insurgents who have been plotting our demise for centuries, and it felt good. But that doesn’t change what happened and what we must do about it. The crime of election fraud that was done to us was far worse than whatever crimes were tossed at the J6 protestors, and the correct terminology regarding it can only be revenge. Revenge was needed, not just retribution.






Now that they are free from prison, the J6 prisoners are telling about their experiences, and many were tortured while they were in jail. They didn’t know if President Trump would return to the White House. They were staring down a bottomless well of injustice, with correctional officers spitting in their food and treating them horribly in solitary confinement. Many of them endured horrible conditions in prison, abused by a system that thought it was untouchable from justice. And revenge is the only word we can use to keep it from happening again. These prisoners had their 4th, 5th, and 6th Amendments violated severely, and we can’t just look away and forget about it. We took back our capital from those holding it hostage for our entire lifetimes. Never before did someone like a Trump get a chance to address with the authority of being a resurrected survivor the hellhound revenge that is perfectly justified now and will continue for many years. We must never forget what the bad guys did to us. Revenge is the only justifiable remedy for what they did, and we walked that thin line to enforce it. Everyone involved on the bad side should consider themselves lucky that we are willing to stick by the law and give them their due process because they don’t deserve it. They deserve everything and worse for what they did, and now they will have to pay for it. But what’s different for us is that we do respect the law, and we will use the law to get revenge on those who broke it and tried to destroy our country and all of us with it.
Rich Hoffman

Click Here to Protect Yourself with Second Call Defense https://www.secondcalldefense.org/?affiliate=20707