I have a lot to say about Peter Navarro’s new book, I went to Prison so You Won’t Have To. But before going down that rabbit hole, let me say that it’s good to have enemies. I was talking about that this past week, and my love of destroying enemies and the many Christian people who are always around me reminded me that my attitude was not the way of Christ, and that if Erika Kirk could forgive her enemies, why couldn’t I? I said to them that I had no plans to hang around on a cross crucified by those same enemies for the concept of sacrifice to an evil power of timeless tyranny. And their faces melted. I continued to tell them that the Christ story in the Bible was told four different ways, from the perspective of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. And that it is my thought that the Romans were looking for compliant citizens for their empire, so they told the Christ story as a way to shape a nice and compliant society. And to emphasize the point, the Romans stopped talking about God being mad at the Israelites for making peace with the enemy and started talking about forgiveness to the death. I like Jesus Christ. But I have no desire to hang on a cross and to forgive sins. If God wants to do that, have at it. That won’t be me. I’m with Trump on the forgiveness of enemies. I don’t think it’s a good idea, and it usually ends in your own personal crucifixion. If God has a problem with it, he can let me know. But so far in my life, God seems to enjoy it when I punish my enemies. I would say I was built for it. To go even further, I think God made me to defeat evil in a very Old Testament way. So I’m not real keen on the hippie Jesus talk.

And to that point, I think the value of a person is in the enemies they have. It’s good to have enemies and to seek to destroy them. Not to make peace with them. But to kill them. And I think that the destruction of God’s enemies is God’s work on earth. So if you have a lot of enemies, you are doing a good job in the world. If you don’t have enemies, then you aren’t doing enough to make the world a better place. And I say all that because I knew I would be enraged by Peter’s book when he wrote it. I wasn’t sure how much it would make me angry, but I knew it would. So I wasn’t exactly looking forward to reading it. I really like Peter Navarro and several of the old White House senior advisors of the first Trump administration, and I never liked what the bad guys did to him and Steve Bannon of the WarRoom. We walked an excellent line in the days of Trump’s exile, playing by the rules just enough to last, so that the enemies could have those same rules turned around on them and be punished for what they did. Things could have turned violent, and I’ll have to admit, I was very close to going full mercenary during the years of 2020 to 2024, many times when people would say to me, as they still do, what would Jesus do. I would reply that he would be crucified at a terribly young age as a political prisoner and hung on a cross as a warning of non-compliance. And that evil needed to be punished for that, not forgiven.
I would not have been able to do what Peter did that day; he and his girlfriend were arrested while getting on a plane at Reagan International Airport as they were traveling to Nashville to be on Mike Huckabee’s Fox News show. The humiliation of it would have been enough to make me fight back. They waited for him to be separated from the terminal and the crowd there so they could take him out the door just before entering the plane. They were toying with him to embarrass him in front of a public scared of what could happen to them. If a senior White House staff member could be put in leg irons and strip-searched the way Peter Navarro was, after they had let him through security, it could happen to anyone. And that kind of evil in the world, which is the same personality of evil that hung Christ on the cross, I’m not going to play nice with. So I consider it very valuable to have enemies in the world. I love them. And I love to destroy them. If God doesn’t like it, he can let me know. If he wants me to go to Hell, then that would be great. Because there would be a lot of enemies there to destroy, and it would be Heaven for me. It’s great to have enemies because it’s fun to destroy them. And I say that for context, for all the enemies who must now be punished for what they have done. That’s the Nancy Pelosis, the Jim Comey types. John Bolton. I want to see Clapper, Brennan, Pencil Neck, Big Tish, Fanny, and George Soros all punished. I want to rake them all over the coals and punish them to the point of them crying for mercy. And I want to shower in their tears. I hate them and want to see them utterly destroyed.
And I think that is the right way to think about it. I don’t know that I even want to pray for our enemies, as they like to say on the WarRoom. As I said, I think history reads the Jesus story wrong. Evil wants to be forgiven so they can sacrifice the innocent to their schemes of doom, which is why I am not a big supporter of organized religion. Religion isn’t strict enough for me in fighting the nature of evil. I like a God who says to destroy every one of your enemies completely, and utterly. But before you can do that, you have to have enemies; the more the better. And to destroy them as much as you can. And I won’t be praying for their pathetic souls, or for hopes of redemption in the afterworld. Once they are enemies, I would offer that you go into eternity, continuing to destroy them and punish them for their misdeeds. And never to seek to make peace with them. Peace is a really dumb idea when it means compromising with evil. And Jesus even questioned it in the end, “Father, why hast thou forsaken me?” I think Jesus should have cut the throats of all his captors in the middle of the night and led a revolt against the tyrannical establishment’s at the time, and not played into the game of sacrifice that has always been the assumption of the political left, to sacrifice to the forces of evil in the world, and feed their hungry spirits with the blood of the innocent. No, I think evil needs to be punished, and with Trump’s second term, everyone who did him wrong, and all the rest of us, wrong, need to be punished viciously. Even people who do the day-to-day things that are knowingly wrong and make themselves our enemies should all be punished and never forgiven. And in the aftermath, we’ll let God sort it all out. But it’s good to have enemies and to destroy them when they make themselves known. It’s not good to be hung on a cross to feed their unworthy souls with your life, expelled to their great joy.
Rich Hoffman

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