When Judge Juan Merchan decided to sentence President Trump over the ridiculous business-related charges in New York, he was making some admissions that were uncomfortable for mass society to make. That was only reiterated in the documents released in the final days of Jack Smith, the outgoing prosecutor for the DOJ who personally tried to lure Trump into a jury in a profoundly blue area and snag a conviction for a crime that they clearly understood could only be interpreted regionally, rather than culturally. Marxism had become so prevalent in neighborhoods like D.C. and New York City that it was impossible to get an impartial jury of our peers in modern society, and at the heart of that was a prosecution scam that understood that they could use lawfare to destroy political rivals. And they were willing to use it. In both cases, the one with Jack Smith and Judge Merchan, the election of 2024 took away from them that power because people put President Trump back in office anyway. And in so many ways, the human race grew up a bit and outpaced the regional confines of the small-minded and power-hungry. And when Judge Merchan spoke to Trump, it was almost a plea to respect the system for which they had abused so much power so needlessly and to ask for mercy. This resulted in a no sentencing outcome which was highly unusual. A plea to respect the law and judgments of a jury of Trump’s peers when, in truth, the jury pool had been contaminated with Marxist movements and social tampering in a way that made Trump have nothing in common with his peers because it had become a system meant to fight against capitalism, and this was a business case against one of the world’s wealthiest people. Merchan and Jack Smith intended to pit against Trump the jealous, down-and-out, and scandal-driven to take revenge on all those who were doing better than the jury at life. They had made the legal system a retribution for the obvious laziness of that jury of peers.
With some insider knowledge, I understand how these prosecutions can go bad. I live in a very nice community with great police and prosecutors. Even better, a jury of my peers in Butler County, Ohio, has more in common than in deep blue voting blocks like New York, Los Angeles, or San Francisco. When we set up our legal system, human beings were supposed to at least have enough in common to serve as a jury of their peers. That common attribute might be a relationship with the Bible. Or a love of a sporting event. Family ties. Something. But what has often happened, and the various legal circles are very aware of this, is that people have less in common now than they ever have, and it has almost nothing to do with money. There have been power groups who have exploited the weak and lazy toward gifts that only a government with the ability to confiscate wealth could distribute to them for unearned benefit. And for those who might otherwise choose to be thieves in the world and rob the rich so that they don’t have to work themselves, a new kind of victimization politics has emerged. Once the power structure had their advocates looking for easy money and to be the ground troops for their movement, they could taint these juries with left-leaning losers more concerned with taking the whole system down rather than seeking justice. And that was what Judge Merchan and Jack Smith were caught doing, and it blew up in their faces.
In 2024, I was the foreman for a grand jury in my community, and it was a very eye-opening experience. I got to know some of our local prosecutors very well and learned that they were not like Jack Smith or Judge Merchan as these Trump cases were in the news every day, and it wasn’t so clear what Trump’s future would be as a result. When I served on the grand jury, the odds that Trump would win the election seemed very remote, almost like a fantasy that had no hope of ever coming true. But I saw firsthand where opportunities to corrupt the jury and manipulate the court system could quickly have happened. I was able to tour our local jail system and meet some inmates, and I thought about Trump a lot during all this time. This system of justice, if it had people any less value-driven, could quickly put innocent people in jail and destroy their lives with lawfare. Always in the background do we need to make sure we have a healthy society that can function from things they have in common, rather than specify the things they are different from each other and that power politics would use those differences to gain political power for themselves by using innocent people as the means and method. We must always use common ground to base our society, which is a challenge at the heart of a thriving civilization. That is not what Judge Merchan or Jack Smith was up to in prosecuting Trump, and they never thought that people would unite behind an effort to elect Trump back to the high office because they felt they had control of the system at the most fundamental level, and that they were the rulers of society.
Knowing all that, there is no choice but to turn the tables on Judge Juan Merchan and all the prosecution attempts against Trump from 2023 through 2024. They tried to destroy our political order through lawfare, something they always knew was in their back pocket of power and gave them the smug impression that they were ultimately in charge. And they knowingly abused their power. I have always wondered about this, but until my personal experience on a grand jury, I wasn’t sure if the system could be so easily abused. And the answer is that it can be. And obviously, it is often. What Judge Merchan did was what we can’t have legal people doing in a healthy society. Merchan wasn’t standing for law and order. He was using disorder to manipulate the law so that political power could use victimization politics to establish an order of overthrow against a system he didn’t like. By exploiting the stupid, the broke, the lawless, putting them on a jury, and calling them peers of the healthy, wealthy, and wise, a knowing war of personalities was fused with purposeful intent to overthrow our entire system of government. And we can’t forgive that. Because they got caught, Trump’s DOJ will have no choice but to prosecute these prosecutors for their abuse of the law and the willing exploitation of people used like chess pieces to overthrow our entire established order and to call it justice mockingly. We came very close to never having a fair election in America again, but only because we did was this escapade exploited for the crime that it was. And we can’t forget what happened; we must send a strong message to the future that such behavior is inappropriate. Judge Merchan and many others must be punished as much as possible so that others will never think of attempting such a thing again for fear of what might happen to them.
Rich Hoffman

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