I am proud of Sheriff Jones; I had a nice chance to talk to him at the Nancy Nix fundraiser as he had just returned from Washington, D.C., with a mission straight from Tom Homan, the border czar himself. The Sheriff was told to make room in his jails because they would fill up quickly during March. The Trump administration was done with Mexican drug cartels that were hiding in plain sight behind illegal immigration, and they were about to do what had been promised by Trump on the campaign trail. They were going to be at least arrested and deported with what should be called, mass law enforcement. The media will call them raids, and crackdowns. But whatever anybody calls them, the illegal aliens, especially those hosting a criminal element, are toast. And Sheriff Jones is more than ready to do his part in Butler County, Ohio. He has been waiting his entire life for just this opportunity and a president willing to do what the law states: we must protect our borders from hostile people not committed to the American cause. The only way to describe the previous immigration policy was a purposeful attack on our nation and the concept of a free people, with the hostilities of a criminal element seeking to overrun our legal system. It wasn’t amicable, so the remedy must be more resilient. Sheriff Jones warned us that the days to come would have a lot of stories of rounding up these villains and that people needed some context for the voluminous incidents that would be reported in the news during March, which was good news to my ears. It couldn’t come soon enough. One of the promises Trump had made during the campaign was the death penalty for cartel drug traffickers, which, to my mind, is too good for any of them.

Butler County has a very good police department. This past year, I have been able to work with them a lot. I served several weeks on a grand jury in 2024, where I met many of them and toured around the jail Sheriff Jones oversees, so I acquired an appreciation for what good law enforcement is and what it isn’t. And I again was able to get to know some really good members of the Sheriff’s department at an event I was a part of organizing for Vivek Ramaswamy where they served as security. Good guys, all of them. They are excellent guys. And tough guys too. Which is what you want. But when I saw Sheriff Jones, and we spent a little time catching up, I told him, and I meant it, that if he wants to deputize me to help round up all these punks, losers, despots, and crime-addicted lunatics hiding in illegal immigration, give me a call. I would be more than happy to help. I know the Butler County Sheriff’s Department has it all covered. But I would enjoy the work and do it at the drop of a hat because let me explain something. I hate drug dealers. I hate drug use. And I hate the drug cartels. I hate them so much that I don’t think hate is a strong enough word. Drug dealing, to me, is the deliberate poisoning of a person’s mind, which I consider one of the worst crimes. What makes rape so terrible is it displays an intent to take away from a person their consent to sex and to display complete dominion over them, robbing them of the decision-making process. Drugs do all that and more through a subterfuge of the intellectual process of thought. And for me, it all falls under the same category. I feel so strongly about it that I don’t even like drinking at sports bars and social events. If you aren’t protecting a mind, you are proposing that animal acts rule in society, non-thinking application of life energy.

And as I said all that and more to Sheriff Jones, I was proud of him. I like knowing that my local sheriff was called to Washington, D.C., to be a part of cleaning up national drug cartel violence. I’ve known Sheriff Jones for years, and he doesn’t tell the stories of all the death hits on his life that the drug cartels have called for against him. But there have been many. More than many, and all of them, should be considered an act of war declared against any American citizen. Remember when President Trump talked about the way he was going to apply to all law enforcement like Tom Homan and sheriffs like Jones, the need to punish these criminals. And now they would be conducting that task over the next several weeks. When drug cartels announce that they want to kill you, that’s not something to be taken lightly. The thug mentality that was proposed should be considered hostile and purposeful. They started it, and it’s our task to correct the behavior. For too long, these horrible people in the drug cartels, neck tattoos and all, have been insisting that they exploit human weakness with drug use, knowing that their product was poison and that the result would be catastrophic to America as a nation. They purposefully engaged in the destruction of innocence with a deliberate intent to destroy America as a country, and socialists around the world cheered the effort on with great enthusiasm. Never forget that.

Not to kiss and tell, which I don’t like to do, but I think in the case of Sheriff Jones, it is needed for context regarding what is about to happen. The Sheriff and I were sitting together about 15 years ago at a political event. I remember it well; it was in the barn for a Tea Party event that was going on at the Niederman Farm, and we were showing off a video I had done with Sheriff Jones talking about the problem of illegal immigration. That was the same year many of us, myself included, were purposefully attacked through the IRS by Lois Lerner, and I was named as one of the targets along with my personal friend Justin Binik-Thomas. Jones and I were trying to decide whether or not to use pictures of headless people who were decapitated along the border by the drug cartels. Sheriff Jones encouraged me to use them because he thought it might wake people up. They were nasty pictures that showed many innocent people killed in horrible ways. Women were raped and had their bones ripped away from their bodies afterward, and they were awful to look at. I was going to use them for my media platforms, and ultimately, I decided not to use them because I figured they’d be banned for their graphic content. But we looked at hundreds of these pictures together while everyone else enjoyed a nice party atmosphere of hamburgers and hot dogs on a beautiful summer evening. My wife and I had just returned from Mexico with a video from some rough, drug cartel-controlled areas, so I knew firsthand how bad the situation was. And I know what Sheriff Jones wanted to do about it then, but Obama was in office, and his administration was encouraging drug cartel growth and not looking to punish it in any way. So this isn’t a new thing. But finally, I think we are going to see justice applied to the drug cartels. And they have it coming, all they will receive and then some. And Sheriff Jones is ready. And if he needs help, I am more than willing. I have hated the cartels for a long time and would be happy to see their destruction for good. For our purposes, it’s the month of March that is only the beginning.
Rich Hoffman

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