What You Need to Know is that tomorrow the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the Fischer v. United States case, which pertains to the 1512(c) charge that has been levied against January 6 protestors. 1512(c) is part of the Sarbanes-Oxley act of 2002, and it prohibits the obstruction of official proceedings and destruction of evidence. The question is: does protesting on January 6 really count as a violation of this law? Carrie Severino has a great bench memo on the case in National Review. We are meant to trust that the government will give citizens their Constitutionally-guaranteed rights to due process, but the use of the 1512(c) law is emblematic of how much the narrative machine has stretched the narrative to take down political enemies on the right.
Jason Jones is a film producer, author, activist, popular podcast host, and human rights worker and president of the Human-Rights Education and Relief Organization (H.E.R.O.). Jason joins Ed to discuss the Arizona Supreme Court decision on abortion. Check out Jason’s book on The Great Campaign Against the Great Reset.
Dan Schneider, VP of MRC Free Speech America, joins Ed to discuss Alvin Bragg’s exclusion of Orthodox Jews from the jury pool in Trump’s trial. Dan explains how Orthodox Jews lean pro-Trump more than any other demographic in New York City, so Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg moved jury selection from Wednesday to Friday in an act of religious discrimination to protect his political attack. This is not due process, this is a trick of Democrat operatives.
Wrap Up: Sources to follow this week, plus – a consideration on Trump.