Will Wilkinson is about as mainstream and conventional a thinker as one can find, and is unfailingly civil and restrained in his rhetoric. But yesterday, he was fired by the technocratic centrist think tank for which he worked, the Niskanen Center, and appears on the verge of being fired as well by The New York Times, where he is a contributing writer. This multi-pronged retribution is due to a single tweet that was obviously satirical and sarcastic and for which he abjectly apologized. But no matter: the tweet has been purposely distorted into something malevolent and the prevailing repressive climate weaponized it against him.
Neither Wilkinson nor his tweet are particularly interesting. What merits attention here is the now-pervasive climate that fostered this tawdry episode, and which has unjustly destroyed countless reputations and careers with no sign of slowing down.
During the Bush and Obama years, Wilkinson worked at the libertarian CATO Institute but, even then, he was not much of a libertarian. As he himself explained, he is far more of a standard-issue neoliberal that one finds everywhere throughout DC think tanks, the op-ed pages of large newspapers, and the green rooms of CNN, just with a bit wonkier style of expression and a few vague libertarian gestures on some isolated issues. That self-description was in 2012, and he since then has become even more of a standard liberal during the Trump era, which is why the Paper of Record made him a contributor opinion writer where he published articles under such bold and groundbreaking headlines as “Trump Has Disqualified Himself From Running in 2020.”
On Wednesday, the night of Joe Biden’s inauguration, Wilkinson posted this now-deleted tweet in which he was obviously not calling for violence. He was instead sardonically noting that anti-Pence animus became a prevailing sentiment among some MAGA followers over the last month, including reports that at least a few of those who breached the Capitol were calling for Pence’s hanging on treason grounds, thus ironically enabling liberals and MAGA followers to “unite” over that desire:
The next morning, a right-wing hedge fund manager and large-money GOP donor, Gabe Hoffman, flagged this tweet and claimed to believe that Wilkinson “call[ed] for former Vice President Mike Pence to be lynched.” Hoffman also tweeted at Wilkinson’s New York Times bosses to ask if they have “any comment on your ‘contributing opinion writer’ calling for violence against a public official?,” and then tweeted at Wilkinson’s other bosses at the think tank to demand the same.
It is unclear whether Hoffman really believed what he was saying or was just trying to make a point that liberals should be forced to live under these bad faith, repressive “cancel culture” standards he likely blames them for creating and imposing on others. This is how he responded when I posed that question:
I was not attempting anything. Numerous major news outlets reported on Wilkinson’s tweet, including Fox News. I simply documented the events on my Twitter feed yesterday. Clearly, many liberal journalists were outraged at his firing, noticed my documentation, and decided to inexplicably blame me for his firing. It’s ridiculous that many liberal journalists apparently had nothing better to do on Twitter, than blame a guy with less than 10,000 followers documenting events, for getting Wilkinson fired, considering many major news outlets reported on Wilkinson’s tweet.
When I pressed further on whether he really believed that Wilkinson’s tweet was an earnest call for assassination or whether he was just demanding that perceived “cancel culture” standards be applied equally, he responded: “I did not take a position either way on the matter. Wilkinson is perfectly capable of explaining the tweet and his intended meaning, since he wrote it. Clearly, given the content, the least one can expect is that he should give that explanation.”
Either way, intentional or not, Hoffman’s distorted interpretation of Wilkinson’s tweet produced instant results. That afternoon, Wilkinson posted a long and profuse apology to Twitter in which he made clear that he did not intend to advocate violence, but still said: “Last night I made an error of judgment and tweeted this. It was sharp sarcasm, but looked like a call for violence. That’s always wrong, even as a joke. It was especially wrong at a moment when unity and peace are so critical. I’m deeply sorry and vow not to repeat the mistake. . . . [T]here was no excuse for putting the point the way I did. It was wrong, period.”
At least for now, that apology fell on deaf ears. The president and co-founder of the Niskanen Center, Jerry Taylor, quickly posted a statement (now deleted without comment) announcing Wilkinson’s immediate firing, a statement promptly noted by Hoffman:
Wilkinson’s job with The New York Times is also clearly endangered. A spokesperson for the paper told Fox News: “Advocating violence of any form, even in jest, is unacceptable and against the standards of The New York Times. We’re reassessing our relationship with Will Wilkinson.”
So a completely ordinary and unassuming liberal commentator is in jeopardy of having his career destroyed because of a tweet that no person in good faith could possibly believe was actually advocating violence and which, at worst, could be said to be irresponsibly worded. And this is happening even though everyone knows it is all based on a totally fictitious understanding of what he said. Why?
It is important to emphasize that Wilkinson’s specific plight is the least interesting and important aspect of this story. Unlike most people subjected to these sorts of bad faith reputation-wrecking attacks, he has many influential media friends and allies who are already defending him — including New York Times columnists Ezra Klein and Ross Douthat — and I would be unsurprised if this causes the paper to keep him and the Niskanen Center to reverse its termination of him.
All of this is especially ironic given that the president of this colorless, sleepy think tank — last seen hiring the colorless, sleepy Matt Yglesias — himself has a history of earnestly and non-ironically advocating actual violence against people. As Aaron Sibarium documented, Taylor took to Twitter over the summer to say that he wishes BLM and Antifa marchers had “rushed” the St. Louis couple which famously displayed guns outside their homes and “beat their brains in,” adding: “excuse me if I root for antifa to punch these idiots out.” So that’s the profound, pious believer in non-violence so deeply offended by Wilkinson’s tweet that he quickly fired him from his think tank.
Whatever else might be true of them, the Niskanen Center’s president and The New York Times editors are not dumb enough to believe that Wilkinson was actually advocating that Mike Pence be lynched. It takes only a few functional brain cells to recognize what his actual intent with that tweet was, as poorly expressed or ill-advised as it might have been given the context-free world of Twitter and the tensions of the moment. So why would they indulge all this by firing a perfectly inoffensive career technocrat, all to appease the blatant bad faith and probably-not-even-serious demands of the mob?
Because this is the framework that we all now live with. It does not matter whether the anger directed at the think tank executives or New York Times editors is in good faith or not. It is utterly irrelevant whether there is any validity to the complaints against Wilkinson and the demands that he be fired. The merit of these kinds of grievance campaigns is not a factor.
All that matters to these decision-makers is societal scorn and ostracization. That is why the only thing that can save Wilkinson is that he has enough powerful friends to defend him, enabling them to reverse the cost-benefit calculus: make it so that there is more social scorn from firing Wilkinson than keeping him. Without the powerful media friends he has assembled over the years, he would have no chance to salvage his reputation and career no matter how obvious it was that the complaints against him are baseless.
Humans are social and political animals. We do fundamentally crave and need privacy. But we also crave and need social integration and approval. That it is why prolonged solitary confinement in prison is a form of torture that is almost certain to drive humans insane. It is why John McCain said far worse than the physical abuse he endured in a North Vietnamese prison was the long-term isolation to which he was subjected. It is why modern society’s penchant for removing what had been our sense of community — churches, mosques, and synagogues; union halls and bowling leagues; small-town life — has coincided with a significant increase in mental health pathologies, and it is why the lockdowns and isolation of the COVID pandemic have made all of those, predictably, so much worse.
Those who have crafted a society in which mob anger, no matter how invalid, results in ostracization and reputation-destruction have exploited these impulses. If you are a think tank executive in Washington or a New York Times editor, why would you want to endure the attacks on you for “sanctioning violence” or “inciting assassinations” just to save Will Wilkinson? The prevailing culture vests so much weight in these sorts of outrage mobs that it is almost always easier to appease them than resist them.
The recent extraordinary removal of the social media platform Parler from the internet was clearly driven by these dynamics. It is inconceivable that Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos and Google executives believe that Parler is some neo-Nazi site that played anywhere near the role in planning and advocating for the Capitol riot as Facebook and YouTube did. But they know that significant chunks of liberal elite culture believe this (or at least claim to), and they thus calculate — not irrationally, even if cowardly — that they will have to endure a large social and reputational hit for refusing mob demands to destroy Parler. Like the Niskanen and Times bosses with Wilkinson, they had to decide how much pain they were willing to accept to defend Parler, and — as is usually the case — it turned out the answer was not much. Thus was Parler destroyed, with nowhere near the number of important liberal friends that Wilkinson has.
The perception that this is some sort of exclusively left-wing tactic is untrue. Recall in 2003, in the lead-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, when the lead singer for the Dixie Chicks, Natalie Maines, uttered this utterly benign political comment at a concert in London: “Just so you know, we’re on the good side with y’all. We do not want this war, this violence. And we’re ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas.” In response, millions joined a boycott of their music, radio stations refused to play their songs, Bush supporters burned their albums, and country star Toby Keith performed in front of a gigantic image of Maines standing next to Saddam Hussein, as though her opposition to the war meant she admired the Iraqi dictator.
But two recent trends have greatly intensified this mania. Social media is one of the most powerful generators of group-think ever invented in human history, enabling a small number of people to make decision-makers feel besieged with scorn and threatened with ostracization if they do not obey mob demands. The other is that the liberal-left has gained cultural hegemony in the most significant institutions — from academia and journalism to entertainment, sports, music and art — and this weapon, which they most certainly did not invent, is now vested squarely in their hands.
But all weapons, once unleashed onto the world, will be copied and wielded by opposing tribes. Gabe Hoffman has likely seen powerless workers fired in the wake of the George Floyd killing for acts as trivial as a Latino truck driver innocently flashing an “OK” sign at a traffic light or a researcher fired for posting data about the political effects of violent v. non-violent protests and realized that he could use, or at least trifle with, this power against liberals instead of watching it be used by them. So he did it.
It’s exactly the same dynamic that led liberals to swoon over Donald Trump’s banning from social media and the mass-banning of his followers only to watch yesterday as numerous Antifa accounts were banned for the crime of organizing an anti-Biden march and how, before that, Palestinian journalists and activists have been banned en masse whenever Israel claims their rhetoric constitutes “incitement.”
Unleash this monster and one day it will come for you. And you’ll have no principle to credibly invoke in protest when it does. You’ll be left with nothing more than lame and craven pleading that your friends do not deserve the same treatment as your enemies. Force, not principle, will be the sole factor deciding the outcome.
If you’re lucky enough to have important and famous media friends like Will Wilkinson, you have a chance to survive it. Absent that, you have none.
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Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 17, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 21 Seconds
“The family formation problem facing America and why immigration is not the solution.” Our guests are: Alfred Ortiz, Dr. Steve Camarota, Todd Bensman, Shelby Busch, Dan Schultz.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 17, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 59 Seconds
Rush Limbaugh. “He once again showed his toughness and his courage, virtually every day he was at the microphone.” Our guests are: Alexandra Preate, John Fredericks, Dr. Peter Navarro, Boris Epshteyn, Rudy Giuliani.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 16, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 50 Seconds
“I think the reason is [Biden’s] just not up to the job, this guy is a hollow shell” Our guests are: Dave Ramaswamy, Michael Yon.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 16, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 25 Seconds
“An ideal means” for smugglers, criminals, and anti-border activists to evade immigration laws. Plus: a preview of how the Biden regime is going to try to slip in amnesty piecemeal.” Our guests are: Chris Chmielenski, Mary Ann Mendoza, Mark Krikorian, Kane.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 16, 2021 | Video: 49 Minutes
“The sun doesn’t always shine the wind doesn’t always blow, or in the case if Texas you get freezing rain and it stops the wind turbines from turning” Our guests are: Daniel Turner, Dr. Peter Navarro, Boris Epshteyn, Rudy Giuliani.
February 15, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 51 Minutes 34 Seconds
A historic winter storm is moving across the southern and central United States.
Supporters turned out in Florida to salute former President Donald Trump on President’s Day.
And a heated exchange between a CBS reporter and Trump impeachment lawyer Michael van der Veen goes viral.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 15, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 35 Seconds
“Mitch McConnell has got to go,” “He’s a poison.” Our guests are: Natalie Winters, Steve Cortes, Tom Del Beccaro.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 15, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 35 Seconds
“California is in play.” “I never thought I’d say those words.” Our guests are: Tom Del Beccaro, Dr. Maria Ryan, Dan Schultz, John Fredericks, Melissa Huray.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 15, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 50 Seconds
“His one last regret was he didn’t get on the” CCP’s sanctions list. Curtis Ellis Our guests are: Boris Epshteyn, Dr. Peter Navarro, Michael Walsh.
The Nation Speaks | One Step Closer to Texit; Is Biden Admin Soft on Huawei?; US Grid Vulnerability | Video: 58 Minutes 50 Seconds
In this episode of The Nation Speaks, we take a closer look at the Texit movement. Daniel Miller, president of the Texas Nationalist Movement (Texit), explains why he thinks the Lone Star State should be independent. Then, we ask three Texans how they feel about the movement.
Republicans are worried that the Biden administration might be too soft on Chinese tech giant Huawei. Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.) discusses those concerns and more.
Finally, Dr. Eric Cole, cybersecurity expert and author of upcoming book “Cyber Crisis,” tells us about the vulnerabilities of the U.S. grid, after hackers gained access into the water treatment system in Oldsmar, Florida.
February 12, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 50 Minutes 37 Seconds
Former President Trump’s defense team debunks the Democrats’ case for impeachment; New York’s governor met with President Joe Biden today to talk about the pandemic; and lawmakers are trying to up the minimum wage to $15 an hour nationwide.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 12, 2021 | Video: 49 Minutes
War Room explains why the Trump legal defense team didn’t go for 10, but still put a “total nail in the coffin of the cynical sham of an impeachment,” says Boris Epshteyn. Our guests are: Boris Epshteyn, Dr. Yan.
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 13, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 40 Seconds
“The bottom line is you look at this matrix you see just a sea of check marks, virtually every state has most or all of these irregularities,” Navarro said. “This is the money shot.” Our guests are: Dr. Peter Navarro.
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 13, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 46 Seconds
“It all ties back to the CCP.” Our guests are: Frank Gaffney, Mary Ann Mendoza.
The Lincoln Project, Facing Multiple Scandals, is Accused by its Own Co-Founder of Likely Criminality
The group of life-long Republican Party consultants who, under the name “The Lincoln Project,” got very rich in 2020 with anti-Trump online messaging has spent weeks responding to numerous scandals on multiple fronts. Despite the gravity of those scandals, its conduct on Thursday night was in a whole new category of sleaze. It not only infuriated their long-time allies, but also constituted the abuse of Twitter’s platform to commit likely illegal acts.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 12, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 41 Seconds
“These barriers have to come down immediately,” Kassam said. “Bring down that wall right now. Today. No more politicization. [The National Guard] are not the political shock troops of the Democrat Party.” Our guests are: Richard Baris, Steve Cortes, Matt Braynard.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 12, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 47 Seconds
“This is completely fake, just like everyone else after Trump has worked out his usefulness to them,” Beattie said. “It’s the same story.” Our guests are: Gad Saad, Darren Beattie, Maria Ryan, Dan Schultz.
February 11, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 51 Minutes 41 Seconds
At least 5 people are dead after a 100 car pile-up in Texas. Democrats wrap up their case against Trump, and Disney faces backlash after firing an actress over her social media posts.
Democrat Impeachment Managers Make The Case To Impeach Themselves & Fellow Democrats | Video: 2 Minutes 19 Seconds
In a stunning presentation of ‘facts’, Democrat House managers make the perfect case to impeach themselves, their fellow Democrats, including Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Democrat Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Presidential candidate Joe Biden and Vice-Presidential candidate Kamala Harris. They called for continuing riots, violence and claimed that the election of Donald Trump in 2016 was a stolen election.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 11, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 54 Seconds
“They’ll happily hold the Constitution up with one hand and stab you in the back with the other.” Our guests are: Boris Epshteyn, Brian Kennedy, Dan Schultz, Darren Beattie.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 11, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 43 Seconds
“Why is everyone so allergic to counting the ballots in any place where there is a controversy?” Our guests are: Darren Beattie, Dr. TCC, Dr. Ming, Mike J. Lindell.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 11, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 59 Seconds
Raheem Kassam says the National guard is being “deployed for political ends” as if this was Beijing. Our guests are: John Solomon, Boris Epshteyn, Dr. Peter Navarro, Melissa Huray.
Kabuki Theater, Doctored Videos & Fake News Complete The Picture Of Another Democrat Dubious Impeachment | Video: 12 Minutes 12 Seconds
After what appears to be claim after claim of House managers being able to read minds, Kabuki theater and doctored videos, Democrats and CNN finally get directly challenged by Senator Mike Lee over the House manager’s use of CNN’s fake news reports. Pandemonium and confusion breaks out. As one viewer put it, “What an embarassment.” House managers close the session by removing the false statements attributed to Mike Lee by the House managers and CNN “on the grounds that it is not true.”
February 10, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast | Video: 51 Minutes 53 Seconds
Democrats begin laying out their case for why they say Trump is responsible for the violence at the Capitol building, 14 states urge Biden to reverse course on the Keystone XL pipeline, and Border Patrol agents make more arrests for illegal entries.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 10, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 50 Seconds
“This is maybe the most important story revolver has ever run,” he said. “I promise you the rabbit hole goes far deeper.” Our guests are: Gov. Eric Greitens, Darren Beattie, Mike J. Lindell.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 10, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 50 Seconds
“One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors.” Our guests are: Gov. Eric Greitens, Mike J. Lindell, Rudy Giuliani, Dan Schultz, Boris Epshteyn.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 10, 2021 | Video: 48 Minutes 59 Seconds
“Don’t hog being the smartest person in the neighborhood. Share being the smartest person in the neighborhood” Our guests are: Dr. Peter Navarro, Natalie Winters
February 9, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast
A majority of the Senate agree that Trump’s impeachment trial should go on, a new proposal means Americans could get up to thirty-six-hundred dollars a year for each of their children, and a Texas Senator teams up with the state’s governor to fight censorship.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 9, 2021
“There’s two problems with her rebuttal: she insulted the voters of Wyoming and we’re not buying the narrative,” “Number two, the people of Wyoming are very intelligent.” Our guests are: Terry Schilling, Frank Eathorne, Sonny Borelli, Ben Bergquam, Thomas Farnan, Jack Posobiec.
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 9, 2021
“This is the man who spent 40 years selling the country,” said Raheem Kassam. “They claim he won the election and what is the first thing he did? China can propagandize in the schools again.” Our guests are: Terry Schilling, Jack Posobiec, Kane, Adam Kredo.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 9, 2021
With the President’s lawyers refusing to go there, we may never get the receipts presented in the well of the senate. Our guests are: Jack Posobiec, Boris Epshteyn, Dr. Peter Navarro, Dr. Yan.
February 8, 2020 | Nightly News Rebroadcast
Trump’s legal defense team laid out their argument ahead of the former president’s impeachment trial; a survey suggests the GOP can’t risk losing the diverse coalition Trump built over the past four years; and journalist and author Andy Ngo gives an update on Antifa.
Rand Paul Speaks Out Against Democrats Hypocrisy On Impeachment & Political Violence
BREAKING: @RandPaul UNLOADS on Impeachment, the Media and Democrats’ Double Standard.
WOW pic.twitter.com/ZWFYN8KOZq
— Benny (@bennyjohnson) January 26, 2021
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 8, 2021
Bannon’s War Room | Morning Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 8, 2021
“Come on down,” Lindell says, standing by the evidence in Absolute Proof “100 percent.” Our guests are: Mark J. Lindell, Dr. Maria Ryan, Dan Schultz.
Bannon’s War Room | Evening Edition | Recorded February 8, 2021
“They are using scientism against you.” Our guests are: Jack Posobiec, Boris Epshteyn, Dr. Peter Navarro, Richard Fernandez, Amanda Shea.
The Journalistic Tattletale and Censorship Industry Suffers Several Well-Deserved Blows
A new and rapidly growing journalistic “beat” has arisen over the last several years that can best be described as an unholy mix of junior high hall-monitor tattling and Stasi-like citizen surveillance. It is half adolescent and half malevolent. Its primary objectives are control, censorship, and the destruction of reputations for fun and power. Though its epicenter is the largest corporate media outlets, it is the very antithesis of journalism.
I’ve written before about one particularly toxic strain of this authoritarian “reporting.” Teams of journalists at three of the most influential corporate media outlets — CNN’s “media reporters” (Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy), NBC’s “disinformation space unit” (Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny), and the tech reporters of The New York Times (Mike Isaac, Kevin Roose, Sheera Frenkel) — devote the bulk of their “journalism” to searching for online spaces where they believe speech and conduct rules are being violated, flagging them, and then pleading that punitive action be taken (banning, censorship, content regulation, after-school detention). These hall-monitor reporters are a major factor explaining why tech monopolies, which (for reasons of self-interest and ideology) never wanted the responsibility to censor, now do so with abandon and seemingly arbitrary blunt force: they are shamed by the world’s loudest media companies when they do not.
Just as the NSA is obsessed with ensuring there be no place on earth where humans can communicate free of their spying eyes and ears, these journalistic hall monitors cannot abide the idea that there can be any place on the internet where people are free to speak in ways they do not approve. Like some creepy informant for a state security apparatus, they spend their days trolling the depths of chat rooms and 4Chan bulletin boards and sub-Reddit threads and private communications apps to find anyone — influential or obscure — who is saying something they believe should be forbidden, and then use the corporate megaphones they did not build and could not have built but have been handed in order to silence and destroy anyone who dissents from the orthodoxies of their corporate managers or challenges their information hegemony.
Oliver Darcy has built his CNN career by sitting around with Brian Stelter petulantly pointing to people breaking the rules on social media and demanding tech executives make the rule-breakers disappear. The little crew of tattletale millennials assembled by NBC — who refer to their twerpy work with the self-glorifying title of “working in the disinformation space”: as intrepid and hazardous as exposing corruption by repressive regimes or reporting from war zones — spend their dreary days scrolling through 4Chan boards to expose the offensive memes and bad words used by transgressive adolescents; they then pat themselves on the back for confronting dangerous power centers, even when it is nothing more trivial and bullying than doxxing the identities of powerless, obscure citizens. . .
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 2 | Recorded February 6, 2021
“The problem is we’re not in control of it, and the reason we’re not in control of it is because we’re not in it,” said Schultz. How to take control? Become a precinct committeeman. Schultz said there are 400,000 positions, “but over 200,000 are vacant.” Our guests are: Dan Schultz, Mike J. Lindell.
Bannon’s War Room | Saturday Edition Hour 1 | Recorded February 6, 2021
“This has to be because he’s violating the censorship put out by the new Stasi,” Giuliani said. “Pretty soon they’re gonna come visit your homes.” Our guests are: Jack Posobiec, Rudy Giuliani.