"I've been talking about the need for reciprocity, the need for justice, the need to balance the scales, the need to say 'look, we have to return to a one-tier system of justice.' And if you don't do that, if you don't hold people to the same standard, then you will have an issue of elites and everybody else, elites and subjects, rather than a group of people who are all subject to the same set of law." Jack Posobiec was speaking not only of law across the board, but of justice for Liz Cheney, one of the only two Republicans who sat on the J6 committee and is alleged to have colluded with witnesses who then testified before Congress.
A report out from Rep. Barry Loudermilk on Tuesday recommended that the former Wyoming Congresswoman should be investigated for possible criminal activity for colluding with witness Cassidy Hutchinson, who testified about Donald Trump's actions following his speech at the final rally of what would become his first term. Posobiec spoke to Breitbart's Matt Boyle about the alleged collusion and the J6 committee.
"This is the gang that can't shoot straight," Boyle said. He called out the Democrats and GOP neo-cons like Cheney who have repeatedly said that "no one is above the law" and claimed that "everyone needs to be held accountable" for not wanting to be held accountable themselves for their own potentially criminal actions. Boyle said he hoped that the "incoming administration actually takes steps to do this."
It has also been reported that President Joe Biden has been considering issuing pardons to those members of the January 6 committee. Former Chair of that committee, Benny Thompson, has said that he would be interested in a pardon. "These same people, they've had January 6 prisoners locked up in prisons in Washington, DC for the last several years, and if they committed widespread criminality here, which or may not be the case... the process needs to be played out." He said it's not right that Cheney and the others should skate free in the event that they did commit crimes.
Steve Bannon and Peter Navarro both served time in federal prison on Contempt of Congress charges after they refused to comply with subpoenas from the J6 committee, which demanded correspondence that they believed was protected by Trump's executive privilege. Posobiec said that Bannon "did four months in Danbury federal prison simply for refusing to participate in this committee's actions. And as it turns out, if the committee was conducting itself in an illegal fashion, then legally speaking it does show why Bannon would not want to get involved with an illegal committee in the first place."
Watch the full episode below.