While national Democrats – and their Louisiana
lackeys – attempt to obscure a year of policy failure by unsupported
fantasy and hyperbole about unrest at the U.S. Capitol on year ago, the
anniversary is relevant for Louisianans in that it set the stage for the political
decline of Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy as he launched
his quest for Strange
New Respect.
Almost immediately after a mob infiltrated the
Capitol seeking
to delay Electoral College tabulations over the belief insecure elections
in several states made an accurate victory declaration impossible – who video
footage showed after members of Congress fled, with many of the few hundred
many ushered in by Capitol police, mostly wandered aimlessly, acquired souvenirs
of various kinds, and engaged in very minor vandalism before trickling out,
kind of like the dog who actually caught the car and didn’t know what to do
with it – the political left not only went into hyperventilation mode about the
“insurrection,” but also it tried to incorporate Republican former Pres. Donald
Trump as the genesis of it all. Never mind, of course, in a speech given to
nearby protesters Trump never hinted that a bunch of listeners should deploy
violence down the street to accomplish their aim, and even went so far as to
instruct that any such protest should occur peaceably (although the Federal
Bureau of Investigation already knew, and later
would confirm, a handful of protesters were trying to organize a less
peaceful response), all the while not engaging in any legally or constitutionally
suspect behavior.
Nonetheless, Democrats quickly tried to paint Trump as, if not the center of a conspiracy to overthrow the federal government,
dastardly enough to rile a revolutionary army into existence to prevent a
change in executive power. Within hours this hoax began to unravel and has done
nothing else since, and anyone with a scintilla of political judgment astute
enough to govern the country and honest enough to exercise it from the start knew
the very worst about which Trump could be accused on this issue was adhering to
his typical undiplomatic leadership style by not anticipating that any remarks,
no matter how benign, might encourage more high-strung members of the listening
audience to engage in trespass.