Jun 30: Calm Before the Storm
Calm Before the Storm
In the final days of 2020, as the cold wind swept across a divided nation, millions of Americans felt the weight of betrayal. We watched as the evidence piled up — sworn affidavits, statistical anomalies, videos that the media wouldn’t dare show. State after state certified results that defied logic and common sense. Dead voters. Mysterious ballot dumps in the dead of night. Machines switching votes live on TV. But every time we raised questions, Big Tech silenced us, the media smeared us, and politicians — even those we once trusted — told us to move on.
But patriots don’t back down so easily.
In the days leading up to January 6, 2021, the air in D.C. was electric. People came from every corner of this great nation: farmers from Iowa, small business owners from Michigan, veterans from Texas, moms and dads who had never been to a rally in their life. What brought them all together? Love of country, and the unshakable belief that the people — not corrupt politicians, not globalist elites — decide who leads this nation.
We all knew the stakes. The mainstream media kept repeating their script — “most secure election in history” — but we saw through it. We watched as key swing states broke every rule in the book. We saw Republican poll watchers locked out of counting rooms. We saw video of suitcases full of ballots pulled from under tables in Georgia after observers were sent home. But if you questioned it, you were called a conspiracy theorist, a traitor, or worse.
Then came the calls to action. President Trump announced the rally at the Ellipse. “Be there, will be wild,” he said. And wild it was — not in the way the media would have you believe, but in the way freedom feels when it’s on the line. We gathered peacefully, with flags waving and prayers offered up. We believed — no, we knew — that if Congress would just hear the evidence, they’d do the right thing.
But even before January 6, the setup was obvious. You could feel it. The fences going up. The heavy police presence. Reports of agitators planning to infiltrate. Some of us warned about this on Parler and Gab — how suspicious it was that certain groups seemed eager to stir trouble. But again, our voices were censored.
And as we stood there, shoulder to shoulder with fellow Americans, we hoped that our representatives would have the courage to object, to pause the certification, to investigate the fraud that everyone else was too afraid to name. We weren’t there to “overthrow” anything. We were there to save something: the republic.
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