In this episode, I address the growing pressure for Americans to subjugate themselves to destructive liberal narratives. Please, this is the time for strength.There was a need for me to take a night off yesterday. Not sure exactly what it was that made me want to take take the night off. Perhaps it was the fact that my Coronavirus test came back negative, which I found out Saturday morning in an email. I just got the testing done with the deep, uncomfortable, nasal swab on Friday afternoon, and was told it would take 3 business days to get the results. So, it was a rather happy moment when I got that email the next day! So, there was some celebration to be done Saturday night. Turned out to be a perfect night for doing a campfire in the good old firepit I built last Summer. No bugs, and a cool front that moved through, so it wasn't hot or muggy. Perfect, except for that brief rain shower that ended the campfire. But, that may not have been the only reason that I wasn't writing this blog post yesterday.
Though it was Friday night when I saw this episode for the first time, the first segment was emotional for Dan to do, and it was emotional for me to see and hear. I could tell that he was rather torn up inside with the events that took place, on a personal level, for Dan, his wife Paula, and his children. He didn't say a lot about whatever it was, other than being pressured to give his allegiance to Black Lives Matter. You and I know that will never, ever happen. But that is where the title to this episode came from. The fight came to Dan's front door. You will have to watch the segment for yourself, and come to your own thoughts about it. When I saw the episode, I decided not to come to any conclusions, but just to pray for Dan and the Bongino family.
What really stuck out to me was Dan's monologue in that first segment regarding police officers that lose their lives in the line of duty. The Black Lives Matter protest chants about "frying them like bacon," and I can't even quote the rest of it, definitely does not sit well with Dan Bongino, or me, or any of us that believe that Blue Lives Matter. It bothers me very much that when an officer is killed in the line of duty, and there aren't protests, and they barely, if not rarely, even get reported by the legacy mainstream media. Yet, the death of a law enforcement officer also affects many people. Their children, spouses, family, work associates, and friends, also feel terrible amounts of sorrow. All lives matter. That is the bottom line that I come to.
There is a lot more to this episode than just that monologue, and I pray that you will watch it all.
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