The real issue is never private expression itself—it’s secrecy, hypocrisy, and whether officials or their inner circles are vulnerable to pressure that could compromise judgment. If the same people demanding invasive moral policing can’t survive their own standards, what does that mean for vetting, loyalty tests, and Homeland Security decision-making?
This is bigger than gossip. It’s about how hidden vulnerabilities become national security liabilities when politics is built on fear, judgment, and selective morality. And when we let people like Trump anywhere near public office. Because it’s always the same story with these people, the ones who hate the most have a Jeffrey Epstein, Stormy Daniels, or Bryon Noem in their life. They seemingly can’t live with themselves, so they decide they won’t live with anything they can judge about others too.
And it destroys our ability to function as a republic, leading to resentments, hatred, and, eventually, fascism.
Watch the video to find out more about this led us to Iran, among other disasters.
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