Posted on | October 11, 2025 | No Comments

There are a lot of things I’d rather be paying attention to than politics. The Alabama Crimson Tide is facing an unbeaten Missouri team today, and the San Francisco 49ers — with my boy Mac Jones at quarterback — are currently the No. 1 seed in the NFC going into Sunday’s matchup against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Yet the duties of citizenship require me to pay attention to politics at a time when it is literally a matter of life and death. Charlie Kirk was assassinated in broad daylight by a demented leftist who believed his crime was justified as fighting “fascism,” and a similar motive inspired Joshua Jahn, the 29-year-old who opened fire on an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Texas.
People are literally killing because they believe what “Atheist Girl” believes — if you do not support Antifa, you are a fascist. This belief is obviously flawed as a matter of logic. It is a tautology, a circular argument where the first premise is identical to the conclusion. It asserts as fact a proposition which it fails to prove. The supporters of Antifa expect us to accept without question that any person or organization that they label “fascist” actually is what they say it is, and then use this “fascist” labeling to justify lawless violence. What this logic represents, in other words, is a claim to moral authority to kill anyone who disagrees with them.
Question: Where is the evidence of Antifa’s moral superiority? If these people are qualified to make such judgments — to act as a de facto revolutionary tribunal, deciding who is a “fascist” and therefore deserving of violent death — then shouldn’t they present their credentials, so that we may be assured of their bona fides? What we find instead is that Antifa thugs conceal their identities while committing their terrorist deeds, and on those occasions when their identities become known, there is nothing in their biographies to suggest any sort of superiority at all. Antifa militants are not more intelligent or more virtuous than their opponents and, in fact, are quite generally the scum of the earth.
Portland Antifa mugshots.
How many of these folks look Batshit Crazy to you?
Or, really, how many DON’T?!
Special bonus: How many seem to be trans? pic.twitter.com/XEEE3JENlK— Armstrong and Getty (@AandGShow) October 9, 2025
If any of those freaks moved into your neighborhood, you’d immediately put your house up for sale and start loading your furniture into a truck, whereas by comparison, having someone like Charlie Kirk as a neighbor would actually enhance your quality of life. Far from being self-evidently superior to others, the typical Antifa militant is more like proof of the “spiteful mutant” hypothesis. If, as “Atheist Girl” claims, anyone who opposes Antifa is a fascist, then we should all be fascists.
The movement that now calls itself “Antifa” can be traced, properly, to the anarchists who staged the 1999 “Battle in Seattle” riot. If you covered the protest scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s, you recognize the “Black Bloc” garb and provocative tactics of those so-called “direct action” anarchists as continuous with those now employed by “Antifa,” which started in Portland in 2007. It’s the same movement by a different name, and the only reason that “Antifa” has in recent years become so prevalent is because Democrats have insisted on labeling Donald Trump and his supporters fascists (or Nazis or authoritarians), thereby promoting the delusion that the 77 million Americans who voted for Trump are all fascists and thus deserving of death. And therefore . . .
Trump signs executive order designating Antifa a ‘domestic terrorist organization’ https://t.co/kvkYmS2C55 pic.twitter.com/1Y46PBgsz6
— New York Post (@nypost) September 22, 2025
What did they expect? Did the geniuses who applauded the murder of Charlie Kirk believe that there would no consequences? Did they think they could go on rioting and advocating assassination without ever provoking a response? Did they imagine that a majority of the American people would agree with their faulty logic and hateful rhetoric?
The FBI arrested a 69-year-old California man who sent a threatening letter to my friend Benny Johnson. Here is that letter:

(Click here to see it full-size.) On Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi flew down to Tampa for a press conference where the arrest was announced and, I think we must admit, the person who sent this letter is probably not a legitimate threat to Benny Johnson. However, there was no way for Benny to know who had sent this to him and, in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, it was prudent to take the threat seriously.
However, in support of my thesis — i.e., that the people calling us “fascists” don’t have any claim to moral superiority — I noticed some interesting information about the man who sent that letter. George Russel Isbell Jr. is the owner of a San Diego porn shop:

Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I rest my case.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to get ready to take my wife to the airport, as she’s going to visit some of our grandchildren for a week. Meanwhile, I’ll be cheering on Alabama — Roll Tide! — and getting ready for Sunday’s big game in Tampa Bay. And I’ll once more remind you that the Five Most Important Words in the English Language are:
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