Harris will be forced to certify her own defeat

By 
 December 29, 2024

Kamala Harris, as the vice president of the United States, is about to have to certify President-Elect Donald Trump's 2024 Election victory, along with her own defeat. 

One of the former Jan. 6 prisoners is accordingly arguing that this is "evidence that God has a sense of humor."

The man who made the remark, according to Breitbart News, is Jacob Chansley.

He is the one who has become known as the J6 "Shaman" for the outfit that he wore as he walked around the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

"God loves poetic justice"

Chansley recently participated in an interview with Breitbart, and it was there that he argued that the fact that Harris has to sign off on the 2024 election results shows that there is justice in the world.

He said:

[It is] evidence that God has a sense of humor. It’s like Joe Scarborough just bad-mouthing Donald Trump for years — and now he has to go kiss the ring at Mar-a-Lago. God loves poetic justice.

Chansley, of course, is referring to the surprising turnaround that we have seen from members of the political left, such as NBC's Joe Scarborough, following Trump's victory over Harris in the 2024 presidential election.

Chansley did not really explain why it is that this would be poetic justice, but this is because the explanation is obvious.

The left spent the better part of the decade trying to destroy Trump, and yet the recent election shows that the American people are on his side and are ready for him to fix our country after four years of the Biden-Harris regime.

More justice to come?

Chansley is also looking for some justice of his own, and with Trump about to enter the White House he just might get it.

Trump has made it clear that he is not happy with how the Biden administration has treated Jan. 6 prisoners, and to rectify the situation Trump has also made it clear that he intends on pardoning many of them.

"I am hoping to God that it will get some people out of prison," Chansley told Breitbart.

He continued, "I’m still on probation, so technically I’m still serving my sentence, so I’m hoping if he decides to do a blanket pardon, that’d be great. I would love to have my record clean. But there’s still people that are suffering behind bars, and I would like to see them free."

At the time of this writing, it is not exactly clear how Trump plans to do the pardons.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson