Earlier this week, Peter Navarro became the first White House advisor in American history to be imprisoned for exerting executive privilege and maintaining separation of powers between the separate branches of government.
Navarro was one of the better appointees inside the Trump White House and he was a major advisor to President Trump on COVID-19. When Fauci was pushing lockdowns, Navarro was advocating for freedom in America.
When the fake, illegitimately appointed Liz Cheney January 6 Committee tried to subpoena Navarro, he refused to cooperate. He cited executive privilege, just as many previous White House advisors and Cabinet officials have done for hundreds of years.
You cannot compel presidential advisors to testify about private conversations with a president. That’s always been the rule until now. The Democrats just sent a 74-year-old man to prison for doing the same thing that every previous presidential advisor has ever done when subpoenaed.
How do we fix this? Podcaster Dan Bongino explains exactly how to issue a correction to this. Some people aren’t going to like it, but it’s true. If you want to make a bully stop bullying you, the only way to effectively do it is “punch back twice as hard,” as the late Andrew Breitbart once said.
Watch as Bongino recaps the unprecedented nature of Peter Navarro’s imprisonment, and the solution to the problem.