Before Rachel could testify in Gabrion’s rape trial, he kidnapped Rachel and her 11-month-old baby, Shannon.
He took them to a national forest, chained Rachel to cinderblocks, and drowned her in a lake.
3/8
Rachel’s baby has never been found.
Gabrion said he “killed the baby because there was nowhere else to put it.”
Gabrion is suspected of numerous other murders.
Biden granted Gabrion clemency.
4/8
Ricardo Sanchez Jr. and Daniel Troya brutally murdered a family of 4.
They shot Yessica Escobedo, the mother, 11 times while she tried to protect her young sons—Luis Julian (age 4) and Luis Damian (age 3).
Biden granted Sanchez and Troya clemency.
5/8
Kaboni Savage is a gang leader who’s been convicted for his involvement in the deaths of 12 people.
Savage ordered the firebombing of the family home of one of his rivals.
The attack murdered 6, including a 15-month-old baby and 3 other children.
6/8
When Savage heard that his rival was being temporarily released from prison to attend his family’s funeral, Savage said, “They should stop off and get him some barbecue sauce” to “pour it on them burnt bitches.”
Biden granted Savage clemency.
7/8
A jury of their peers unanimously recommended capital punishment for these monsters and 31 others.
But Biden refused to carry out their lawful and just sentences.
While these rapists, baby-killers, and murderers are breathing a sigh of relief today, fair-minded Americans are mourning for their victims and their families.
8/8
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger on CNN this morning: “People often struggle to come up with examples” of left-wing bias at PBS.
Actually, it’s not a struggle at all.
Here are just a few of PBS’s biggest whiffs:
🧵 (1/5)
(2/5) In Louisiana, a PBS video claimed that pre-schoolers “may have racial bias.”
PBS affiliates also advocated for males in women’s sports to have “support in their push for athletic access.”
They have the right to say this stuff—but not with your money.
(3/5) Even worse, PBS pushed so-called “gender-affirming care for youth” and released woke “anti-racist” talking points for “[t]alking to young children about race and racism.”
Should taxpayers really be funding PBS’s hot takes on “the hidden racism of young white Americans”?
NPR’s CEO Katherine Maher on CNN this morning: “As far as the accusations that we’re biased, I’d stand up and say, ‘Please show me a story that concerns you.’”
I’ve got a few:
🧵 (1/5)
(2/5) NPR reported that country music and birds are racist, told American people to stop eating beef, and promoted the Russia-gate conspiracy.
No person with a brain above a single-celled organism would call these articles fair and balanced.
(3/5) NPR claimed President Biden’s presidential debate performance didn’t change the election, days before he dropped out of the race.
If you believe that headline, you believe in the tooth fairy. But that’s what NPR reported with your tax dollars.
🧵 (1/11) The Senate only has a few more days to approve President Trump’s rescission request to cut funding to wasteful foreign aid projects and public broadcasting.
We should pounce on this opportunity like a ninja.
(2/11) President Trump entered the Oval Office on a mission to reduce waste in the federal budget—what I call “spending porn.” He’s made a great start through the early work of DOGE.
Some of the spending that the Biden administration approved will take your breath away.
(3/11) Under President Biden, our federal government agreed to spend $3M on an Iraqi version of “Sesame Street,” $500K on electric buses in Rwanda, and $67K to feed insect powder to children in Madagascar.
(2/8) In 2025 alone, Congress will send the Corporation for Public Broadcasting $535M.
The CPB is a government-backed nonprofit that issues taxpayer-funded grants to NPR, PBS, and their affiliates.
By 2027, the CPB expects the federal government to send it nearly $600M.
(3/8) One would think that receiving billions of dollars from taxpayers would motivate NPR and PBS to publish fair reporting that the American people can use.
Instead, these organizations are using taxpayer money to advance their own political agendas.
(3/13) Since adopting an “anti-racism roadmap” in 2020, UCLA's medical school ranking has plummeted.
More than half of the students failed their standardized exams on emergency medicine, family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics—a failure rate 10X the national average.
(2/10) Normally, a court’s injunction only applies to the plaintiff in the case.
But in the 1960s, judges began blocking the government from enforcing the policy against anyone, anywhere—not just addressing one plaintiff's concerns.
(3/10) The universal injunction gives individual judges extraordinary power.
Don’t like a law passed by Congress? Gone.
Don’t like one of the president’s policies? Sayonara.