By now, everyone with eyes to see and ears to hear can understand how the establishment plays its game.
For instance, thanks to establishment media sycophants and their selective curiosity, we know more about โMaryland fatherโ Kilmar Abrego Garcia than we do about most anything related to the two assassination attempts against President Donald Trump, the first of which occurred on July 13 in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Thus, when journalist and author Salena Zito revealed earlier this month that she heard Trump yell โUSAโ twice before picking himself off the ground and delivering his iconic โFight! Fight! Fight!โ message only moments after a would-be assassinโs bullet grazed his right ear on the stage in Butler, the revelation reminded us not only of how little we know about those who tried to murder Trump but of what we do know โ and must never forget โ about one of Americaโs greatest presidents.
โOne thing people donโt know,โ Zito told host Glenn Beck on โThe Glenn Beck Program,โ โis before he said โFight! Fight! Fight!โ โ I could see him โ he says โUSA,โ twice.โ
Zito, author of the forthcoming book โButler: The Untold Story of the Near Assassination of Donald Trump and the Fight for Americaโs Heartlandโ and a Washington Examiner columnist based in nearby Pittsburgh, had appeared at that Butler rally to interview the then-former president.
โHeโs still on the ground,โ Zito continued, referring to Trump. โAnd then I see him turn and get up and say โFight! Fight! Fight!’โ
โWow,โ Beck replied in a whispered tone that signified awe.
Trumpโs explanation for his spontaneous โUSAโ chant revealed an even more awe-inspiring element in his character.
โHe said, โWell, Salena,’โ Zito added, referring to a subsequent interview with the president, โโat that moment I wasnโt Donald Trump. I was symbolic. Even though I wasnโt president yet, again, I had once been president. I had an obligation to show that the country is strong, that we will not be defeated, and that we are resolute. I did not want to be the symbol of America being weak.’โ
Then, Zito explained that Trump called her the next day to inquire about her welfare.
โI said, โAre you bleeping kidding me? Youโre the one that was shot,’โ the author recalled
Readers may view the following relevant clip from the interview, posted to the social media platform X:
https://x.com/glennbeck/status/1910388341448532268
Above all, of course, Trumpโs sense of duty to the country stands out in Zitoโs retelling of the story.
It sounds so simple, even trite, to comment on something like duty. But it sounds that way, ironically, in large part because we have forgotten what that kind of commitment looks like. โDuty,โ for instance, calls to mind men like George Washington, who sometimes seems too mythical to have actually existed.
Thus, when we finally do witness what Trump displayed on July 13, we must cherish that rare quality in him.
How rare? Well, can anyone imagine former Presidents Joe Biden or Barack Obama, for instance, behaving as Trump did? What about Bill Clinton?
That is not a comment on their respective courage โ one cannot know such things until a moment arrives that calls for courage โ but rather on their views of the country, as well as of their own relationships to the presidency.
In short, to feel the sense of duty that Trump expressed, a president must love America and its people.
Would anyone dare suggest that Biden, who spent half a century enriching himself at public expense before flooding the country with illegal immigrants and referring to Trump supporters as โgarbage,โ loves America and its people?
What about the narcissistic and condescending Obama? How do you think he really felt about the โclingersโ?
And has Clinton ever lived for anything besides the perpetual gratification of his boundless appetites?
Trump, on the other hand, very obviously loves America and its people. He also understands better than most public figures what the Christian virtue of sacrifice means.
Sometimes it really is that simple.