It was barely mentioned in passing, but House Speaker Mike Johnson, our very own congressman from Louisiana’s House District 4, played a significant role in that infamous August 26 visit to ARLINGTON NATONAL CEMETERY by Cadet Bone Spurs, aka Mrs. Putin.
That’s the one where Trump staffers roughed up a U.S. Army representative who attempted to enforce a longstanding rule against photography in Section 60 of the cemetery.
Well, it turns out that family members of servicemen buried there had experienced some degree of difficulty in arranging for FAUXTUS to visit the cemetery, according to U.S. Rep. Mike McCaul (R-Texas), who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee. A spokesperson for McCaul said the families had reached out to McCaul because the cemetery had been giving them “a hard time” about coordinating the ceremony with Spanky McLiarface.
The families claimed that the Army would only allow specific times which did not work into everyone’s schedule.
So naturally, McCaul reached out to the Speaker of the House and Johnson obligingly greased the skids to accommodate everyone, the rules be damned.
But it wasn’t the first time Johnson had stuck his neck out in order to curry favor with Agent Orange.
New York Magazine last March published 27 NOT-FUN FACTS ABOUT SPEAKER MIKE JOHNSON. Some of those included the following:
- He masterminded Frump’s election coup;
- He worked for the conservative legal group behind the case that ended Roe v. Wade;
- He wants to ban abortion nationwide and to sentence abortion providers to hard labor;
- In a real stretch, he managed to blame abortion for school shootings, and for Social Security and Medicare cuts;
- He also managed to blame mass shootings on the teaching of evolution;
- He not only subscribes to the creationist theory that the earth is only 6,000 years old, but fought successfully to have the state of Kentucky pony up $18 million to help underwrite construction of the Ark Encounter theme park;
- He fought to ban same-sex marriage in Louisiana, led an anti-gay campus movement, authored several homophobic op-eds, introduced a national version of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill and that Rome fell in part because it was too gay;
- He once provided legal counsel to Exodus International, which offered counseling services to help young people “convert” from gay to straight;
- Citing queer youth and a lack of church attendance, he described America as “depraved and dark,” and once wrote the foreword to a book filled with homophobic insults – like any compassionate Christian;
- He advocated “covenant marriage,” making it more difficult to obtain a divorce;
- He was appointed dean of the Judge Paul Pressler School of Law at Louisiana College in Pineville, saying at the time that it couldn’t fail. It failed. Not a single class was ever held.
- There is no evidence he has a banking account (though, in fairness, his financial affairs could be conducted through a brokerage with home he may have some type of arrangement);
- He blamed post-Katrina looting on America’s turning away from God;
- He supported the display of the Ten Commandments in public buildings in defiance of the separation of church and state doctrine;
- He subscribes to Covenant Eyes, a brand of “accountability software” that monitors “inappropriate” computer use, like porn, raising the question of why he feels that is necessary.
Back to that foreword he wrote for Scott McKay’s book, The Revivalist Manifesto, in which Johnson wrote that the book managed “to articulate well what millions of conscientious, freedom-loving Americans are sensing.”
Really?
Let’s take a look at a couple of McKay’s more bizarre articulations:
- Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was part of Jefrey Epstein’s sex trafficking ring;
- That the PIZZAGATE and SETH RICH conspiracies are true at least in part, despite both having been proven to be totally bogus;
“I obviously believe in the product (McKay’s book), or I wouldn’t have written the foreword, so I endorse the work,” Johnson said.
Ooookaaaay…
Meanwhile, H.R. 2955, the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, has been introduced in the House by U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-California). The bill calls for an end to the warehousing and the often accompanying sexual, mental and physical ABUSE OF CHILDREN in residential homes, many of which are run by church-affiliated organizations.
What’s unique about the bill is that it has 113 CO-SPONSORS, including representatives from both Democratic (64) and Republican (49) sides of the aisle.
For whatever reason, only two of Louisiana’s six representatives, Republican Julia Letlow and Democrat Troy Carter have seen the necessity of signing on as co-sponsors.
Where are Clay Higgins, Steve Scalise, Garret Graves and, most of all, that paragon of virtue and family values, Mike Johnson?