Adam Kinzinger had a promising career in the Republican Party. A decorated veteran, he served in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was elected to Congress from Illinois in 2010 and left Congress in 2023. He was one of ten Republucans who voted to impeach Trump for his role in the insurrection. He was one of two Republican members of Congress who served on the January 6 Commission, along with Liz Cheney. Both of their political careers are over unless the GOP breaks free of Trumpism.
For four years, a massive machine of deception has worked tirelessly to transform the greatest political tragedy of our time — the bloody January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — into what Donald Trump now calls a “day of love.” As the machine’s chief operator, Trump is determined to make the truth the ultimate casualty of that tragedy. It is up to us to defend it.
No crime in history has been documented more thoroughly than the January 6 attack. More than 1,000 cameras captured the day’s events, and much of that footage was used to charge over 1,600 people with crimes related to the riot. Around 1,000 have been convicted.
As a member of the House committee that investigated the attack, I reviewed the key footage repeatedly and listened closely to the officers who fought against the mob. More importantly, the world watched the tragedy unfold in real time as news networks broadcast the events minute by minute. Since then, we have all seen the images of Trump supporters clad in helmets and tactical gear waging medieval combat against police officers. We’ve witnessed the assaults with our own eyes.
The truth of January 6 is so well established that even people who weren’t there have felt the moral injury of seeing their fellow citizens surge violently into the Capitol. Like September 11, January 6 was a national trauma. The key difference, however, is that this attack was incited by the sitting President of the United States and carried out by our own citizens.
Although the story is familiar, it must be repeated every time January 6 is mentioned. That day was the culmination of Trump’s months-long campaign of lies designed to convince the world that the 2020 election he lost had been rigged. He and his allies spread rumor after rumor, filed and lost lawsuit after lawsuit. Still, conspiracy theories flooded the media and the internet, stoking the anger of Trump’s most fervent supporters.
No evidence of widespread corruption was ever found. Nevertheless, Trump and his followers continued to push these lies in countless ways. Then, as Congress prepared to certify the election results, he summoned his supporters to Washington, D.C., and all but ordered the attack to disrupt the certification process. More than 140 officers were injured. Five people died.
In the immediate aftermath, only a handful of political extremists denied what had occurred. Even Trump, the King of Lies, initially called it a “heinous attack” and a “calamity,” warning that lawbreakers “will pay.” However, in the weeks that followed, false claims of leftist agitators began to spread. Fringe lawmakers described members of the mob as mere tourists who had been granted access to the Capitol. By March, Trump echoed the notion that rioters had been “ushered” into the building. By 2022, he began to express sympathy for those charged with crimes, and with his encouragement, his followers began portraying these attackers as martyrs.
Trump, the most brilliant and malicious propagandist in American history, relentlessly repeated the lie that January 6 wasn’t an attack but a “simple protest” gone wrong — not a violent attempt to disrupt the democratic process. Each statement advanced the falsehood in small, calculated increments. This is how reality is corrupted. Today, a majority of Republicans claim the people who stormed the Capitol were engaged in “legitimate civil discourse,” while one-third of Americans question whether Joe Biden won the 2020 election fairly.
In the tragic context of Trump’s potential return to power, we should expect him to fulfill his promise to pardon most, if not all, of those convicted for their actions on January 6. He will justify these pardons with even more lies, which millions will accept as truth.
Yet a greater number of us still believe in the facts captured on video, documented in the January 6 Committee’s report, and upheld in the courts. As rational citizens, we are obligated to speak out when lies are spread. We must continue to do so until the day Trump’s propaganda is obliterated and the truth prevails — as it will, in time.

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Why can’t the Republicans support a presidential candidate like Kinzinger?
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Kinzinger is not MAGA. The GOP base is.
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sadly, many people I have talked to swear they saw the capital police letting the rioters in.. they mention the woman who was killed trying to climb through the window bit not the police who died. They don’t want to hear the truth,
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I never saw footage of police letting rioters in.
As for Ashley Babbitt, she should have known that whoever broke into the chambers of Congress first was in mortal danger.
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I watched on TV for hours and early on, the police did indeed open the gates and let the mob in. The mob (they were NOT fighting or acting obnoxious at that point) was at a side balcony and there were guardrails placed with police posted at the top of the steps. The police moved the guardrails and let them in. I sat there thinking WTF! I never saw repeat footage of that again.
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I watched on TV from start (Trump’s speech) to end, when the mob was cleared from the Capitol. I never saw cops opening gates to let the mob in. I saw the mob press against the barricades until they overran them. I saw rowdy men using captured police shields and other objects to break the glass in windows and doors to gain entry. No cops opened doors to let the mob in. I saw the mob crush officers with doors until they screamed. I saw the mob climbing up the walls to break in.
No way was Jan 6 “a day of love.”
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I saw a very short clip of some cops moving a barricade aside for the mob. Just one clip. But I definitely saw it and then it wasn’t aired again on any of the services that I use.
I think this was either because they were so seriously outnumbered or, as Calisto said; they were in on the plan. That’s really not such a far fetched notion. But considering the many injuries and the deaths that occurred on that day, I’d say they were very much in the minority.
Donald Trump is a thug. Our celebrity spin machine has made him into an outlaw hero. It’s beyond disgusting.
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I remember some cops letting the seditionists in early in the attack. They were likely just part of the well-organized coup and we know how effectively right wing agitprop has infiltrated law enforcement. I feel like this aspect of history has been suppressed (erased?) due to fears over MAGA brain rot in our military and police forces. Toxic masculinity is rampant there. Did anyone catch how a few weeks ago there was a move to remind military personnel that their oath is to the Constitution and not a man. I wonder why they felt the need to do that?
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