
by Walter Curt at WC Dispatch
The Democrat Party Wooed the Radicals Into Their Engagement Proposal. They Can’t Run From the Altar Now.
There’s a moment in every bad romance when the friends try to whisper, “Don’t do it.” The Democrat Party never listened. They courted the radicals, bought the ring, planned the wedding, and strutted down the aisle with them—convinced they could reform them later. Now the honeymoon’s over, and the Jay Jones scandal is the bill from the caterer.
Jones, their nominee for attorney general in Virginia, didn’t just post a bad take online. He joked about “three people, two bullets,” and sent messages about the Republican House speaker’s children that no civilized man would repeat. It was disgusting, juvenile, and dangerous. But the real story isn’t Jay Jones’s words, it’s the silence that followed. The Democrat establishment didn’t demand his resignation that day.
Not Spanberger, not Hashmi, not the big-name donors, and not the national press corps that would’ve howled for blood if the party label were red instead of blue. They all tried to duck and cover, issue their boilerplate “We condemn this behavior,” and hope the voters would look away.
But this time, they can’t hide.
The vows are on tape. They said “I do” to this brand of politics years ago.
It started when they invited the radical fringe to dinner—the ones who burned cities, shouted down dissenters, and replaced reason with rage.
They told themselves it was temporary,…
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