Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese
In an interview that aired at 5:27 pm yesterday evening, the President of the United States struggled as he sat leaning forward in the Oval Office. As the questions turned to his family's business dealings and the billions of dollars his financial disclosures showed he had earned since taking back the presidency, his skin grew tackier with sweat the more he talked. When Kernen handed him what should have been the easiest opportunity to reassure Americans that his family keeps a clear line between public office and private profit, Trump did the opposite. He volunteered something about his own sons that no ethics lawyer would ever advise a president to say: "Almost anything they do... they have inside information." Based on the events of 7-2-2026 The Breakdown: * In a CNBC interview, Trump admitted his sons have "inside information" on "almost anything they do," while asking Americans to feel sorry for them * His financial disclosures showed more than two billion dollars in revenue in 2025 * He could not name the firms managing his money and was unsure what rules he was supposed to follow * U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro announced a felony indictment against 67-year-old Olympic canoeist David "Davey" Hearn for touching peeling paint at the Reflecting Pool * The charge carries a maximum of ten years. Pirro claimed he "forcefully and violently" removed the liner * Hearn says he stopped on a bike ride, touched a piece already peeling off, and was handcuffed and held for five hours * His attorneys Norm Eisen and Mary Dohrmann called it "the misuse of government power against an ordinary citizen based on a concocted narrative" * How the truth is that the administration rushed a vanity project, ignored experts, and hired the wrong company * A reporter asked how Pirro could charge Hearn while over 1,000 January 6 rioters were pardoned. She refused to answer: "Who's next? Not you!" * Even Republican Senator Thom Tillis: "What freakin' parallel universe did I wake up in?" * Air Force Major Jason Watson became the first active-duty commissioned officer in American history to publicly call for a president's impeachment, conviction, and removal * Watson recited his oath on the Capitol steps and listed the charges before being handcuffed while the crowd chanted "Who do you serve?" * The career, pension, and freedom Watson knowingly risked, and the legal defense fund that raised more than $93,000 in 24 hours * Jack Smith's first televised interview: "We are facing an attack on the rule of law that is different in kind and scope to anything I've seen in my lifetime" * Smith on the "retribution prosecutions" of James Comey and Letitia James, and the agents Kash Patel fired * Smith confirming he is still ready to bring the case to trial after Trump leaves office * Smith's advice to state attorneys general: "I would be ready to litigate everything. Don't let reason be a limitation" The oath exists for days like this one, when keeping it means risking a career, a reputation, or even freedom. In two days, America turns 250 years old, and that anniversary belongs to all of us. This has never been about left versus right. It is about those willing to defend our constitutional democracy and those willing to sacrifice it for power. The people who honored their oath this week have shown us the way forward. Now it is our turn. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.
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