Here we go again, Patriots. The same deranged individual who served prison time for threatening to kill President Donald Trump has been arrested AGAIN for allegedly making even more threats against our Commander-in-Chief.
Diedrich Holgate, 47, was sentenced to 18 months behind bars for his original threats made when Trump was campaigning in 2024. But apparently, prison time didn't cure his Trump Derangement Syndrome.
During his 2024 rampage, this unhinged individual threatened to kill the president nearly THREE DOZEN TIMES through social media posts, phone calls, and voicemails. In one particularly disturbing message, Holgate declared: "I have the right to kill the president. I want to kill you."
Think about that for a moment, folks. This man served his time, got released, and immediately went back to threatening the life of the President of the United States. What does that tell you about the effectiveness of our so-called "justice" system?
The Left's Rhetoric Has Consequences
This isn't happening in a vacuum, Patriots. For years, we've watched the mainstream media, Hollywood elites, and radical Democrats push increasingly violent rhetoric against President Trump. They've called him "Hitler," a "threat to democracy," and every other inflammatory label in the book.
Is it any wonder that mentally unstable individuals like Holgate think they have some kind of patriotic duty to harm our president? The left's non-stop demonization of Trump has real-world consequences, and this case proves it.
While law-abiding Americans celebrate Trump's historic return to the White House and his America First agenda, we have repeat offenders who can't seem to accept the will of the people. This man represents everything wrong with the current state of political discourse in America.
How many more times will this individual be allowed to threaten our president before the justice system takes these crimes seriously? And how many other deranged leftists are out there, emboldened by the media's constant attacks on Trump, planning their own acts of violence?
