Main Justice

Mary McCord Joins House Dems to Mark Five Years Since January 6th

10 snips
Jan 7, 2026
Join Winston Pingen, a former Capitol Police officer, who vividly recalls the harrowing violence he faced on January 6, 2021. Brendan Ballew, a former federal prosecutor, discusses the impact of presidential pardons on justice and his resignation in protest. Pamela Hemphill, a convicted participant, reveals her journey of remorse and the reason she declined a pardon. The trio emphasizes the ongoing threat to democracy, the dangers of misinformation, and the necessity of preserving the memory of that day.
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INSIGHT

January 6th's Threats Persist Today

  • Leaders warn that January 6th's causes persist: denialism, rewarded allies, and retribution politics.
  • They argue democracy remains threatened while falsehoods are promoted and opponents punished.
INSIGHT

Remembering Prevents Repetition

  • Brendan Ballew warns that erasing January 6th from public memory empowers future attacks by normalizing violence.
  • He suggests memorials and education as acts of resistance to forgetting.
ADVICE

Actively Preserve The Record

  • Preserve memorials, archive materials, and teach the history of January 6th to resist whitewashing.
  • Brendan Ballew urges citizens to keep talking, writing, and memorializing the attack as civic duty.
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