This show is not bad as long as Mr. Johnson sticks to his own history and the specific infrastructure in which he committed his crimes. The problem here is that, like so many former criminals turned celebrities, he seems to think his status indicates that he's smarter than he really is.
A recent example is Mr. Johnson's 30-minute diatribe in which he insists DOJ action against former president Trump is most certainly and absolutely politically motivated, no room for a hint of doubt. Additionally, Mr. Johnson sets the world straight, informing us that president Biden is the worst president in all of American history, even worse than--wait for it--Jimmy Carter.
Never mind the fact that Joe Biden is presiding over a stunning economic recovery, following COVID-19, and the best economy in my lifetime. (I'm 60 years old.). Thanksgiving, together with his success in repairing America's reputation on the world stage, his success in leading the war in Ukraine and the unprecedented unification of the free western nations in solidarity with Ukraine, and his sweeping policy reforms have led most non-Fox dazed experts in such matters to take quite the opposite view of the Biden presidency. There's little doubt history will view the Biden administration to be among the greatest in the history of our nation.
You may think I'm saying this because I favor Joe Biden. I will admit I am a fan of Joe Biden. But I became a fan as a result of his success. I did not support Biden initially. I predicted he would be a horrible president, but I was beaten i to submission by the facts. Biden is a great president. As a world leader, history will equate him with Winston Churchill. If Ukraine prevails (and they almost certainly will), Biden's reputation will likely surpass that of Churchill, because Biden will have won without bringing the rest of the allies into a world war.
There can be little doubt that the actual worst president in American history is Donald Trump. In fact, it remains to be seen if the GOP and/or America will ever recover from the damage done by the Trump presidency and his illegal attempts to remain in power.
Mr. Johnson seems to want to give Donal Trump a pass. He claims Trump played no part in planning the January 6 attacks in the capital, even as significant evidence to the contrary emerges. He says the hearings were unnecessary, a waste of tax dollars, even as legal and political experts tell us the hearings was the catalyst for action finally taken by a reluctant DOJ, which Johnson claims is politically motivated.
Johnson then tells us how easy it would be to steal a presidential election. He says he registered dead people to vote, though he surely didn't register enough dead people, undetected, within scores of districts, in the eight swing states, to move the electoral college. He could gain access to voting machines and hack them, he says. He could do it in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, he claims.
He knows all this, but apparently doesn't know that Puerto Ricans do not vote in presidential elections. Someone should tell him. Someone should tell him he would have to gain physical access to dozens, of not hundreds, of voting machines to sway a presidential election. Someone should tell him that widespread election fraud has never happened in a presidential election. Chicago election fraud happened on a local level, not the national level. The idea that drop boxes could be stuffed with dead people's ballots to a degree that would change a presidential election is ludicrous.
If you want to know how to steal an election, look no further than the efforts of Donald Trump. He nearly succeeded, and now the stage has been set to possibly succeed in the future. But Mr. Johnson wants to give President Trump a pass. He wants to claim action to protect our nation is politically motivated.
I gave M. Johnson two stars, because when he stays on topic, he's fairly interesting. The rest of this is wholly in necessary. Mr. Johnson isn't saying anything that isn't already being said on Fox and Newsmax.
When it comes his history with identity theft and cybercrime, Mr. Johnson is a genius. When it comes to political punditry, he is Dunning-Kruger's poster child.