Three Republicans, desperate to cast front runner Donald J. Trump behind them in unbridled ambitions to lead America from the Oval Office, have thrown completely in with the Democrats in blaming main street Americans for Friday night’s George Soros orchestrated Chicago protest.

America has come full circle, a sinister full circle no true patriot ever hoped would come about.

Is it any wonder that some of them are over-reacting with enthusiasm and joy at the prospect of a billionaire businessman leading them out of the Marxist miasma and offering them the potential of making America great again?

For almost eight long years, Americans have been under the Marxist boot called the Fundamental Transformation of America, having to watch their freedoms frittered away by day, 96 million of them hopelessly jobless; every one of them worried about the future of their children and grandchildren in a progressive engineered Utopia.

Nobody on the Republican side put up much of a fight for freedom and liberty in the years leading up to the 2016 presidential race, and nobody on the Republican side is putting up much of a fight to protect freedom and liberty today.

Hard to believe but as true as the Marxists in the Obama administration brand every day Americans as bigots, racists and Islamophobes.

In the aftermath of the Chicago protest, for which Soros’ group MoveOn.org took partial responsibility, never once did Senators Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio or Governor John Kasich call for public safety in presidential primary rallies.

How can it possibly be that Chicago police seemed to be more sympathetic to the protesters than they were to Trump rally attendees—with no media asking why?

For the kind of zeal they manifest by turning out to rallies by the flag-waving tens of thousands, they deserve to be bullied off by the kind of rent-a-mob thugs paid for by a depraved, Obama boosting George Soros, we ask you, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and John Kasich?

How can it possibly be that Chicago police seemed to be more sympathetic to the protesters than they were to Trump rally attendees—with no media asking why?

Deliberately bumping into rally attendees, shouting them down, intimidating them and chasing them away is not an acceptable way to shut down 1st Amendment rights, or to punish those they regard as naive.

In essence, Cruz, Rubio and Kasich may just as well have joined unrepentant domestic terrorist Bill Ayers to wave their placards in a full-fledged protest that only narrowly missed serious injury.

The three politicians have been in office long enough to know that the sign-tearing malcontents did not suddenly come out of the woodwork on Friday night; that this coming together of Occupy Wall Street (OWS), #blacklivesmatter and other radical groups has been in the works for a long time.

By now the three Republican presidential contenders will have been told by their own supporters that turning on the rally attendees rather than the protesters is wrong, and will be wanting to walk back their post protest remarks.

But their words are now a matter of public record:

“Thirty people were arrested today over violence and then the rally was cancelled, protesters took violence into their own hands ...any campaign that disrespects the voters and a campaign that encourages violence and facing allegations against members of the press you create an environment that encourages this.” -Ted Cruz.



“There is only one candidate that has violence at his events. I think potentially some of the rhetoric he has used contributed to this environment and it’s disturbing.” -Marco Rubio.

“The seeds of division that Donald Trump has been sowing this whole campaign finally bore fruit, and it was ugly.” -John Kasich.

Last week, Cruz likened Donald Trump supporters to “low information” voters, a term he borrowed from talk show radio host Rush Limbaugh.

Limbaugh’s “low information voters” are identified as those motivated purely by a desire for “free stuff”.

Donald Trump supporters are not “low information voters”, Mr. Cruz. They are people from all walks of life who want this election to bring their country back.

Citizen participation in the primaries became risky in Chicago on Friday night.

But something of true voter value came out of the Chicago protest all the same: the fact that if Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio or John Kasich would blame We the People for a protest organized by the far left, they will do exactly the same thing if ever elected president.