Roger Stone’s latest interview is a reminder that millions of Americans still smell a double standard in our justice system, and they’re not going to forget it. Stone told listeners bluntly that he expects indictments and accountability for those he says orchestrated a campaign of lawfare against President Trump — a message that lands with a lot of patriotic voters who watched their leaders get smeared while the real architects of the political hit job walked free.
Stone didn’t mince words about who he thinks will be on the hook: he named high-level officials and operatives whose actions, he argues, amounted to a seditious conspiracy against a sitting president. Love him or hate him, Stone speaks for an America tired of one-way justice, and his prediction that “justice is coming” is music to the ears of every hardworking patriot who remembers the weaponized probes and media circus that tried to topple a legitimate administration.
Nobody on our side is defending violence or lawlessness, and the real criminals who stormed the Capitol are being punished — the Department of Justice itself has already secured convictions in high-profile seditious conspiracy cases, showing that the law can and must reach those who break it. Conservatives who care about the rule of law should welcome consequences for criminal acts, while also demanding the same impartiality be applied to the bureaucrats and officials who abused their power.
That demand for even-handedness is not fantasy. The federal government has indicted and convicted extremist actors connected to January 6, and those precedents prove the law can work when it’s applied fairly. But when investigators and prosecutors selectively target one political tribe while giving the other a pass, faith in institutions collapses — and that collapse is precisely what Stone and millions of voters warn against.
Stone also used the platform to criticize the elites who think they can run roughshod over everyday Americans and then posture as defenders of democracy. The mainstream press spent years spinning narratives while ignoring inconvenient facts, and reporters who cheered the initial witch-hunts have little standing to lecture Americans about “rule of law” when they were complicit in the smears. The long-overdue scrutiny Stone calls for is about restoring trust and making the powerful accountable.
On the broader politics, Stone addressed fractures within the MAGA coalition and the economic anxieties keeping voters awake at night. He told listeners that the movement must stop bickering and focus on delivering real results — lower costs, secure borders, and an economy that rewards work instead of rewarding connected insiders. Conservatives should take that admonition seriously: unity is built on policy wins and accountability, not internecine feuds or performative purity tests.
If the coming months bring the investigations Stone predicts, the country will face a choice: let accountability cut both ways and rebuild institutions, or watch the same corrupt systems reassert themselves with impunity. Patriots must demand fair, transparent proceedings that punish true criminality while protecting political dissent. That’s how liberty is preserved — by applying the law equally and by never allowing a permanent ruling class to operate above it.
