
Perkiomen Elementary School Principal Fired Over Social Media Posts
Francis Malofiy joins the Dom Giordano Program. Malofiy, a local Philadelphia lawyer, has taken the cases of local educators Ashley Bennett and Amy Sacks, who were both fired after making pro-conservative posts on Facebook. First, Giordano and Malofiy discuss the case of Amy Sacks, who was fired from her post as Principal of an elementary school in the Perkiomen Valley School District after posting memes on Facebook, such as suggesting that she’d vote for a potato over Joe Biden. Then, Malofiy and Giordano dig into the case of Ashley Bennett, who was labeled a racist after posting a long Facebook post questioning which black lives matter after seeing the treatment of black conservatives, police officers, and unborn babies. Malofiy explains why he has joined up with Sacks and Bennett, and tells how he hopes to help out in similar cases throughout the nation.
Allen West On Texas' Election Lawsuit
Col. Allen West returns to the Dom Giordano Program, this time to discuss the election lawsuit in Texas, which was filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. The lawsuit takes umbrage with changes to election procedures in battleground states Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Paxton argues in the lawsuit that those changes were unlawful and call into question Biden’s victories in those states. West explains what he hopes to see from the Supreme Court and explains why this case is crucial to ensuring security in elections moving forward. Also, Giordano and West discuss four-star General Lloyd Austin, Biden’s nominee as defense secretary.
Ithaca College Newspaper Bans Pro-Conservative Opinion Column
Michael Deviney, President of the Republican club at Ithaca College, joins the Dom Giordano Program to recap a situation in which he saw an opinion piece he penned banned from the Ithaca College student newspaper, the Ithacan. In a December 6th opinion column, Deviney argued that there was some election fraud in the latest election and criticized mail-in balloting using solid sourcing. After posting the article, the Ithacan was hit with threats and anger due to the piece and removed it from their website. Deviney explains the point of the piece, which was to spotlight the diversity in the Freshman class of recently elected Republican Representatives, and tells what he’s learned through the entire debacle.