
By: Daiman Teer for The Simpleton Star
Maddow has made her choice. She doesn’t stand with the President. That would kill her. She doesn’t stand with our advisors. She doesn’t even stand with the concept of Western survival.
The air in the American heartland feels heavy these days, thick with the tension of a world on the brink, yet if you tune into the fading signal of the radical left, you’ll find a different kind of heaviness. It is the weight of a singular, soul-crushing bitterness. At the center of this swirling vortex of negativity sits Rachel Maddow, a woman whose descent from the heights of media influence to her current, vastly demoted status has done nothing to humble her. Instead, it has only sharpened the venom she spits at the very country that afforded her a platform in the first place.
Maddow’s current trajectory is a cautionary tale of what happens when personal unhappiness is allowed to taint professional duty. It is no secret to any casual observer that she carries the aura of a woman profoundly at odds with the world. Her life, marked by the hollowed-out aesthetics of a miserable lesbian activist who has traded joy for a permanent scowl, seems to bleed into every syllable she utters. There is a specific kind of stench that sets in when a person chooses to live in a state of perpetual grievance, and in Maddow’s case, that smelliness has turned into a form of psychological warfare against the United States.
While our nation stands at a crossroads, facing a Middle Eastern theater where the threat of a nuked Israel is no longer a worrisome probability but a stated goal of the Iranian regime, Maddow has made her choice. She doesn’t stand with the President. She doesn’t stand with our advisors. She doesn’t even stand with the concept of Western survival. Instead, she has retreated into the dark corners of foreign propaganda, actually suggesting that the mullahs in Tehran—men who hang dissidents from cranes and dream of atomic fire—are more reliable sources of “truth” than our own Commander-in-Chief.
This isn’t just “contrary reporting.” It is a pathological need to find a “gotcha” moment against her own country to satisfy a deep-seated hatred for Donald Trump. Her MO is clear: if the United States says “up,” Maddow will consult a terrorist regime to explain why it is actually “down.” She has completely abandoned the search for any shared American idea, any common ground, or any sense of national unity. She would rather see the world burn in a nuclear flash if it meant she could spend the last five minutes of her broadcast blaming it on the man she loathes.
History has a specific way of dealing with people like this—those who use their voices to destabilize their own society from within while the enemy is at the gates. During the French Revolution, the “horse-drawn carts” were filled with individuals who had betrayed the trust of the people, though back then, the mobs were often led by the very same kind of miserable, resentment-filled radicals that Maddow represents today. She is a modern-day Marie Antoinette of the airwaves, telling the struggling American worker to “eat cake” while she whispers sweet nothings in the ever-vigilant easr of the Iranian mullahs.
But where the French Revolution lacked a moral compass, we have the Word. We see her for what she is because we have been warned about the “rotten fruit” of a bitter heart. Her sedition isn’t just a political choice; it is a spiritual failure. She is a woman who hates the traditional family, hates the traditional faith, and ultimately, hates the very foundations of the country that keeps her safe.
This is why Rachel Maddow must be called out—not just as a bad journalist, but as a seditious actor who belongs in a courtroom, facing the grim reality of treason indictments.

We must ask ourselves: how much longer do we allow the airwaves to be poisoned by someone who views our enemies as her allies? The answer must be “no longer.” The time for polite disagreement has passed. When a media figure actively provides aid and comfort to the propaganda machines of Tehran, they have crossed the Rubicon.

The Scripture
“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!” — Isaiah 5:20
The Reason
This verse was chosen because it perfectly encapsulates the inversion of truth that Rachel Maddow practices daily. By framing the Iranian mullahs (the “evil”) as reliable and the American leadership (the “good”) as the liars, she has literally traded light for darkness. She offers the “bitter” cup of foreign propaganda to an American public that hungers for the “sweet” truth of national unity.
The Prayer
Heavenly Father, we ask for Thy protection over this nation and our allies in Israel. We pray that You would expose the hearts of those who seek to divide us from within. Silence the voices of sedition and bitterness that seek to exalt our enemies. Grant our leaders wisdom and our people the discernment to recognize the wolf in sheep’s clothing. May the truth prevail, and may those who betray their country find no harbor in our land. Amen.
