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Beck and Stuckey: Conservatives Push Back Against Elites’ Smears

America is watching two very different stories collide: conservative titan Glenn Beck found his name dragged into the so-called “Epstein Files,” and rising Christian voice Allie Beth Stuckey was publicly rebuked by Hillary Clinton in a high-profile Atlantic piece. Both incidents landed in the cultural crosshairs this week, and patriots should not be content to let media elites write the narrative without scrutiny.

Beck himself made light of his inclusion, explaining that the mention comes not from wrongdoing but from an email that mocked his politics — the kind of mention any honest observer would read with a grain of salt. He rightly framed it as a badge of honor that Epstein’s circle disliked him, and conservatives should applaud a broadcaster who’s more likely to expose corruption than to consort with it.

Yet the broader Epstein saga still smells of secrecy and selective releases by authorities who seem more eager to soothe elites than to serve justice for victims. The Justice Department has publicly walked back lurid “client list” theories even as redaction blunders and partial disclosures have fueled distrust among Americans who rightly demand transparency. Patriots should demand the full truth — not sanitized leaks that protect the powerful.

Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton’s Atlantic screed that labeled prominent conservative Christians as waging a “war on empathy” crossed a line from critique into condescension, and she even took aim at Allie Beth Stuckey by name. For a political class built on preening lectures about virtue, Clinton’s timing and sanctimony reek of political calculation rather than moral clarity.

Stuckey fired back forcefully, defending her concept of “toxic empathy” and refusing to let liberal moral grandstanding redefine Christian courage or common-sense policy. Her response is exactly what American conservatism needs right now: unapologetic defense of biblical truth, practical compassion for citizens, and a refusal to be bullied by elites who traffic in guilt and hypocrisy.

This is a moment for conservatives to stand firm: call out the selective outrage, demand real transparency on the Epstein matter, and refuse to accept moral lectures from those who have facilitated the decay of our institutions. If Hillary wants to lecture the country about empathy, let her start by showing some for the millions harmed by policies she and her allies championed; and if the media wants to smear Glenn Beck or Allie Beth Stuckey, let them try — the American people are wiser than the talking heads give them credit for.

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