Roger Stone’s recent sit-down with Sara Gonzales was unapologetically blunt: he described his prosecution as political theater and warned that the so-called deep state is not a relic but an active, organized force still working against patriotic governance. He used the platform to recount the long saga of his indictment, conviction, and eventual clemency, framing his fate as evidence that justice in America has become transactional and partisan.
Stone reminds listeners that a jury found him guilty in 2019 and that his 40?month sentence was dramatically altered through political intervention, with the White House commuting his prison term in 2020 before a full pardon followed. Conservatives watching the case saw not a triumph of law but a confirmation that prosecutors and establishment figures have been weaponized against dissenting voices.
He didn’t stop at his own story; Stone compared his treatment to that of FBI elites like James Comey, arguing the rules bend for insiders while being enforced against outsiders. Recent inspector general findings exposed procedural failures and deep problems inside the FBI’s handling of the Russia probe, which only fuels the suspicion that two standards of justice exist in our country today.
Stone went further and aired the now-infamous “Stone Plan,” a last?ditch strategy he drafted that pushed for preemptive pardons to protect Trump allies — a move he says was driven by necessity in the face of an institutional swamp that would gladly punish loyal Americans while sparing its own. Whether one likes the plan or not, the episode reveals a single truth: when institutions are politicized, extraordinary measures are considered to keep the fight alive.
The conversation moved beyond grievance into strategy, with Stone and Gonzales agreeing the deep state can be disrupted and even dismantled if conservatives stop playing by the enemy’s rules. Outside of Stone’s circle, leading MAGA strategists have quietly been preparing to reclaim federal agencies and replace careerist obstructionists with officials aligned to a constitutional, law?and?order agenda — an effort documented by investigators who exposed plans to build transition playbooks and even “shadow” operations to hit the ground running.
This is not about revenge; it is about survival of a constitutional republic. The lesson from Stone’s ordeal is plain: if the bureaucratic class will not police itself, then political leadership must restore accountability, protect loyal Americans who followed the law, and ensure the justice system stops acting as a political cudgel. Patriots who care about liberty should demand transparency, prosecutions grounded in law not politics, and a return to equal treatment under the law.
The left’s media machine will scoff, but millions have already seen the double standard with their own eyes — career prosecutors who bend, agents who leak, and the powerful who walk free while rank?and?file citizens are crushed. Stone’s interview is a clarion call to conservatives: accept neither the narrative nor the status quo, organize intelligently, and use the tools of power — political, legal, and administrative — to finally neutralize the entrenched forces that have long undermined the will of the people.






