The chickens are finally coming home to roost for Stephen Colbert, the so-called 'comedian' who has spent years turning CBS's Late Show into a nightly Democrat campaign rally disguised as entertainment. The FCC is now breathing down his neck over potential 'Equal Time' rule violations, and predictably, the leftist hack is crying victim.
For those who haven't had the misfortune of watching Colbert's Trump Derangement Syndrome hour, let's be clear about what this show really is: a taxpayer-subsidized hate fest against conservatives, wrapped in the thinnest veneer of comedy. Night after night, this partisan puppet uses the public airwaves to spew Democrat talking points while pretending to be an entertainer.
The Equal Time rule exists for good reason – it prevents broadcast networks from becoming propaganda arms of political parties. But Colbert and CBS have been gaming the system for years, hiding behind the 'entertainment' label while delivering more partisan attacks than most cable news shows.
The Rules Apply to Everyone – Even Liberal Darlings
Now that President Trump is back in office and Republicans control the government, suddenly there's actual oversight of these broadcast shenanigans. The FCC isn't playing games with networks that think they can abuse their licenses to push partisan propaganda.
What's truly rich is Colbert's whining about 'political pressure.' This is the same guy who spent four years calling President Trump a dictator, yet now he's shocked – SHOCKED – that there might be consequences for turning a comedy show into a Democrat Super PAC.
"The crybaby late-night host insists he's a victim of political pressure, but he's been a long-time abuser of the nation's broadcast airwaves," according to The Federalist's reporting on this overdue reckoning.
Patriots, this is what accountability looks like. For too long, the mainstream media and their entertainment wing have operated with impunity, using public airwaves to attack conservatives while claiming immunity through comedy. Those days are over.
The question now is: will other late-night propagandists clean up their acts, or will they double down and face the same regulatory scrutiny that's finally catching up to Colbert?
