
Rep. Ro Khanna, the California Democrat who never met a progressive cause he wouldn't ride like a rented mule, is now preaching the gospel of second chances — but only for Democrats, naturally. Khanna came out swinging in defense of Graham Platner, the controversial Maine candidate running to replace Sen. Susan Collins, arguing that the man "really grew as a person" and "deserves redemption."
Isn't that precious? A Democrat discovering grace and forgiveness. Someone check the temperature in Hell.
Here's the thing. Platner isn't exactly running on a squeaky-clean record. The guy has been dogged by a Nazi-linked tattoo, extramarital sexting, denigrating fellow servicemembers, and a collection of disturbing online posts that would make a 4chan moderator blush. He did serve two tours of duty in Iraq as an infantry officer — and credit where it's due for that — but the baggage train behind this candidacy is longer than a Maine winter.
Khanna, speaking about Platner, said he was "more concerned about making it clear that we're opposed to misogyny" and acknowledged that Platner's past relationships were "toxic and volatile" with "no excuse for that." But then came the kicker — Khanna gushed that Platner "really grew as a person when he came back to Maine, and he was an oyster farmer."
Oh, well. He farmed oysters. All is forgiven.
"We need that redemption in this country," Khanna declared, apparently with a straight face.
Now, let's rewind to 2018, shall we? When Brett Kavanaugh was going through confirmation hearings for the Supreme Court and Christine Blasey Ford came forward with allegations, Khanna didn't exactly extend the same olive branch. In fact, he tweeted — and the internet never forgets — "I stand with Dr. Christine Blasey Ford. Brett Kavanaugh is not fit to sit on the Supreme Court. #BelieveSurvivors."
No redemption. No growth. No second chances. No oyster farming exemption. Just a blanket declaration that Kavanaugh was unfit, period, based on unproven allegations.
This isn't just a bad look — it's the entire Democrat playbook exposed in two quotes from the same mouth. When it's a Republican nominee for the highest court in the land, it's "believe all survivors" and destroy the man's life. When it's a Democrat running for Senate in a critical pickup state, suddenly we're all about personal growth and redemption arcs.
Even Democratic strategists aren't buying what Platner is selling. Joel Payne put it bluntly: "There's no way he's going to win a referendum on himself." And Steve Schale was even more brutal, saying "I'm glad I don't live in Maine" and noting there are "5 other viable pick-up opportunities" — translation: this guy is radioactive and we all know it.
But Khanna doesn't care about winning Maine. He cares about looking magnanimous while the cameras are rolling. The problem is, we've got the receipts from 2018, and they tell a very different story about Ro Khanna's commitment to grace and redemption.
Same mouth. Two standards. And they wonder why nobody trusts them.



