Scott Jennings Wrecks CNN’s Fantasyland Take on Kilmar Abrego Garcia (VIDEO)

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If you happened to catch CNN on Friday night—and you didn’t, which is why I watch it for you—you missed yet another episode of “Let’s Pretend the Law Doesn’t Exist,” starring everyone’s favorite panel of libnut pundits. And once again, Scott Jennings played the role of that guy—you know, the one person in the room with functioning brain cells.

The topic? Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the criminal illegal alien who is being brought back to the U.S. to face a long list of charges. And true to form, CNN spun it like this was a Nicholas Sparks movie. But Jennings? He wasn’t having it.

He kicked things off with a gut punch of sarcasm, calling out Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen and the media for their glowing treatment of this guy. “I suspect that Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen, when he heard that Saint Abrego Garcia was coming back, took a shower, put on his nice suit, got on Open Table, found out what maybe party of two reservation they could get for tonight so they could continue the bromance they started when he went back to visit Saint Abrego in El Salvador.”

Perfect. Nailed it. And then he dropped the sarcasm for something even more dangerous—facts.

“He was not deported because he was a bad guy. He was deported because he was an illegal immigrant living in the country illegally for 14 years who had gone through due process, who had an existing deportation order. It so happens that it turns out he may in fact well be a really, really bad person that we would not want in the country.”

Right. Funny how no one on the panel wanted to mention that. Jennings laid out the possibilities like a normal person might when discussing someone accused of very serious crimes:

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“Number one, he gets convicted of this stuff and goes to prison for a long time. Number two, he gets acquitted and goes back to El Salvador, which is what I suspect the White House would do with him if he somehow gets out of these charges. Either way, it’s what the White House said all along. There’s no future where the ‘Maryland man’ goes back to Maryland to live quietly in the suburbs.”

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Sounds reasonable, right? Except reason isn’t exactly welcome at CNN. And just when you think the conversation couldn’t get more deranged, it turns out Garcia’s own wife accused him of domestic abuse. You’d think that would matter. But on this panel? Crickets.

In fact, S.E. Cupp—yes, the one who used to pretend she was conservative—basically brushed it off with a wave of her hand. She literally called the domestic abuse allegations “hearsay.”

Apparently, we only “believe all women” when it’s politically useful. If it messes with the story? Suddenly, we’re all legal scholars debating the finer points of “hearsay.”

Jennings was dumbfounded. “I trust his wife when she runs off and says, please protect me from this man.”

And Cupp, in a moment that makes your brain itch, shot back with this gem: “What if his wife said, this man’s great? You wouldn’t trust her. That’s insane.”

What?! That’s your argument?

Jennings couldn’t believe it either: “So you’re acting like we don’t know things.”

Exactly. Welcome to the new CNN—where common sense is treated like a foreign language and illegal immigration is just another lifestyle choice.

Then Bakari Sellers chimed in, attempting some legal gymnastics that would make Cirque du Soleil jealous. “That is not a crime. That’s a status offense,” he declared, referring to living in the country illegally.

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Jennings, now hovering somewhere between disbelief and stroke territory, responded: “I am just—my mind is so blown here—by the last two nights about illegal immigration.”

Same, Scott. Same.

Think about it: This man broke into the country, ignored a legal deportation order for fourteen years, got accused of domestic violence, and CNN’s panelists are treating him like he’s the victim. Jennings had had enough:

“At a minimum, what we know should be more than enough for anybody at this table to say, yes, please get in the hell.”

Cue Donte Mills, tossing in some conspiracy theory frosting, suggesting the charges were all about saving face. But those accusations of trafficking and abuse? They’ve been floating around for weeks. Not exactly breaking news.

Jennings held the line: “I think they charged him because he committed serious crimes, apparently.”

And there it is. No spin. No dodging. Just the plain, boring truth.

“He should be deported anyway regardless of this other stuff. The only issue that really mattered [was] whether he was in the country illegally.”

Exactly. But for CNN, that kind of clarity is a fireable offense.

This is what happens when one adult walks into a room full of people playing pretend. They turn lawbreaking into heroism. They downplay domestic violence. And when confronted with reality, they act like it’s the strangest thing they’ve ever heard.

Jennings didn’t just participate—he obliterated them. This isn’t just a debate about Kilmar Abrego Garcia. It’s about whether we’re still a country with borders, laws, and a shred of common sense left.

And if this panel is any indication? We’re running low.

#deportthemall #cnnexposed #scottjenningstruth