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“And what I said yesterday and will say again now, though, is that prayer alone is not enough to prevent and end the crisis of gun violence in America. It’s not,” Psaki declared on her show.
That wasn’t all. Psaki even tried to pull the Pope into her argument, claiming his words supported her anti-prayer stance—a stretch that showed just how far she was willing to go to push her narrative.
Millions of viewers were left shaking their heads, realizing that in Psaki’s world, faith always takes a back seat to government control.
Speaker Mike Johnson wasn’t about to let Psaki’s remarks go unanswered. Appearing on Fox & Friends, he delivered the response that many Americans had been hoping to hear.
“It’s incredible to me that Jen Psaki and Gavin Newsom and others would attack religion and diminish the faith of millions of Americans at a time of such great tragedy,” Johnson said.
Johnson didn’t mince words. He made it clear that the Left’s knee-jerk reaction to blame guns misses the bigger picture.
“And at the end of the day, the problem is not guns. Okay, Jen Psaki, the problem is the human heart. It’s mental health,” he added.
He blasted Democrats for using tragedy as a political weapon, saying, “This is not a time to politicize these issues.”
Johnson’s defense of prayer wasn’t just about faith—it was about America’s future.
By ridiculing prayer, the Left exposes its real goal: replacing faith, family, and personal responsibility with government power and control.
Psaki’s comments proved that many Democrats simply can’t stand the idea that Americans might find hope in something beyond Washington, D.C.
Children were gunned down in a place of worship, and her first instinct was to attack prayer itself. That’s not leadership—it’s moral bankruptcy.
Johnson’s strong response struck a chord with millions of Americans who feel their faith has been under siege for years.
He reminded the nation that prayer is more than tradition—it’s the backbone of a free people who refuse to put their trust in politicians to save them.
The Left may want a secular state where faith is silenced, but Johnson made it clear: Americans aren’t giving up their right to pray, no matter how many attacks come from the media or political elites.
And judging by the outpouring of support, this fight is far from over.




