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Dan Fleuette: Rebels of The GOP Have a ‘Fighting Spirit’

Artist and photographer Dan Fullette spoke to Breitbart News on Saturday about his picture book, Rebels, riots, outlawsfeaturing portraits of people who appeared in Steve Bannon's war room, such as Tulsi Gabbard and Kash Patel, “They described them as “continuing to fight” even when they felt “nothing.”

Full Et I explained it His Books The “history of the paintings of the War Room” of 90 people, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Steve Bannon. Fullette said that what he began as “blowing steam off and finding cool little projects” would hope these people would “really capture” people who are beyond their “public persona.” He added that he changed.

“It's the history of the paintings Warroomand it is told through portraits – there are 90 different subjects out there. From Bobby Kennedy to, of course, Steve Bannon and Kash Patel to Tarsi Gabbard, and, as I said, 90 individuals who passed the studio at one point. And what it is, it's not a headshot and a small story of these people. What I was trying to do was really capture those people who are really these people who are just the public persona behind. Who are these people? what are they doing? What drives them? And the theme that connects the entire book really is the name of the title – Rebels, Rogues, Outlaws. There is this kind of rebel, the spirit of outlaws, and the spirit of fighting against all these people,” Fullett explained.

“I really wanted to understand where that fire came from and try to capture it with these photos. I was very successful with it and the reaction that it got. I was extremely happy and proud of it,” Furuett added.

Fullet added that he had spoken with Bannon “a few weeks ago” about the speed at which the Trump administration went and what President Donald Trump was “doing on his executive order.”

“As we were watching, I was talking to Steve a few weeks ago, and the speed of the White House, and Donald Trump's executive order, his pick, and his doge, and all. What you're doing with amazing things in government to clean it up. And, yeah, I don't feel that – it's mainly because the audience cleans up corruption, have a smaller government, and have accountable to the people It's nothing new to the audience in the sense that it was driven by the desire to do it. , such a thing.”

“In the past, we have been very fortunate to see the rest of the country being destroyed, calling it a victory and sort of sort of thing. Seeing what's going on in it, it's absolutely fantastic. And I have to say, it surprised me.”

Fullet added that there has been a change in culture as well as government.

“What it feels is that people are sighing in relief. Wow, I think about what I actually want to say, what I want to say, what I want to say, and what I'm thinking And it's really new – especially… It's even Bush has returned, and before that, the Patriot Act set the stage for many of our rights to be reduced. But since then, it has been steadily happening – and it's one thing that's drip, one thing that's taken away or it's imposed on us,” Fuluett added.

“In this book, we were able to capture some of the people who were fighting this fight and we went through this fight mercilessly, especially when we felt like nothing would happen. But they always did. They stuck to the guns – they kept fighting, and as I said, the rebel spirit I really wanted to capture because I felt it was important, but as I said, There's a real spirit of battle. And when I was doing it, it was never planned to become a book. Just blow the steam off and find a cool little project I enjoyed did.”

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