Trump supporters behaving like the bags of ass that they are

blackpepper

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
There has been proof that a majority of the people who were there mainly showed up for Shits and Giggles so they could say they were there. Majority of them had no intentions of overthrowing the Government.

A lot of folks who showed up at the White House event thought the rally would just be at the WH. They were caught off guard when the mob migrated toward the Capitol.

When they arrived at the Capitol and saw all hell broke loose, the smart ones got the fuck out of there with the quickness and went straight back home.

A large majority of the ones who crossed the lines just saw a opportunity to act stupid and made a impulsive judgement to follow the crowd.

Similar to a person during a riot seeing folks running in and out of a electronics store stealing stuff and they look around and make a dumb decision “Everybody else is doing it, I guess I might as well too”.

There is definitive proof there was a small segment who actually was there to kill VP Pence, SoH Pelosi and key members of Congress. They were using the large mob to cover their actions.

And there is also definitive proof there was dark money organizers who chartered buses to get people to DC. Hotel and food was also paid for. And there is proof that Crypto money came in from outside the US to fund the Capitol Riot.

If you noticed, those folks have not been rounded up yet. Only the idiots are being rounded up, indicted and sentenced with slaps on the wrist for now.

Like I said, they starting from the bottom and working up.
Not to be argumentative, but do you feel that trespassing is an appropriate charge for most of the stupid folks that just showed up and provided cover for the real operatives? There was just way, way more at stake than just some high end electronics, watches, purses or sneakers. Its not the same. If they don't do a better job of making an example of these fools it will all just have been a practice run for the next attempt.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Ex-FBI official says law enforcement needs to take upcoming right-wing rally in DC 'very seriously'

By Paul LeBlanc, CNN
Updated 12:32 PM EDT, Tue September 07, 2021


Washington(CNN) Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe said Monday evening that law enforcement needs to take the upcoming right-wing rally in support of jailed January 6 rioters "very seriously" as concerns mount about more potential violence on Capitol Hill.

"I think they should take it very seriously. In fact, they should take it more seriously than they took the same sort of intelligence that they likely saw on January 5," McCabe, a CNN contributor, told CNN's Poppy Harlow on "Erin Burnett OutFront."

Law enforcement members in Washington are steeling themselves against possible unrest at the "Justice for J6" rally -- planned for September 18 -- which aims to support the insurrectionists charged in the riot.

The event, organized by a former Trump campaign staffer, has prompted security concerns on Capitol Hill, and some precautionary measures will be in place. However, it's unclear how many protesters plan to attend. The rally is also taking place on a Saturday, when the House will be on recess, so far fewer lawmakers or staff will be around.

A law enforcement source previously told CNN that the Metropolitan Police Department will be fully activated, which includes canceling days off for sworn officers and putting Civil Disturbance Units on standby. The source said the department will monitor open source information -- like online chatter and travel bookings -- to gauge the potential crowds.

Homeland Security Intelligence chief John Cohen told CNN last month that online extremist rhetoric is strikingly similar to the buildup to the January 6 attack, with increasing calls for violence linked to conspiracy theories and false narratives.

The security preparations for September 18 underscore the tense environment on Capitol Hill following the January 6 attack. In August, a man critical of Democrats was arrested after an hours-long standoff near the Capitol during which he claimed to have an explosive device; the event ended without incident but still sent a chill through Capitol Hill and provided law enforcement with yet another example of the risks of a toxic political climate. In April, a Capitol Police officer was killed after a man rammed a vehicle into a police barricade.

The charged environment has led lawmakers to invest in body armor and security systems, while the US Capitol Police is opening field offices in cities around the country.

Still, McCabe, who served as the FBI's deputy director from 2016 to 2018 including a period as acting director, said Monday that law enforcement has "a few factors leaning in their favor" this time. "You don't have a sitting President actively fanning the flames and trying to get people to attend the rally," he said.

McCabe continued: "And on the other hand, it looks like, from all indications, our law enforcement partners are well prepared for this one. They seem to be taking the intelligence very seriously, which raises a question as to whether or not they did on January 6, but that's another issue."

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blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Capitol Police arrest man with machete and bayonet in pickup painted with swastika near DNC HQ

Kevin Breuninger
@KEVINWILLIAMB
September 13, 2021


U.S. Capitol Police arrested a man who was carrying banned weapons — including a bayonet and a machete — in a truck scrawled with white supremacist symbols that was outside the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee, the department said Monday.

The driver, 44-year-old Donald Craighead of Oceanside, California, claimed to the cops that he was "on patrol" and started talking about "white supremacist ideology," the U.S. Capitol Police said.

The arrest was made early Monday morning, less than a week before people were set to gather at the Capitol for a rally in support of the hundreds jailed in connection with the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol invasion.

The Capitol police said later Monday that it is monitoring "concerning online chatter" surrounding that rally. The department said it will put up a temporary fence around the Capitol building, and that it will be prepared to deputize outside law enforcement officers.

USCP said it was not yet clear if Craighead "was planning to attend any upcoming demonstrations or if he has ties to any previous cases in the area."

A Special Operation Division officer noticed Craighead's vehicle, a Dodge Dakota pickup truck, around midnight, according to the department.

The truck had "a swastika and other white supremacist symbols painted on it," according to the Capitol Police. It also displayed a picture of an American flag in place of a license plate.

Craighead was arrested on charges of possessing the prohibited weapons, police said. He is likely to make his first appearance in court in Washington on Tuesday, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office in Washington told CNBC.

The Capitol Police have so far seen no indication that the incident was related to any particular interest in the DNC, a person with knowledge of the situation said.

"We are thankful for Capitol police containing this threat, and can't comment further on the specifics of this ongoing investigation," DNC Executive Director Sam Cornale said in a statement.

"DNC employees are real human beings who fight tirelessly for a better America, and their safety, security, and well-being — physical, mental and emotional — are the top priorities of DNC leadership," Cornale said. "This suspect's apparent views are despicable, and violence and white supremacy have no place in our country."

In a statement, Capitol Police chief Tom Manger called the arrest "good police work plain and simple."

The arrest came less than a month after another man, North Carolina resident Floyd Ray Roseberry, forced the U.S. Supreme Court and other buildings to evacuate after he drove his pickup onto a Capitol Hill sidewalk and threatened to ignite a bomb.

Before he was arrested, Roseberry recorded himself speaking about a coming revolution and demanding to talk to President Joe Biden. He posted those videos to Facebook before the website took down his profile.

Security on Capitol Hill ramped up dramatically after the Jan. 6 invasion, when hundreds of former President Donald Trump's supporters stormed the building where Congress had gathered to confirm Biden's Electoral College victory.

After the attack, a 7-foot-tall fence was erected around the Capitol and thousands of National Guard members were deployed to the area. Those measures were in place through Biden's inauguration, which was already subject to precautions due to the coronavirus pandemic.

That fencing will make a return in preparation for a "Justice for J6" rally set for Saturday, Manger told reporters at the Capitol.

"The fence will go up a day or two before and if everything goes well it will come down very soon after," he said after briefing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., on the upcoming demonstration.

In a statement later Monday, Manger said, "We are here to protect everyone's First Amendment right to peacefully protest."

"I urge anyone who is thinking about causing trouble to stay home. We will enforce the law and not tolerate violence," he said.

The event's organizer, former Trump campaign staffer Matt Braynard, told CNBC there would be no violence at the "peaceful protest."

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blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Woodward/Costa book: Worried Trump could 'go rogue,' Milley took top-secret action to protect nuclear weapons

By Jamie Gangel, Jeremy Herb and Elizabeth Stuart, CNN
Updated 12:55 PM EDT, Tue September 14, 2021


Washington(CNN) Two days after the January 6 attack on the US Capitol, President Donald Trump's top military adviser, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley, single-handedly took top-secret action to limit Trump from potentially ordering a dangerous military strike or launching nuclear weapons, according to "Peril," a new book by legendary journalist Bob Woodward and veteran Washington Post reporter Robert Costa.

Woodward and Costa write that Milley, deeply shaken by the assault, 'was certain that Trump had gone into a serious mental decline in the aftermath of the election, with Trump now all but manic, screaming at officials and constructing his own alternate reality about endless election conspiracies.'

Milley worried that Trump could 'go rogue,' the authors write.

"You never know what a president's trigger point is," Milley told his senior staff, according to the book.

In response, Milley took extraordinary action, and called a secret meeting in his Pentagon office on January 8 to review the process for military action, including launching nuclear weapons. Speaking to senior military officials in charge of the National Military Command Center, the Pentagon's war room, Milley instructed them not to take orders from anyone unless he was involved.

"No matter what you are told, you do the procedure. You do the process. And I'm part of that procedure," Milley told the officers, according to the book. He then went around the room, looked each officer in the eye, and asked them to verbally confirm they understood.

"Got it?" Milley asked, according to the book.

"Yes, sir."

'Milley considered it an oath,' the authors write.

"Peril" is based on more than 200 interviews with firsthand participants and witnesses, and it paints a chilling picture of Trump's final days in office. The book, Woodward's third on the Trump presidency, recounts behind-the-scenes moments of a commander in chief unhinged and explosive, yelling at senior advisers and aides as he desperately sought to cling to power.

It also includes exclusive reporting on the events leading up to January 6 and Trump's reaction to the insurrection, as well as newly revealed details about Trump's January 5 Oval Office showdown with his vice president, Mike Pence.

Woodward and Costa obtained documents, calendars, diaries, emails, meeting notes, transcripts and other records.

The book also examines Joe Biden's decision to run for office again; the first six months of his presidency; why he pushed so hard to get out of Afghanistan; and how he really feels about Trump. CNN obtained a copy of "Peril" ahead of its release on September 21.

'You know he's crazy'


Milley's fear was based on his own observations of Trump's erratic behavior. His concern was magnified by the events of January 6 and the 'extraordinary risk' the situation posed to US national security, the authors write. Milley had already had two back-channel phone calls with China's top general, who was on high alert over the chaos in the US.

Then Milley received a blunt phone call from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, according to the book. Woodward and Costa exclusively obtained a transcript of the call, during which Milley tried to reassure Pelosi that the nuclear weapons were safe.

Pelosi pushed back.

"What I'm saying to you is that if they couldn't even stop him from an assault on the Capitol, who even knows what else he may do? And is there anybody in charge at the White House who was doing anything but kissing his fat butt all over this?"

Pelosi continued, "You know he's crazy. He's been crazy for a long time."

According to Woodward and Costa, Milley responded, "Madam Speaker, I agree with you on everything."

After the call, Milley decided he had to act. He told his top service chiefs to watch everything "all the time." He called the director of the National Security Agency, Paul Nakasone, and told him, "Needles up ... keep watching, scan." And he told then-CIA Director Gina Haspel, "Aggressively watch everything, 360."

The authors write, 'Milley was overseeing the mobilization of America's national security state without the knowledge of the American people or the rest of the world.'

Woodward and Costa also write that 'some might contend that Milley had overstepped his authority and taken extraordinary power for himself,' but he believed his actions were 'a good faith precaution to ensure there was no historic rupture in the international order, no accidental war with China or others, and no use of nuclear weapons.'

Trump going rogue


Milley's fear that Trump could do something unpredictable came from experience. Right after Trump lost the election, Milley discovered the President had signed a military order to withdraw all troops from Afghanistan by January 15, 2021, before he left the White House.

The memo had been secretly drafted by two Trump loyalists. No one on the national security team knew about it, according to the book. The memo was eventually nullified, but Milley could not forget that Trump had done an end run around his top military advisers.

Woodward and Costa write that after January 6, Milley 'felt no absolute certainty that the military could control or trust Trump and believed it was his job as the senior military officer to think the unthinkable and take any and all necessary precautions.'

Milley called it the 'absolute darkest moment of theoretical possibility,' the authors write.

"Peril" is one of several books released this year that have documented the tumultuous final days of Trump's presidency. In "I Alone Can Fix It," Washington Post reporters Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig detailed how Milley discussed a plan with the Joint Chiefs to resist potential illegal orders from Trump amid fears that he or his allies might attempt a coup.

'Wag the Dog'


Woodward and Costa write that top national security officials were worried Trump might pull a "Wag the Dog" -- provoking a conflict domestically or abroad to distract from his crushing election loss.

When Trump refused to concede in November 2020, Haspel warned Milley, "We are on the way to a right-wing coup. The whole thing is insanity. He is acting out like a six-year-old with a tantrum." Haspel also worried that Trump would try to attack Iran.

"This is a highly dangerous situation. We are going to lash out for his ego?" she asked Milley, according to the book.

Even some of Trump's most loyal advisers privately expressed concern after the election. Then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Milley that Trump was "in a very dark place right now."

Milley had just one goal: ensuring a peaceful transfer of power on January 20. As he told Pompeo, "We've got a plane with four engines and three of them are out. We've got no landing gear. But we're going to land this plane and we're going to land it safely."

'We're going to bury Biden on January 6th'


"Peril" offers a behind-the-scenes account of Trump's refusal to concede the election and how those around him tried -- and failed -- to contain his desperation.

On November 4, the day after the election, Trump seemed privately ready to acknowledge defeat, asking adviser Kellyanne Conway, "How the hell did we lose the vote to Joe Biden?" But after making phone calls to loyalists, including Rudy Giuliani, Trump embraced the false and damaging conspiracy theories of election fraud.

Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump took a light touch, the authors write, and Kushner told aides he did not want to be the point person for an intervention. Then-Attorney General William Barr tried to talk sense into Trump, telling him the claims of fraud were bogus. "The problem is this stuff about the voting machines is just bullshit," Barr said, according to the book.

"Your team is a bunch of clowns," he told Trump.

According to the book, a key figure from Trump's earliest days as president reemerged: former White House adviser Steve Bannon. The authors write that Bannon, who had been indicted in April 2020 and later pardoned by Trump, played a critical role in the events leading up to January 6.

On December 30, Bannon convinced Trump to come back to the White House from Mar-a-Lago to prepare for the events of January 6, the date Congress would certify the election results.

"You've got to return to Washington and make a dramatic return today," Bannon told Trump, according to the book. "You've got to call Pence off the fucking ski slopes and get him back here today. This is a crisis."

The authors write that Bannon told Trump that January 6 was "the moment for reckoning."

"People are going to go, 'What the fuck is going on here?' " Bannon believed. "We're going to bury Biden on January 6th, fucking bury him," Bannon said.

Trump to Pence: 'I don't want to be your friend anymore'


"Peril" also describes the tense encounter in the Oval Office on January 5 when Trump pressured Pence to overturn the results of the election. While the showdown went on inside, the two men could hear MAGA supporters cheering and chanting outside near Pennsylvania Avenue.

"If these people say you had the power, wouldn't you want to?" Trump asked.

"I wouldn't want any one person to have that authority," Pence said.

"But wouldn't it be almost cool to have that power?" Trump asked, according to Woodward and Costa.

"No," Pence said. He went on, "I've done everything I could and then some to find a way around this. It's simply not possible."

When Pence did not budge, Trump turned on him.

"No, no, no!" Trump shouted, according to the authors. "You don't understand, Mike. You can do this. I don't want to be your friend anymore if you don't do this."

Trump called Pence again the morning of January 6. "If you don't do it, I picked the wrong man four years ago," Trump said, according to the authors. "You're going to wimp out," he said, his anger visible to others in the office.

Even though Pence stood up to Trump in the end, "Peril" reveals that after four years of abject loyalty, he struggled with the decision. Woodward and Costa write that Pence reached out to Dan Quayle, who had been the vice president to George H.W. Bush, seeking his advice.

Over and over, Pence asked if there was anything he could do.

"Mike, you have no flexibility on this. None. Zero. Forget it. Put it away," Quayle told him.

Pence pressed again.

"You don't know the position I'm in," he said, according to the authors.

"I do know the position you're in," Quayle responded. "I also know what the law is. You listen to the parliamentarian. That's all you do. You have no power."

'You really should do a tweet'


According to the authors, Trump ignored repeated requests by both staff and his daughter Ivanka Trump to call off the rioters at the Capitol on January 6.

In one episode, retired Gen. Keith Kellogg, who served as Pence's national security adviser, was in the White House with Trump while he watched the insurrection unfold on television.

Kellogg urged Trump to act.

"You really should do a tweet," Kellogg said, according to the authors. "You need to get a tweet out real quick, help control the crowd up there. This is out of control. They're not going to be able to control this. Sir, they're not prepared for it. Once a mob starts turning like that, you've lost it."

"Yeah," Trump said. The authors write, 'Trump blinked and kept watching television.'

Ivanka Trump also repeatedly tried to intervene, talking to her father three times. "Let this thing go," she told him. "Let it go," she said, according to the book.

Rage 2.0


Woodward's previous book on Trump was called "Rage," but "Peril," filled with expletive-laced shouting matches, takes the rage up a notch.

Top officials told the authors that Trump's outbursts reminded them of "Full Metal Jacket" at times and "Doctor Strangelove" at others.

In June 2020, after Black Lives Matter protests near the White House, Trump lit into then-Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who had just announced at a news conference that he opposed invoking the Insurrection Act in response to the protests.

"You took away my authority!" Trump screamed at Esper in the Oval Office. "You're not the president! I'm the goddamn president."

But Trump wasn't done, according to the book, turning to the rest of his team in the room. "You're all fucked up," he yelled. "Everybody. You're all fucked. Every one of you is fucked up!"

In the aftermath of the election, Trump's rage was directed at Barr for daring to even mention the incoming Biden administration.

"First part of the Biden administration!" Trump shouted, according to the authors. Trump was so mad, Barr thought, 'if a human being can have flames come out of his ears, this was it,' Woodward and Costa write.

The book also reveals that Trump is still angry with Republicans who blamed him for the insurrection, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

"This guy called me every single day, pretended to be my best friend, and then, he fucked me. He's not a good guy," Trump said, according to the book.

While McCarthy has walked back his initial comments after the insurrection, Trump is quoted as dismissing McCarthy's attempts to get back into his good graces.

"Kevin came down to kiss my ass and wants my help to win the House back," Trump said, according to the authors.

The book ends with Trump allies speculating about his plans for 2024. Privately, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham is quoted as saying, "if he wants to run, then he's going to have to deal with his personality problems ... we've got a very damaged team captain."

But in a conversation with Trump directly, Graham was much more optimistic.

"You've been written off as dead because of January the 6th. The conventional wisdom is that the Republican Party, under your leadership, has collapsed," Graham told Trump, according to the book. Graham continued, telling Trump that if "you came back to take the White House, it would be the biggest comeback in American history."

In July, Trump's former campaign manager Brad Parscale, who had been demoted and then stepped aside from the campaign in September 2020, asked the question.

"Sir, are you going to run?"

"I'm thinking about it ... I'm really strongly thinking about running," Trump said, according to the book.

"He had an army. An army for Trump. He wants that back," Parscale later told others. "I don't think he sees it as a comeback. He sees it as vengeance."

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mrcmd187

Controversy Creates Cash
BGOL Investor
Trump Calls Allies to Demand Gen. Mark Milley Be ‘Arrested’ for ‘Treason’

Guess he forgot his not in charge anymore.

Bet this friend snitched to get a plea deal on his charges, all these Patriots sure turning Benedict Arnold when those NBA number started coming at them. That's why them GOP Politician want to block the Jan 6th investigation.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Republicans, Wary of Political Fallout, Steer Clear of Rally for Riot Suspects

The “Justice for J6” rally planned for Saturday on Capitol Hill has presented a dilemma for Republicans, who are toiling to avoid dredging up memories of the Jan. 6 riot.

By Luke Broadwater
Sept. 15, 2021


WASHINGTON — Ever since a pro-Trump mob attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, Republicans have been trying to shift the national conversation away from that dark, violent day and onto what they say are the problems of the Biden administration: a troubled pullout from Afghanistan, an overtaxed southern border and rising inflation.

Then, a former campaign operative of President Donald J. Trump announced that he was organizing hundreds of protesters to return to the Capitol on Saturday for a rally in support of the defendants charged in connection with the deadly assault, which left dozens of officers bloodied.

Bad memories of the violence rushed back. The Capitol Police announced that they were reinstalling a security fence around the complex and were aware of “concerning online chatter” from extremist groups. And many Republican lawmakers, gritting their teeth, said they wanted nothing to do with the event. Not a single member of Congress has confirmed his or her attendance, even those who have been most outspoken in portraying the rioters as patriots who have been persecuted for their political beliefs.

“There are a lot of clearly angry people who want to march on the Capitol,” said Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 2 Republican. “I haven’t talked to a single Republican up here in the Senate that has encouraged or enabled anything like that.”

Nevertheless, the “Justice for J6” rally, to be held at noon on Saturday at the foot of Capitol Hill, has created a predicament for Republicans, who are caught between a hard-right base including many voters who consider the rioters righteous and a desire to distance themselves from the attack and its political fallout.

“Anytime the attention is on Joe Biden it’s good for Republicans, and anytime the attention is on Jan. 6 it’s bad for Republicans,” said John Feehery, a Republican strategist and veteran of Capitol Hill. “The only hope Democrats have of keeping the House is to make Jan. 6 the issue of the campaign. They know that, and we know that. The only people who don’t seem to know that are the activists.”

That has left top Republicans in an uncomfortable spot, toiling to distance themselves from an event that is certain to dredge up the subject of the Capitol riot — and that could potentially spiral out of control — but wary of offending voters who sympathize with the cause.

Representative Kevin McCarthy, Republican of California and the minority leader, told reporters this week that he did not expect any lawmaker in his party to attend, but his office had no response to questions about whether he supported the rally or was dissuading people from attending. Representatives Steve Scalise of Louisiana and Elise Stefanik of New York, the second- and third-ranking House Republicans, have been similarly taciturn about the event.

Even Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican who has been among the most vocal critics of the treatment of the Jan. 6 suspects, said she would not be attending the rally, even as she defended the inspiration behind it.

“There’s a two-track justice system in America, and the treatment of the J6 political prisoners compared with violent antifa/BLM rioters proves it,” she said in a lengthy email statement.

Ms. Greene said she condemned the violence that occurred during the riot, but said she believed that “illegal aliens are treated better than many of the J6 accused.”

In shunning the event, Republicans are following the lead of Mr. Trump himself, who has been uncharacteristically silent about it even though he has in the past defended the mob.

Mr. Trump, aides said, has little interest in engaging with the protest and has no plans to be anywhere near Washington on Saturday. Instead, his schedule includes a golf tournament at his Bedminster, N.J., club before he heads back down to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, according to people familiar with his schedule.

Mr. Trump views the planned protest as a setup that the news media will use against him regardless of the outcome, according to people familiar with his thinking.

But disquiet in the party is real on behalf of the Jan. 6 defendants, particularly those who are charged with nonviolent offenses, Mr. Feehery said. He said many Republican voters believed that the Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol would have received lighter treatment if they had been supporting a left-wing cause.

“I can appreciate why Republicans don’t want anything to do with this,” he said, “but there is a lot of angst in the Republican base.”

Capitol Police officials have urged anyone considering violence to stay home instead of attending Saturday’s rally, which was organized by Matt Braynard, a former Trump campaign operative, and his organization, Look Ahead America.

Mr. Braynard has pledged that his group will be peaceful, unlike the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, when about 140 police officers were injured and several people died.

Mr. Braynard has argued that the brutal attacks on police officers during the assault were the work of a “few bad apples” and accused the Biden administration of targeting the “peaceful Trump supporters who entered the Capitol with selective prosecutions based on their political beliefs.”

“These people’s faces are up on billboards,” he said. “They’re losing their jobs. They’re losing their homes. They’re spending all their savings on attorneys. They’re going bankrupt for doing what on any other day, for any other cause would have gotten you a $50 fine and a slap on the wrist.”

Those kinds of appeals had found support among the right flank of the Republican Party in the House — including Ms. Greene and Representatives Matt Gaetz of Florida, Louie Gohmert of Texas, Bob Good of Virginia, and Paul Gosar and Andy Biggs of Arizona. In July, those members held a news conference on behalf of the Jan. 6 defendants, but as of Wednesday, none of them had confirmed their attendance to Saturday’s rally.

Mr. Braynard has had difficulty securing high-profile speakers for his event. To date, he has announced the attendance of two congressional hopefuls, including Joe Kent, a primary challenger to Representative Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington, who was one of 10 Republicans to vote to impeach Mr. Trump over his role in the attack.

Mr. Braynard also announced that Ralph Norman, Republican of South Carolina, would attend a future “Justice for J6” rally in Columbia, S.C. But Mr. Norman’s spokesman said he would not be attending.

Asked if he believed Republican leaders were discouraging his efforts, Mr. Braynard said, “You’d have to ask them that.”

In the Senate, Republicans have also worked to distance themselves from the rally, with many arguing that it is a distraction.

Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority leader, said he believed the police were “well equipped to handle” whatever might occur.

Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican who led objections to President Biden’s victory on Jan. 6, said he was not attending and was focusing on other issues. Senator Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, another Republican who objected to the election results and was in close contact with Mr. Trump’s inner circle before and during the riot, also said he would not participate.

“I don’t expect a lot of people there,” Mr. Tuberville said. “I haven’t heard anything about it. I will not be there.”

Still others said they had little sympathy for the Jan. 6 defendants, and encouraged a forceful response from the police should Saturday’s crowd turn violent.

“They need to take a firm line, buddy,” said Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, an on-again, off-again ally of Mr. Trump’s. “If anybody gets out of line, they need to whack ’em.”
 

phanatic

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
“There are a lot of clearly angry people who want to march on the Capitol,” said Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 2 Republican. “I haven’t talked to a single Republican up here in the Senate that has encouraged or enabled anything like that.”

I don't understand why not. Apparently they were violent antifa or peaceful protesters or the cops were exaggerating or whatever horseshit excuse is next.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Capitol Police requests National Guard on standby for pro-Trump rally supporting Jan. 6 rioters



The U.S. Capitol Police said Wednesday it asked the Pentagon to free up the National Guard in case it is needed for an upcoming rally in support of the deadly Jan. 6 invasion.

The department said in a tweet that it "asked the Department of Defense for the ability to receive National Guard support should the need arise" at the Saturday protest.

That announcement came hours before construction of a fence around the Capitol was set to begin, two sources told NBC News earlier Wednesday. The installation will start at 8:30 p.m. ET, NBC reported.

The "Justice forJ6" rally, organized by an ex-campaign staffer for former President Donald Trump, is expected to draw about 700 people outside the U.S. Capitol building, a Homeland Security Department official said.

On Jan. 6, the Capitol was overrun with Trump supporters who forced a joint session of Congress into hiding, temporarily derailing the confirmation of President Joe Biden's Electoral College victory. Capitol police officers who defended Congress have since described the mob as being intent on stopping Biden's election.

The failure to secure the Capitol from the mob of pro-Trump rioters led the USCP's internal watchdog to call for widespread changes to the department.

The USCP said in a press release Monday that they are "aware of concerning online chatter" surrounding the rally, and that the Capitol Police Board had approved plans to temporarily erect fencing around the Capitol. The board also issued an emergency declaration that will allow USCP to deputize outside law enforcement officers.


"I urge anyone who is thinking about causing trouble to stay home. We will enforce the law and not tolerate violence," Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger said in that press release.

Rally organizer Matt Braynard told CNBC in an email that "there is no possibility of violence [from] our peaceful protest."

More than 600 people have been charged in connection with the Capitol invasion, and dozens have already pleaded guilty.

The attempt by the upcoming rallygoers, as well as some members of Congress, to re-frame the Jan. 6 rioters as "political prisoners" follows other efforts by the political right to downplay the attack. In May, for instance, Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., claimed Jan. 6 was not an insurrection but a "normal tourist visit."

"I think they're much better prepared than things were before" Jan. 6, said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on Monday after Manger briefed him and other congressional leaders about the rally.

The rally follows other incidents by lone actors in recent weeks. On Monday, police arrested a man who allegedly had knives in a pickup truck displaying swastikas that was outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters.

Last month, police arrested another man who parked his pickup truck outside the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill and claimed he had a bomb.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
The “Justice For J6” rally is going on and it’s looking to be a bust with low turnout.

The Black folks in the picture look to be media and support staff.

justice-for-j6-capitol-breach-rally-15-ap-llr-210918_1631983659009_hpEmbed_3x2_992.jpg

Matt Braynard, the organizer behind the rally and a former Trump campaign staffer, speaks during the rally near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 18, 2021.
 

Quek9

K9
BGOL Investor
The “Justice For J6” rally is going on and it’s looking to be a bust with low turnout.

The Black folks in the picture look to be media and support staff.

justice-for-j6-capitol-breach-rally-15-ap-llr-210918_1631983659009_hpEmbed_3x2_992.jpg

Matt Braynard, the organizer behind the rally and a former Trump campaign staffer, speaks during the rally near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 18, 2021.
I worry more about the ones that agree with them but smart enough not to show up.
 

phanatic

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The “Justice For J6” rally is going on and it’s looking to be a bust with low turnout.

The Black folks in the picture look to be media and support staff.

justice-for-j6-capitol-breach-rally-15-ap-llr-210918_1631983659009_hpEmbed_3x2_992.jpg

Matt Braynard, the organizer behind the rally and a former Trump campaign staffer, speaks during the rally near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 18, 2021.

The only black people there were security for that guy speaking.
 

dasmybikepunk

Wait for it.....
OG Investor

darth frosty

Dark Lord of the Sith
BGOL Investor

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Low turnout, low drama mark rally for jailed pro-Trump rioters

Law enforcement was prepped for large crowd that did not materialize

By Chris Marquette
Posted September 18, 2021 at 2:37pm


The “Justice for J6” rally to advocate the release of jailed pro-Trump insurrectionists who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 lacked much drama Saturday. Only a small number of protesters showed up, matched by a heavy media and law enforcement presence.

Demonstrators came out on a muggy day in less than droves to a sleepy Capitol complex shrouded in a black security fence and a large law enforcement footprint, with members of the media appearing to rival the protesting crowd in size. Capitol Police put the turnout at the protest area at approximately 400 to 450 people.

Unlike Jan. 6, Saturday’s rally, which took place near the Capitol Reflecting Pool and lasted just over an hour, was not marred by violence. Capitol Police tweeted that one man armed with a knife was arrested on a weapons violation.

“What I’m asking you to do is to take your anger and channel it into something productive,” rally architect Matt Braynard, a former Trump campaign employee, said onstage as he closed the event. He encouraged the protestors to volunteer with his organization, Look Ahead America, and work to “fix our election system.”

“This is about disparate treatment of the nonviolent people,” said Braynard, who has promulgated former President Donald Trump’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Braynard took a jab at the heavy police presence Saturday, but also thanked the officers ringing the Capitol. “A little bit of overkill, but, look, I respect it.”

Around 140 D.C. Police and Capitol Police officers were assaulted in the Jan. 6 melee, and the Justice Department has since arrested over 600 people in connection with the attack.

Look Ahead America secured a permit request for 700 participants in Union Square near the Capitol.

A man who identified himself as Kevin and didn’t give his last name said he flew from Utah to get to the demonstration because of what he called injustice being done to the imprisoned insurrectionists. “I’m actually surprised at all the media that’s here,” he said.

Kevin acknowledged the journalist-to-protestor ratio, saying people were afraid to attend the rally out of fear of “being vilified like the guys who are unjustly being kept under solitary confinement.”

Another man, who identified himself as Adam, said he was rattled when asked by CQ Roll Call for comment because he had already talked to so many journalists.

“Sorry, my exasperation,” Adam said, nothing that many reporters had asked about his reasons for attending.

‘Treated unfairly’


Sue, who also did not provide her last name, said she came to Washington on a bus from Long Island, N.Y., because the pro-Trump rioters in jail are being “treated unfairly.”

She said she wants charges against the rioters dropped or for them to receive a quick trial. The insurrectionists, she added, are in jail “because they have a different political position.”

Adam, 36, who drove overnight to D.C. from Florida, said he wanted to raise “awareness” for the prisoners, a goal he felt was already accomplished by the heavy media presence. He said he heard about the rally through the far-right site Infowars.

Adam said he was not advocating the release of violent rioters who assaulted police but the “grandma who walked through the velvet ropes, who was let in by the Capitol Police — that’s who I think shouldn’t be in prison right now. That’s all.”

Adam said he was present for the Capitol attack on Jan. 6 because of Trump.

“Our president brought me here on the 6th. The election brought me here on the 6th,” he said. “But that’s not why we’re here today.”

Despite some shows of support for the Capitol rioters since Jan. 6, GOP lawmakers steered clear of the event. But one Republican hoping to join their ranks showed up.

Joe Kent, a Trump-endorsed primary challenger to Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash., told rallygoers to keep fighting for justice for the imprisoned insurrectionists. Herrera Beutler was one of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in January.

“Our enemies are those that will deny people of their constitutional rights and then take a narrative that labels all of us as terrorists and insurrectionists for just questioning things,” Kent said.

After the rally ended, law enforcement officers, some in riot gear, worked to separate pro-Trump protestors and counterprotesters near the rally site.

Abdul, 32, said he traveled from Albany, N.Y., to “smash fascists,” particularly “Proud Boys,” referring to the extremist group of self-described “Western chauvinists.”

Abdul, who did not give his last name, said he is “anti-fascist” and had been following the news about Saturday’s rally for weeks. His goal for making the 365-mile trek? “Run them out of town.”

‘Hearts and minds’


More than eight months after a violent mob of insurrectionists undertook one of the gravest assaults on American democracy, the Justice for J6 demonstrators arrived Saturday on the west side of the Capitol “demanding justice” for “political prisoners” and for rioter Ashli Babbitt, who was fatally shot by Capitol Police Lt. Michael Byrd while she was attempting to breach the Speaker’s Lobby on Jan. 6, and other civilians who died that day.

The Justice Department declined to prosecute Byrd, and Capitol Police decided not to discipline him. The force said Byrd acted lawfully and within department policy when he fired his pistol and hit Babbitt in the left shoulder with one round. Far-right groups have treated Babbitt, an Air Force veteran and follower of the QAnon conspiracy theory, as a martyr for their cause.

With the House and Senate both out of session on a weekend, the campus was largely vacant Saturday. Leading up to the rally, House Sergeant-at-Arms William J. Walker — on more than one occasion — wrote to members and staff, strongly encouraging them to avoid Capitol grounds. Congressional offices took precautionary steps, with some encouraging or mandating remote work in the days leading up to the protest.

Trump issued a statement Thursday in support of the jailed protestors and repeated the false claim that the 2020 presidential election was corrupted.

“Our hearts and minds are with the people being persecuted so unfairly relating to the January 6th protest concerning the Rigged Presidential Election,” he said. “In addition to everything else, it has proven conclusively that we are a two-tiered system of justice. In the end, however, JUSTICE WILL PREVAIL!”

‘Do justice’


Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger faced his first major hurdle as the top official at a department plagued by mismanagement and a lack of preparation leading up to Jan. 6. In addition to erecting the fence, the force enlisted help from several law enforcement entities, including officers from the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department and from the police departments in Montgomery County, Md., and Arlington County, Va. The Pentagon also approved 100 D.C. National Guard troops to be on standby at the D.C. Armory in anticipation of the demonstration.

Leading up to the rally, a Capitol Police intelligence assessment noted that the force and other law enforcement agencies discovered increasing violent online chatter about the protest.

A discussion thread on the far-right site 4chan exhibited calls to “do justice” against “local jews and corrupted officials.” Further, it said the demonstration should be used as a way to participate in violent acts against local “Jewish centers and Liberal churches” while law enforcement is distracted. Another comment from the thread said, “I will be there with my AR15 even though legally I can’t have one f*** the Demonrats.”

Nine members of Congress were invited to attend the rally, but none appeared. Those invited were: Republican Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama and Mike Lee of Utah; and GOP Reps. Louie Gohmert of Texas, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, Paul Gosar of Arizona, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Matt Gaetz of Florida.

Gosar has questioned “who executed Ashli Babbitt” and used his official website to allege a “cover up” surrounding her death. Gosar, Taylor Greene and Gaetz have been associated with Look Ahead America in the past.

Look Ahead America has organized other events in D.C. for the same cause: one at the Department of Justice and one at the D.C. jail.

Gohmert, Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., and Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., accompanied Gaetz, Greene and Gosar to a July 27 news conference outside the Justice Department to examine treatment of the imprisoned insurrectionists. That event was interrupted by protesters. Greene, Gosar, Gaetz and Gohmert subsequently made an unsuccessful trip to meet with incarcerated rioters at the D.C. jail.

cbsn-fusion-justice-for-j6-rally-draws-smaller-than-expected-crowds-at-us-capitol-thumbnail-795535-640x360.jpg


 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
:smh::angry::smh::angry::smh::angry::mad: WHY!!!!! News spin for months just for this waste of time stupid bullshit!

There was originally going to be a large turnout along with shenanigans.

Listening to the news and it looks like the hardcore groups got spooked some time ago when they got inside word that the Capitol Police were ready to use deadly force unlike how they conducted themselves on January 6th.

They along with Trump put out word it was a “setup” as a cover their ass for low turnout.
 
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