Conservatives programed to trigger at words "Black Lives Matter" by Russian trolls.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I am waiting to see this video, this story screams bullshit snowflake photo-op to me (and not just because they claim that the 'left-wing' protesters in it because of a 'proud boy' who have firmly planted themselves in the right wing cult).

Im not going to say right off the bat that this is some more cat fishing like last year white supremacists LARPing as protesters to start riots, but something seems off on that picture. Those flags look really new, and the one person is wearing the BLM flag like the trumptards where theirs.

idk, I will wait to see the video/further reporting.

https://www.rawstory.com/newberg-proud-boys/?cx_testId=6&cx_testVariant=cx_undefined&cx_artPos=2#cxrecs_s
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A group of Proud Boys showed up to confront demonstrators waving Black Lives Matter and Pride banners in Newberg, Oregon this weekend.

Footage reported on by the Willamette Week shows Proud Boys standing on a street corner being outnumbered by people carrying signs supporting racial justice and LGBTQ+ rights.

The protest came after an education assistant showed up to Mabel Rush Elementary earlier this week in blackface to protest the "segregation" of workplace vaccination mandates. Lauren Pefferle was fired from the Newburg school system soon after.

"I feel segregated because I am unvaccinated," Pefferle told radio host Lars Larson. "Something is wrong here. The next day, I went to work and did put on some darker color on my skin part that showed. I was going about my morning duties and as there was opportunity to talk to staff... I would say I am representing Rosa Parks today regarding segregation."

In August, the Newberg school board also voted to ban teachers from displaying political symbols, including Black Lives Matter material and Pride flags.

Video taken by a right-wing activist shows a handful of left-wing protesters encircle a Proud Boys member who was speaking through a bullhorn. At one point, something instigates a scuffle. A man wearing a mask emblazoned with Pride colors later tried to break the fight up.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/iowa-philanthropy-evan-feinberg-f2680a1c7c1f84c8f69d63eaa631908aScreen Shot 2021-09-29 at 6.27.03 AM.png
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — As conservative political groups mobilize to ban in schools what they call critical race theory, one prominent backer of Republican causes and candidates is notably absent.

Leaders in the network built by the billionaire Koch family say they oppose government bans and efforts to recall school board members over teaching about race and history in schools. While they note they don’t agree with the ideas at the center of the fight, they argue the government bans, now enacted in 11 states, stifle debate essential to democracy.

“Using government to ban ideas, even those we disagree with, is also counter to core American principles — the principles that help drive social progress,” said Evan Feinberg, executive director of the Koch-affiliated Stand Together Foundation.

That position is in line with the network’s long-held libertarian streak. But it has sparked fresh charges of hypocrisy from the megadonor’s critics. After spending years pouring money into conservative groups, the Koch groups cannot distance themselves from the movement it helped build, they argue.

“They have this nice position they want to tout from a P.R. standpoint. But their money has gone to these groups that have the opposite effect on that agenda,” said Lisa Graves, board president for the liberal watchdog group Center for Media and Democracy.

The Koch organization first went public with its position last spring, as state lawmakers and conservative groups began passing legislation that bans from classrooms specific concepts, including the idea that racism is systemic in society and the U.S. legal system.

The efforts were prompted in part by backlash to The 1619 Project, a New York Times Magazine initiative aimed at rethinking the role of slavery in the nation’s history and development.

In a letter published in The Chronicle of Higher Education in May, Charlie Ruger, the Charles Koch Foundation’s vice president of philanthropy, described Republicans’ push to ban these concepts from schools as a gag on free expression.

“Both learning and research require openness to new ideas and the ability to argue productively,” Ruger wrote. “That requires standing against censorship.”

The Koch political behemoth — a multibillion-dollar umbrella of foundations and a political action committee — was built by brothers Charles and David Koch out of the family’s Kansas-based business empire during the 1980s and 1990s. Though David Koch died in 2018, the network has continued to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into organizations and politics that push for small government, lower taxes, deregulation, free speech, academic freedom and a conservative judiciary.

The organization’s opposition to the race and education bans has not kept the groups it has long supported out of the fight. In Wisconsin, parents seeking to recall school board members have received help this year from the Koch-supported Wisconsin Institute for Liberty and Law. The Milwaukee law firm received $310,000 from the Charles Koch Foundation for five years through 2019, the last year with public records available and before critical race theory flared as a GOP rallying point. The money was in the form of grants that were aimed at protecting free speech on college campuses, a Koch spokesman said.

The foundation and the Charles Koch Institute also contributed over the same period about $75,000 to State Policy Network, a conservative think tank that has promoted the bans. However, the grants, also before the 2021 wave of legislation, helped sponsor an annual meeting, an internship and a panel discussion on business, the Koch spokesman said.

Among the most prominent drivers behind the legislative bans was another Koch-backed group, the American Legislative Exchange Council. The Chicago-based conservative policymaking group provides model legislation for conservative lawmakers and has promoted measures to ban critical race theory in schools this year.

The Stand Together Foundation and its related groups contributed $2.7 million to ALEC between 2015 and 2019.

None of it was targeted for limiting schools’ curriculum on history and race, and was awarded before the issue became a Republican priority, Stand Together spokesman Bill Riggs said.

In 2020, ALEC continued to receive money from two Koch foundations, donations that were earmarked for trade, regulatory and fiscal policy, as well as advocating free speech and providing scholarships, Riggs said.

Riggs did not disclose the 2020 total given. Only contributions through 2019 are searchable through publicly available tax documents. Contributions for 2020 won’t be available to the public until mid-November.

Riggs accused Koch critics of a “misinformation game” that suggests the network is secretly supporting a policy it does not. He noted Koch groups give to a broad spectrum of organizations that align with some of its founders’ values, if not all of their views.

The Charles Koch Foundation contributed to the Democratic-leaning Brookings Institution in 2018 and 2019 on issues related to foreign policy, Riggs said. Last year, the Koch network helped create Heal America, a faith-based program aimed at fighting “racial injustice with love and redemption,” according to its website. Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban and television commentator Van Jones, a Democrat, have both participated in events.

Riggs declined to say whether the Koch network would refuse to contribute to groups supporting bans on teaching critical race theory, such as ALEC, noting it prescribes in grant agreements the purpose of the money. He also declined to say whether they would rethink support for political candidates who also back the policy.

The Koch-backed political action committee Americans for Prosperity Action spent at least $9.7 million backing North Carolina Republican Thom Tillis in his tough campaign for reelection to the Senate last year, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

Tillis was prominent sponsor of a measure this year to prohibit using of federal money to teach the 1619 Project in elementary, middle and high school. The bill has not advanced in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

Endorsements by Americans for Prosperity Action are based on several factors including voting records, statements, how they lead on lead on key issues, “as well as how they distinguish themselves as leaders capable of bringing people together to drive solutions,” Riggs said.

“But there is no single litmus test issue. We recognize no one is going to agree on everything,” he said.
Koch: "We totally don't support the groups trying to use CRT as a propaganda tool to get the 'I am not racist but' racists riled up"..... "So what if we give these people tens of millions of dollars to do it!"

 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
In the domestic terrorism hearing Rep Mace was crying about 'ANTIFA' spray painting her home, based on the symbols. And of course she also had to add in 'Black Lives Matter' into her question about them being a domestic terrorist group.


So I had to look at what she was snow flaking about.

https://apnews.com/article/south-carolina-vandalism-government-and-politics-dc7590a1d85702de564893198da1fb40
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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) —

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace on Tuesday posted a video of obscenities that she said had been spray-painted on her Charleston-area home over the Memorial Day weekend.

“It’s very scary,” the first-term Republican said in the video as she pointed to the graffiti on the front of her home on Daniel Island, a planned community near Charleston.

Mace panned her camera to words reading, “No gods, no masters, all politicians are bastards” on the steps leading up to her home, along with symbols sometimes used by a movement that calls itself antifa, a contraction for anti-fascists.

“This is a house that I live in with my kids,” Mace, an outspoken critic of President Joe Biden’s administration, said in the video. “My kids aren’t even safe on the front porch of their own home.”

Mace also posted video of a man scrubbing and power-washing off the graffiti. She said she had contacted local law enforcement to investigate.

Charleston Police said no arrests had been made Tuesday.

“Basic human decency is not a political issue — and people who don’t understand that will be punished to the fullest extent of the law,” Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg said in a statement.

In November, Mace won a narrow victory over Democratic U.S. Rep. Joe Cunningham, taking back South Carolina’s 1st District for Republicans in one of a series of GOP victories across the state, at all electoral levels. Cunningham had a historic victory in 2018 when he flipped that seat from Republican to Democratic control for the first time in decades.

Mace said this is the second time her private property has been marred by those who oppose her politically. In the run-up to the November election, then-candidate Mace told The Associated Press that someone tried to intimidate her by carving an obscenity into a side door of her vehicle hours before she met Cunningham for a debate.

And before that, Mace said, someone flew cross-country to seek her out in her neighborhood.
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It looks like this is 'ANTIFA' according to her.

Screen Shot 2021-09-29 at 5.23.12 PM.png


I can understand that it would suck to have your house tagged. But to cry 'ANTIFA' and 'BLM' is pretty ridiculous and obviously just pushing the conservative brainwashing propaganda.

Also, is "ANTIFA" in the real world big in getting unionizing legislation passed?

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Seems like a bullshit photo op IMO.

But who knows, it is a shame she didn't go to Nancy and ask her for advice on how she handled the exact same shit happening to her home.

But I guess this spray paint is the real problem according to the North Carolina congresswoman, and what Nancy really needed to worry about. Not insurrectionists trying to find and murder her on January 6th 2021 as her aides were huddled in an office scared for their lives.

 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/raytown-south-middle-school-missouri/Screen Shot 2021-10-02 at 7.02.29 AM.png
Officials at a school district in Missouri were the targets of a protest after a student claimed she was suspended by the Raytown South Middle School school for reporting a racial slur.

"It is the same school district where students reported a teacher used a racial slur in class the day before," Fox 4 Kansas City reports. "In the latest incident to surface, an eighth grade girl said a boy who's not a person of color referred to another student as an N-word in a chat."

The girl's father says she reported it to a teacher, who told her to report it to the administration.

"But the girl's parents say after feeling she was brushed off, she shared the racist comments on social media that night. She underlined the slur and added question marks and 'smh"=', meaning shaking my head. Monday when students returned to school there was reportedly a fight between the boys in the post," the station reported.

The parents say the district blamed her daughter for "stirring things up" by commenting on the racial slur, writes Fox 4 Kansas City

"My kid was suspended for reporting a racial slur made by a student," read a sign held outside the school by the student's mother.

The parents say their daughter was punished with three-days of out-of-school suspension, but changed the final two days to in-school suspension.

The parents say they're proud of their daughter for bringing attention to the racism.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/critical-race-theory-virginia-governor-youngkin/2021/10/01/17ad45f0-1cc8-11ec-8380-5fbadbc43ef8_story.htmlScreen Shot 2021-10-02 at 4.57.28 PM.png
Until recently, Lauren Shupp, a software designer who lives in Northern Virginia, paid little attention to state politics, convinced that her life is shaped more by policy debates in Washington than Richmond.

But Shupp’s focus has shifted in the past year, as she has grown dissatisfied with the public schools and convinced that teachers would educate her children “through a lens of race.” Shupp, who twice voted for Donald Trump for president after backing Barack Obama, attributes the approach to the influence of the Democratic Party, which is why she is supporting Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin.

“They’re trying to indoctrinate the kids,” said Shupp, 39, who brought her two children to her first GOP rally in Ashburn on a recent Saturday. “They’re trying to change the curriculum from kindergarten on up.”

The policy debates roiling suburban school districts in Virginia have provoked heated meetings and rallies that, even during a pandemic, draw large crowds. But whether the uproar can help Republicans galvanize voters in left-leaning communities is a key question of the race to become Virginia’s next governor.

The answer could have implications for how the two parties approach the midterm elections next year.

Youngkin, who would be the first Republican to win a Virginia gubernatorial race since 2009, is seeking to appeal to a broad spectrum of voters with promises to create jobs and cut taxes and crime.

But he also is trying to tap into the charged debates engulfing public schools, particularly in places like Loudoun County, where parents have protested equity initiatives they associate with critical race theory (CRT), the academic framework that examines how systemic racism is ingrained in the country’s history.

Despite the fact that it is not part of classroom teaching, CRT has catalyzed opposition in Virginia and across the country, as conservative leaders and pundits have invoked it to lambaste liberals. Trump, who endorsed Youngkin, has described CRT as a “toxic” and “poisonous left-wing doctrine” that is “flagrant racism, plain and simple.”

What is critical race theory, and why do Republicans want to ban it in schools?

It is unclear whether Youngkin’s anti-CRT message is drawing voters in what both parties describe as a close race. But a Washington Post-Schar School poll shows that Youngkin’s Democratic opponent, former governor Terry McAuliffe, is faring worse than Gov. Ralph Northam (D) did four years ago in voter-rich areas such as Loudoun and Prince William counties.

A Fox News poll released Thursday showed that 47 percent of registered Democrats favor the teaching of CRT while 65 percent of Republicans are opposed. Sizable portions say they don’t know enough to have an opinion — 38 percent of Democrats and 26 percent of Republicans.Among independents, half oppose the teaching of CRT while 16 percent favor it — and a third had no opinion.

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What to know about the 2021 Virginia governor’s race

In early September, hundreds cheered when he repeated the promise at a rally in Loudoun County organized by conservative activists protesting CRT. “We’ve watched what this liberal-left-progressive agenda in Richmond has done to our children, and guess what?” Youngkin said. “We’ve had enough.”

At the Ashburn rally, Youngkin invoked the words of Martin Luther King Jr. to drive his point, saying that “to judge one another based on the content of our character, not the color of our skin, means we’re going to ban critical race theory.”

Screen Shot 2021-10-02 at 5.00.13 PM.png

“We need Youngkin!” the emcee, Patti Hidalgo Menders, a Loudoun Republican leader, implored the crowd.

At his appearances, Youngkin’s pledge to “ban” CRT from the classroom “on day one” typically draws loud applause.

“Thank you Glenn! Thank you Glenn!” supporters chanted in response at a Fairfax County stop in late August.

What to know about the 2021 Virginia governor’s race

Screen Shot 2021-10-02 at 5.05.21 PM.png

At the candidates’ first gubernatorial debate in mid-September, Youngkin brushed off a panelist’s assertion that he had “provided little proof” for his claim that “critical race theory has moved into all schools in Virginia.”

Screen Shot 2021-10-02 at 5.38.12 PM.png

Youngkin, McAuliffe clash in final debate of Virginia governor’s race

Conceived by academics in the 1980s, CRT gained renewed currency last year after a police officer in Minneapolis murdered George Floyd, an African American man, provoking nationwide protests and a broad reexamination of equity issues. Trump seized on CRT after watching Christopher Rufo, a conservative scholar, describe it as a national threat during a 2020 Fox News interview.

Now, as the midterm election cycle approaches, Republicans are using CRT to attack Democrats. At least six Republican-controlled state legislatures have banned the teaching of CRT, including Texas, Tennessee and Iowa, according to a Brookings Institution survey in July. More than a dozen other states were considering similar bills.

Chris Jankowski, a national GOP strategist and a veteran of Virginia races, said Republicans in the commonwealth and around the country are mainly gaining a boost from President Biden’s declining popularity, as well as concerns about the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan, the condition of the economy and the pandemic.

But he said CRT can help Republican candidates with turnout among core supporters, and that “swing and independent voters, once they start to unpack and understand it, can be moved on the issue, as well.”

“It’s a close cousin to ‘Defund the Police’ and cancel culture in that suburban voters are uncomfortable with it even if they don’t express it,” he said. “The challenge with it is that it’s called CRT and can’t be distilled into a 30-second ad. But it’s a part of a set of issues that are clearly winners and support for them will only grow.”

Lissa Savaglio, chair of Loudoun County’s Democratic Committee, accused Republicans of using CRT as a “scare tactic” that “isn’t going to work.” Referring to Trump’s 10-point loss in Virginia in 2020, she said, “Look where it got him.”

Between the GOP and the governor’s mansion: A bigger, bluer Northern Virginia

Still, CRT is an undeniable subject of chatter among voters, whether or not there’s confusion over its meaning.

Diane Gordon, a poll watcher for the Democrats in Northern Virginia, said she is worried that the attention that CRT protests have gotten in Loudoun and across the country could hurt McAuliffe.

“A lot of people don’t realize that, with something like this, it makes people come out to vote when they might not otherwise,” she said as she monitored an early voting site in Ashburn. “My concern is that a lot of people are coming out without the proper information.”
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/10/01/emergence-woke-pejorative-masks-deeper-insecurity/
Screen Shot 2021-10-03 at 11.36.36 AM.png
The news site Axios ran a short item on Friday morning discussing Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), currently in the spotlight thanks to her inscrutable position on the policy proposals her party is trying to get to President Biden’s desk. It was a flattering look at a senator who’s been a focus of a great deal of opprobrium, written by a reporter, Hans Nichols, who recently aided Sinema’s position by uncritically elevating polling from a moderate lobbying group.

What was particularly notable about the piece was the way in which Nichols described how the senator might be viewed as presenting a different sort of politics than the one she endorses.

“Progressives could be forgiven,” Nichols wrote, “for presuming that Sinema, 45, the first openly bisexual member of Congress, who’s easy to spot in her trademark sleeveless dresses, wry wigs and acrylic glasses, would share their woke politics.”

Share … what?

It’s not uncommon for a word or phrase that has some limited purpose in some group to be elevated into something broader. “Woke” is such a word; one used to describe an awareness of the world that has now been embraced by the political right as an often sardonic descriptor. It doesn’t really mean anything specific in its current political iteration, being used mostly as a shorthand for people who, in the eyes of the user, are focused on race in a way that is deemed excessive or dangerous. It’s a pejorative, in short, a hand-wave about the left and its purported obsession with race.

You will not be surprised to learn that it has been a favorite of Fox News of late, overlapping with that network’s obsessive focus on “critical race theory,” itself a term repurposed by the right.

Screen Shot 2021-10-03 at 11.37.58 AM.png

In the Foxworld lexicon, “woke” is the adjective and “critical race theory” the verb, both referring to a contrived framing of the left — essentially that there’s an effort to play the race card to put White people on the defensive.

What’s particularly important here is that it makes no sense in the context of that description of Sinema. From the left’s standpoint, the issue isn’t that Sinema doesn’t support their politics on race; she does. (Here, for example, is a Facebook post from the senator embracing Black Lives Matter.) The problem is that, like other moderate Democrats, she doesn’t support policies aimed at bolstering the social safety net or increasing taxes on wealthy Americans. This is “woke” only if you assume that the exercising of government power to aid the less fortunate is centrally an effort to help non-White Americans — a group that is disproportionately poor.

This conflation of “woke politics” with “liberal politics” showed up in another, more disconcerting place on Friday. The Atlantic’s Emma Green interviewed Ryan Williams, the head of the far-right Claremont Institute, a conversation during which Williams outlined his organization’s complaints about modern society (too many non-Christians, among other things) and the possible remedies it foresaw, like civil war — something Williams said “we try to avoid almost at all costs.”

That “almost” certainly lingers.

If you’re thinking that the Claremont Institute sounds familiar, it should. One of its most prominent voices is John Eastman, the attorney for President Donald Trump who, in the days before Jan. 6, actively prodded Vice President Mike Pence to simply discard the law and grant Trump a second term in office. It was an overt attempt to seize power without the energy expenditures of a civil war, one that Williams cast in laughably generous terms in an essay for Newsweek.

“The president and vice president of the United States are entitled to legal advice. They asked Eastman for counsel on how to proceed during the course of a constitutionally valid process,” he wrote. “What the public has seen is a truncated part of a draft version of John’s memo. To say this truncated portion of a legal memo amounts to treason or incitement of a 'coup’ is preposterous demagoguery.”

What the public has seen is two iterations of a memo in which Eastman makes a case for Pence to simply seize power, unquestionably triggering something not far from a civil conflict. (This response, Eastman laughed off as Democrats “howling” about Pence’s cleverness.) What the public has also seen is Eastman repeatedly making false claims about election fraud that mirrored Trump’s, included claims made from the same stage as Trump on Jan. 6 itself.

In his interview with the Atlantic, Williams admits that his organization’s desired outcome is to “take control of all three branches of government for a generation or two,” something that he insisted was dependent on “persuading our fellow citizens” of the superiority of their rhetoric. That said, Williams assured Green that “[t]he rule of pure numbers was never the touchstone of justice for the Founders.” (Also, of course: America is “a republic, not a democracy.”) So winning via the electoral college is certainly fine, he said — as is, it seems, winning by ignoring the electoral college.

So what is the crisis that demands unified Claremont control of the government, lest our only recourse be civil war? Williams explained his concerns to Green.

“I would say the leading edge of progressivism now is this kind of woke, social-justice anti-racism,” he explained. “It’s a threat to limited government because it seems to take its lead from scholars like Ibram Kendi, who has proposed a Department of Anti-racism that would basically have carte blanche control over local and state governments. … The pursuit of equal results is only going to be successful in a new woke totalitarianism. I realize that sounds a little hyperbolic, but that seems to be the road we’re on.”

This manifests, he said, in efforts to ensure that “all groups are equally represented and have the same outcomes for, say, homeownership, wealth, the proportion of CEOs, or members of Congress.”

Green pressed him on that: Might not uneven representation reflect the sorts of systemic disadvantages that Black leaders (and supportive Democratic senators) have made a focus of their efforts? Well, maybe, Williams said, using the useful dodge that he simply hadn’t seen enough evidence to show that it did — a dodge that helps power dismissiveness forever. (As in: “I’m just not yet entirely convinced that Bigfoot didn’t kill John F. Kennedy.”) He also betrayed his complete disinterest in probing that evidence, remarking that “it would be a wonderful starting point to try to dig into some of the issues you’re talking about, like the different classification of drugs being more associated with one group or another,” something that has been considered repeatedly and led to legislative proposals.

What’s obvious from the discussion is that Williams finds his conception of a “woke” effort to examine American culture as not only painful but dangerous, even if he admitted that he couldn’t rule out that such an examination was justified. It was simply an indicator “that a good portion of our fellow citizens don’t agree with our principles and conclusions about what politics is for” — a line he offered in defense of a truly unhinged essay from Claremont fellow Glenn Ellmers.

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mooray

Well-Known Member
Wow. I hope this one makes its way into the mainstream so we can all keep an eye on it. Rednecks everywhere would be outraged to find that you can't drive drunk while yelling slurs and trying to run someone off the road. That's just called "having a little harmless fun" where they're from.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/black-lives-matter-texas-sentencing-courts-capitol-siege-675b12d0ddacb64d9030c444f8812a5cScreen Shot 2021-10-04 at 2.54.13 PM.png
A Texas man who joined the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan 6. was sentenced Monday to 45 days behind bars even though prosecutors weren’t seeking jail time, after the judge blasted comparisons between the riot that day and the Black Lives Matter protests over racial injustice.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan called it a false equivalence “to compare the actions of people protesting, mostly peacefully, for civil rights” to the mob that “was trying to overthrow the government.” She said doing so “ignores the very real danger that the Jan. 6 riots pose to the foundation of our democracy.”

The judge’s remarks in the case against Matthew Mazzocco of San Antonio came days after another judge in Washington’s federal court suggested that the Justice Department was being too hard on the Jan. 6 defendants when compared to the people arrested during the protests after George Floyd’s murder.

Judge Trevor McFadden, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, questioned Friday why federal prosecutors had not brought more cases against those who had taken part in the 2020 summertime protests and said the Justice Department “would have more credibility if it was even-handed in its concern about riots and mobs in this city.” He sentenced Danielle Doyle of Oklahoma to probation even though prosecutors had recommended two months of home confinement.

Chutkan, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama, said she “flatly” disagreed with the suggestion raised by “some people” that the Jan. 6 defendants were being treated unfairly. In fact, she said she believes those who joined the pro-Trump mob were being treated more leniently than many other defendants.

She noted the vast majority of rioters were not arrested on Jan. 6 but were allowed to return home and that many defendants, like Mazzocco, were charged only with misdemeanors despite what she called the “premeditated decision to come to the District to try to stop the peaceful transfer of power.”

Some Jan. 6 defendants and their Republican allies have claimed that the Justice Department has treated the Capitol rioters harshly because of their political views, while those who caused violence in the wake of Floyd’s killing were given leniency. But an Associated Press analysis of court documents in more than 300 federal cases stemming from the racial injustice protests showed that dozens of people have been convicted of serious crimes and sent to prison.

Prosecutors had been seeking three months of home confinement for Mazzocco, who pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor charge of demonstrating in the Capitol. Mazzocco spent 12 minutes inside the building and posted a selfie on Facebook after the riot with the caption: “the capital is ours!” Assistant U.S. Attorney Kimberley Nielsen noted that he was among the first 10 Jan. 6 defendants to accept responsibility for his actions.

In a letter Mazzocco’s attorney read to the judge, he called his decision to enter the Capitol “one of the most foolish and impulsive decisions” of his life. He told the judge his actions have taken a massive toll on him and that he has received “countless death threats.”

“Since that day, I’ve lived with the feeling of shame, sorrow and remorse, not because I’m going through legal troubles, but because I’m seeing the country I love so dearly divided like never before,” Mazzocco wrote.

The judge said Mazzocco’s participation in the riot warrants time behind bars even though he didn’t steal or destroy anything or hurt anyone at the Capitol. She said that “the rioters who committed violence that day did so because they had the safety of numbers,” thanks to those like Mazzocco.

“Mr. Mazzocco did not go to the United States Capitol out of any love or support for our country, he went there to support one man who he viewed had the election taken from him,” she said.

About 90 Jan. 6 defendants have pleaded guilty, mostly to low level misdemeanor charges, but only a handful have received their punishments so far. Two other defendants, who pleaded guilty to a different misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct, were also sentenced last week to 45 days behind bars.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/critical-race-theory-books-2655221067/Screen Shot 2021-10-04 at 8.29.15 PM.png
On Monday, the Houston Chronicle reported that a school in Katy, Texas was forced to cancel a speaking engagement with an award-winning Black children's book author after a small group of parents raised the specter he would poison students' minds with "critical race theory."On Monday, the Houston Chronicle reported that a school in Katy, Texas was forced to cancel a speaking engagement with an award-winning Black children's book author after a small group of parents raised the specter he would poison students' minds with "critical race theory."

"Jerry Craft, author of Year 6 graphic novels, was set to speak virtually at a Katy ISD event on Monday morning," reported Claire Goodman. "His engagement was quietly canceled and his books removed from district libraries after 400 Katy ISD parents demanded that the event be canceled and his books be banned, claiming that Craft's work promotes critical race theory."

The report went on to say that parents called for Craft's graphic novels to be banned even though they "have been winners of the Newbery Medal, the Coretta Scott King Author Award and Kirkus Prize for Young Readers' Literature."

And even though the books are based on real-life experiences of Craft's own children, the parents in the school district alleged that his books are anti-white.

According to the report, the petition accusing Craft's books of being racist against white children was originated by Bonnie Anderson, a former candidate for the Katy ISD Board of Trustees who also sued the district for having a mask mandate.

"Critical race theory" is a framework that explores the role of systemic racism in shaping U.S. institutions and society. This theory is not actually taught in most public schools, but right-wing activists have frequently attacked "critical race theory" as a stand-in for any books that talk about racism or, indeed, Black educators themselves.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

I think I am getting a better understanding of how the white nationalist propaganda game uses terms so broad that it loses all actual context and can get warped into whatever it is that they can nudge people into believing it is, while also simultaneously swapping to a hyper specific language game when they get stuck to act like they are still correct when their bullshit gets destroyed by reality in a way to pivot away into a snowflake about how the 'other side' is getting it wrong.
 
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Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
In my professional capacity, I am privy to the insane ramblings of troglodite types of right wing nuts that drive trucks and obsessively listen to the most remarkable crap possible.

This allows me to give you early warnings to the latest manufactured rage topics. Today's nonsense: Gavin Newsom is signing a law that makes "stealthing" illegal. Oh my goodness (clutches pearls).

Stealthing is the surreptitious removal of a condom.

Calling these people dumb is an understatement of epic proportions.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
In my professional capacity, I am privy to the insane ramblings of troglodite types of right wing nuts that drive trucks and obsessively listen to the most remarkable crap possible.

This allows me to give you early warnings to the latest manufactured rage topics. Today's nonsense: Gavin Newsom is signing a law that makes "stealthing" illegal. Oh my goodness (clutches pearls).

Stealthing is the surreptitious removal of a condom.

Calling these people dumb is an understatement of epic proportions.
I am really surprised this is not already illegal. How is it any different than people poking holes in condoms?
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
I am really surprised this is not already illegal. How is it any different than people poking holes in condoms?
It should be ok for a guy to remove a condom without the woman's knowledge because he doesn't like the way it feels and also abortion should be illegal. Oh, and we need to get rid of "entitlements" too.

1633788893226.png
 
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UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
In my professional capacity, I am privy to the insane ramblings of troglodite types of right wing nuts that drive trucks and obsessively listen to the most remarkable crap possible.

This allows me to give you early warnings to the latest manufactured rage topics. Today's nonsense: Gavin Newsom is signing a law that makes "stealthing" illegal. Oh my goodness (clutches pearls).

Stealthing is the surreptitious removal of a condom.

Calling these people dumb is an understatement of epic proportions.
the "fuck your feelings", "facts dont care about your feelings", anti-cancel culture, free speech warriors on the right want to ban the teaching of american history because it showcases that white christians in america are a bunch of hopeless racists.

@ASMALLVOICE - ain't that right you delicate little snowflake? still waiting for you to tell me which school districts in your state were teaching CRT. thanks, cuck.

these people are pathetic. if i see a maga hat in public i will beat the shit out of them. it's what they deserve.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I am waiting to see this video, this story screams bullshit snowflake photo-op to me (and not just because they claim that the 'left-wing' protesters in it because of a 'proud boy' who have firmly planted themselves in the right wing cult).

Im not going to say right off the bat that this is some more cat fishing like last year white supremacists LARPing as protesters to start riots, but something seems off on that picture. Those flags look really new, and the one person is wearing the BLM flag like the trumptards where theirs.

idk, I will wait to see the video/further reporting.

https://www.rawstory.com/newberg-proud-boys/?cx_testId=6&cx_testVariant=cx_undefined&cx_artPos=2#cxrecs_s
View attachment 4997455
don't Proud Boys have homes to go to..they've been here forever..when are they leaving? oops! i know why..they need the port for Greater Idaho.

@Fogdog isn't going to be happy about this..let them have Texas but no keeping humans.

1633811513662.png
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
In my professional capacity, I am privy to the insane ramblings of troglodite types of right wing nuts that drive trucks and obsessively listen to the most remarkable crap possible.

This allows me to give you early warnings to the latest manufactured rage topics. Today's nonsense: Gavin Newsom is signing a law that makes "stealthing" illegal. Oh my goodness (clutches pearls).

Stealthing is the surreptitious removal of a condom.

Calling these people dumb is an understatement of epic proportions.
that's why you need to get away from them..there's nothing worse than going to a job with people you hate.
 
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