January 6th, 2021

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
LOL


DeSandick and Kelly the Liar are also Harvard grads.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Is your country full of them?
Security video shows protesters entering the Oregon Capitol building after legislator allegedly opens door
Security footage released Friday shows protesters entering the Oregon Capitol last month after a Republican state legislator allegedly opened a side door and walked out.

Oregon State Police have opened an investigation into state Rep. Mike Nearman's actions, according to spokesman Timothy Fox.
CNN has reached out to Nearman's office but has not received a response. Oregon Speaker of the House Tina Kotek, a Democrat, said Thursday during a news conference that Nearman opened the door to allow protesters into the building before a special session on coronavirus pandemic restrictions.

he surveillance video from the morning of December 21 shows a man, allegedly Nearman, opening an interior door and then exiting the Capitol through an exterior door with glass windows. As he walks out, he steps to his right around a man holding a flagpole and keeps walking.
That man keeps the outside door open, then rushes to grab the interior door before it closes. He and another man signal for others to come inside.
About 20 seconds pass before a few people come inside, as police also show up.

The video eventually shows state troopers and Salem police officers drive the protesters back and struggle to hold them at the open doorway for about eight minutes.

Later, two cloudy bursts prompt the officers to retreat from the doorway, the video shows. The protesters then swarm into the building.
Oregon state police said on the day of the protest: "A protester sprayed some kind of chemical irritant (mace /OC / bear spray) into the vestibule."
The Capitol has been closed to the public because of coronavirus restrictions.
Protesters demonstrated outside the building, objecting to Oregon's Covid-19 restrictions in a "Reopen Oregon" rally, as reported by CNN affiliate KATU.

Another video captures the scene from outside. The exterior video shows a few people outside the door when Nearman appears to exit. As he comes out one man turns around and appears to shout for others to come. Nearman walks by him as he is waving and heads down the sidewalk until he disappears off the bottom of the screen.

As protesters moved toward the main chamber, they were confronted by troopers and Salem police in a vestibule, according to state police. The altercation became physical and officers used "inert pepper balls" to keep the group at bay. After repeated warnings by police to leave the building, two people refused and were taken into custody. Four protesters were arrested by the end of the day. Police soon declared the rally an unlawful assembly.

The legislative session continued uninterrupted, yet lawmakers mentioned hearing chants from outside the building.
Nearman has served since 2015. He was re-elected in November by more than 20 percentage points.

"Representative Nearman's actions were completely unacceptable," Kotek said Thursday. "It's serious, and his behavior was reckless and dangerous."
"The resulting entry was especially terrorizing for our members and staff of color because the rhetoric of the protesters was out of the Trump playbook and is aligned with white supremacy," the House leader added in a statement Friday.

Kotek said Nearman is likely to face discipline in the House, depending on what state police find. She called the OSP probe a "criminal investigation."
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Is your country full of them?
Security video shows protesters entering the Oregon Capitol building after legislator allegedly opens door
Security footage released Friday shows protesters entering the Oregon Capitol last month after a Republican state legislator allegedly opened a side door and walked out.

Oregon State Police have opened an investigation into state Rep. Mike Nearman's actions, according to spokesman Timothy Fox.
CNN has reached out to Nearman's office but has not received a response. Oregon Speaker of the House Tina Kotek, a Democrat, said Thursday during a news conference that Nearman opened the door to allow protesters into the building before a special session on coronavirus pandemic restrictions.

he surveillance video from the morning of December 21 shows a man, allegedly Nearman, opening an interior door and then exiting the Capitol through an exterior door with glass windows. As he walks out, he steps to his right around a man holding a flagpole and keeps walking.
That man keeps the outside door open, then rushes to grab the interior door before it closes. He and another man signal for others to come inside.
About 20 seconds pass before a few people come inside, as police also show up.

The video eventually shows state troopers and Salem police officers drive the protesters back and struggle to hold them at the open doorway for about eight minutes.

Later, two cloudy bursts prompt the officers to retreat from the doorway, the video shows. The protesters then swarm into the building.
Oregon state police said on the day of the protest: "A protester sprayed some kind of chemical irritant (mace /OC / bear spray) into the vestibule."
The Capitol has been closed to the public because of coronavirus restrictions.
Protesters demonstrated outside the building, objecting to Oregon's Covid-19 restrictions in a "Reopen Oregon" rally, as reported by CNN affiliate KATU.

Another video captures the scene from outside. The exterior video shows a few people outside the door when Nearman appears to exit. As he comes out one man turns around and appears to shout for others to come. Nearman walks by him as he is waving and heads down the sidewalk until he disappears off the bottom of the screen.

As protesters moved toward the main chamber, they were confronted by troopers and Salem police in a vestibule, according to state police. The altercation became physical and officers used "inert pepper balls" to keep the group at bay. After repeated warnings by police to leave the building, two people refused and were taken into custody. Four protesters were arrested by the end of the day. Police soon declared the rally an unlawful assembly.

The legislative session continued uninterrupted, yet lawmakers mentioned hearing chants from outside the building.
Nearman has served since 2015. He was re-elected in November by more than 20 percentage points.

"Representative Nearman's actions were completely unacceptable," Kotek said Thursday. "It's serious, and his behavior was reckless and dangerous."
"The resulting entry was especially terrorizing for our members and staff of color because the rhetoric of the protesters was out of the Trump playbook and is aligned with white supremacy," the House leader added in a statement Friday.

Kotek said Nearman is likely to face discipline in the House, depending on what state police find. She called the OSP probe a "criminal investigation."
Oregon's Republican leadership are on record saying that they cannot see Republicans winning back the executive or legislative branches of government again. That would be, they concede they cannot win. They don't say they should change, they don't say they need to connect with the majority of the people of Oregon, they are resigned to losing.

So now they resort to coups. If those people had managed to enter the building, elected lawmakers were in session. And he let them in. Thanks for this. I thought it strange that those doors would have been unlocked. But they weren't. They had a traitor inside who opened the doors.

Oh well, I didn't like Republicans before all this happened. Nothing changed.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
They closed parlor too soon, it was a good place for morons to hang themselves and post evidence. The FBI should have quietly took control... :lol:
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Little background on the father of the senate cop that committed suicide. Manafort,Stone,Moscow,Ukraine,Beijing, this is just the tip of the iceberg.


 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Federal government weighs listing Proud Boys as terrorist group
A spokeswoman did not say when authorities first started monitoring the Proud Boys group, which was founded by a Canadian

Author of the article:
The Canadian Press

The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The federal government is weighing whether to add the Proud Boys and other right-wing groups to Canada’s list of terrorist organizations.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair’s spokeswoman Mary-Liz Power says the Proud Boys are one of several hate groups that officials are monitoring and collecting information about with an aim to adding them to the list.

The revelation follows last week’s Capitol Hill riot in Washington, D.C., which reportedly involved members of the Proud Boys, prompting calls for the organization to be added to the list.

Power did not say when authorities first started monitoring the Proud Boys group, which was founded by a Canadian and has been banned from various social-media platforms, or when a determination on whether it qualifies as a terror group will be made.

But she said such a determination is not a “political exercise,” and instead involves a legal process that requires evidence and intelligence gathering.

Two right-wing groups the government described as white supremacist organizations were added to the terror list in June 2019, joining such organizations as al-Qaeda, Boko Haram and the Islamic State as being banned within Canada.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 10, 2021.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
#52: IN A BORING LETTER, PELOSI DEMANDS TRUMP'S SURRENDER WITHIN 48 HOURS

It reads like the ordinary mundane language of Congressional bureaucracy. But the letter Speaker Pelosi sent to her Democratic colleagues early Sunday evening is in fact an extraordinary blockbuster.

Tie the elements together - a House vote demanding the Vice President "activate" the 25th Amendment, giving him Congressional cover to do so, giving him a deadline, threatening a second impeachment vote as early as Tuesday - and what Nancy Pelosi has actually done is nothing less than to DEMAND DONALD TRUMP'S SURRENDER WITHIN 48 HOURS.

Or maybe it's more correct to say she demanded that Pence surrender Trump within that time frame.

If the letter were not extraordinary enough there's a second sting in its tail. Pelosi thanks her colleagues for bringing up things like Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. That's the Constitutional Language that allowed the House to expel anyone who ever participated in a rebellion against the United States, or merely gave comfort to those who did. It was designed to prevent Southern traitors from the Civil War to rejoin Congress unless they could prove their loyalty. Pelosi's mention of it makes it clear she believes it could be used to expel House Republicans who participated in the incitement to last week's Coup attempt, and probably even those who voted to give the terrorists what they wanted in the votes that night which were intended to delegitimize the election.

It's one of the goddamnedest letters I've ever seen.
 
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