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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/01/20 5:14 pm • # 101 
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Interesting who they seem to be blaming (hint, it's not the protesters)

Businesses Leaving Riot-Torn Cities - ‘They Didn’t Protect Our People’

Bailey Duran

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Rubble remains from businesses along University Avenue that were looted and burned in response to the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, June 10, 2020 in St Paul, Minnesota.


A Minneapolis business owner is leaving the city in the wake of violent protests that broke out after George Floyd’s death, resulting in his business being burned to the ground.

Kris Wryrobek, president and owner of 7-Sigma, Inc., has decided to relocate his business out of Minneapolis after rioters burned it down. 7-Sigma was located in South Minneapolis and had been in the city since 1987.

“They don’t care about my business,” Wryrobek said, “They didn’t protect our people. We were all on our own.” He went on to say that a fire engine was sitting at the scene and didn’t attempt to put out the fire.

Other business owners echoed Wryobek’s words. They say the city turned its back on them.

The destruction that took place in Minneapolis amounts to over $500 million dollars in damages. One-thousand businesses were damaged, and 52 of those were destroyed, the Star Tribune reported.

Wryrobek said that he is confident that his business will overcome, but that it would not be doing it in Minneapolis.

According to Business Insider, at least 4,400 people were arrested the weekend of Floyd’s death. Six states and 13 cities declared states of emergency. The National Guard was called into 21 states and Washington, D.C., and 26 cities in 16 different states have instituted curfews.

These riots, combined with the effects of the coronavirus, have deeply hurt national and local economies. Riots are hindering the economy’s comeback after the virus, and people are reportedly afraid to open their businesses due to rioting and looting. Some businesses that are beginning to open are dealing with broken windows or graffiti on top of other stressors.

"The fiscal hit from dealing with COVID-19 and the recent protests could lead to several government job losses as many states were already strapped for cash and have had difficulty secure federal aid. The economic recovery is fragile and violent protest across major US cities will make this rebound longer and flatter,” Edward Moya, Senior market analyst at Oanda, said.

All of these factors are causing citizens and businesses alike to relocate out of cities. According to Forbes, 5% of New York City’s residents (420,000 people) have already moved out of Manhattan as it is becoming more and more evident that it is dangerous to remain in the city.

USA Today found that 1/3 of Americans were considering moving out of the cities. Some of the pull was because of the cheaper costs of living and bigger spaces to live after being stuck indoors due to COVID-19. What drew people to the cities (entertainment, restaurants, etc.) are now all but gone with stay-at-home orders brought about by the virus and curfews instituted after the riots.

“People will be much more cautious about living in high-density areas with so many people nearby,” after what has gone on this year, said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors.

Staying in the city could give businesses a higher chance of having to close their doors permanently because of COVID-19 and the riots. Forbes writer Jack Kelly wrote, “Those who are left behind will find themselves living in grimy, crime-infested places, plagued with virus outbreaks and violence.

“This will push even more people to leave, creating a downward spiral for the viability and habitation of the cities and increase the populations of states that offer a higher quality of life,” he wrote.

https://cnsnews.com/blog/bailey-duran/b ... our-people


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/01/20 6:14 pm • # 102 
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Quote:
Riots are hindering the economy’s comeback after the virus,


"after"?????


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/02/20 4:05 am • # 103 
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Trump calls proposed Black Lives Matter mural outside Trump Tower 'a symbol of hate'
David Jackson

President Donald Trump criticized a proposed Black Lives Matter mural to be painted outside Trump Tower as a "symbol of hate" Wednesday while denouncing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who ordered the phrase painted outside Trump's longtime office.

De Blasio said he ordered the mural – the words "Black Lives Matter" painted in bright letters – to be placed right in front of Trump Tower for a reason.

"We’re going to take this moment in history and amplify it by taking the ‘Black Lives Matter’ symbolism and putting it all over this city, including right in front of Trump Tower,” the mayor told MSNBC on Wednesday.

Trump responded by ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/07/20 4:16 am • # 104 
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'Central Park Karen' who called cops over Black man in Central Park is being prosecuted
Reuters

NEW YORK — New York prosecutors have charged a white woman who in May accused a Black man of threatening her life in New York’s Central Park with filing a false police report, Manhattan’s district attorney said on Monday.

The district attorney Cy Vance said Amy Cooper, 41, faces an Oct. 14 arraignment over the incident, which was ....

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Gotta love her lawyers comment as well ...


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/12/20 10:27 am • # 105 
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Nothing this asshole does surprises me any more ...

Trump denies Minnesota governor's request for $500M to repair damage from riots

by Andrew Mark Miller

President Trump has denied a request from Minnesota’s governor for money to rebuild parts of Minneapolis that were destroyed during the riots following the death of George Floyd.

“The Governor is disappointed that the federal government declined his request for financial support,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's office said in a statement. “As we navigate one of the most difficult periods in our state’s history, we look for support from our federal government to help us through.”

Walz, a Democrat, requested that Trump declare Minnesota a “major disaster” zone in a request to the Federal Emergency Management Agency on July 2 after more than 1,500 buildings were damaged by looting and rioting in the wake of Floyd’s death, totaling over $500 million in damages.

At least one Republican in the state had lobbied the Trump administration to reject the request, arguing that ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/12/20 3:27 pm • # 106 
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Maybe the Repubs are right for a change. There should be an investigation. From what I read it's mostly white supremacist Grabem followers who were stoking the flames. Be good for people to know just who his supporters are.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/13/20 6:05 pm • # 107 
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Law professor has GENIUS plan for getting rid of bad cops
BREAKING: A prominent law professor just SLAMMED American law enforcement's lack of police officer accountability and provided a GENIUS solution to get rid of bad cops.

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?ref=not ... 0233654279


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/14/20 10:42 am • # 108 
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Let's talk about 3 letters that can make rural whites understand the fear minorities have of cops.



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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/15/20 3:39 am • # 109 
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"So are white people. So are white people. What a terrible question to ask. So are white people. More white people, by the way. More white people." ~ Trump, asked why he thinks African Americans are still dying at the hands of law enforcement


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/15/20 6:00 am • # 110 
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No surprise here

Lawyers to file U.S. civil lawsuit against Minneapolis in Floyd death

Reuters

https://canoe.com/news/world/lawyers-to ... loyd-death


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/17/20 5:22 am • # 111 
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Copied from another board:

Quote:
On May 24th, several hundred protesters stood on the porch of the Kentucky Governor's mansion, many of who were armed with rifles and demanding for him to come outside. This took place for nearly two hours while many beat on the glass windows of his home. The same group later that day hung an effigy of Governor Beshear from a tree. This group was made up primarily of middle-aged white males and they were protesting over COVID-19 restrictions. In response to this protest, they are now building a fence around the Governor's Mansion. ZERO ARRESTS WERE MADE.

On July 14th, 87 protestors sat in the front lawn in front of Attorney General Daniel Cameron's house. They were sitting in lines with their hands in their laps. This group was unarmed and made up of mostly young people both white and of color who were demanding justice for Breonna Taylor. Other than his grass no part of the Attorney General's home was touched. ALL 87 WERE ARRESTED AND CHARGED WITH A FELONY. They face a sentence of 1-5 years.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/20/20 4:46 am • # 112 
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From my FB feed

Portland - under siege by the Federal Government

Quote:
Jami Shofner

Anonymous (full face mask, no name, no organization, no bodycam) Federal agents in generic unlabeled camo, driving unmarked rental vehicles are now grabbing people off the streets of Portland without a reason or arrest warrant and holding them without charges, lawyers, or bail. The mayor and the governor have told them to stop and leave the area. They have refused and the head of DHS has said they're not only not stopping in Portland, they're going to be doing the same thing in other cities.

What I want to know is where are all the gun-toting 2nd Amendment folks who have repeatedly told anyone who'd listen that they kept guns to be able to stand up to federal agents or troops who would violate our citizens and their rights and fight to keep us all free.

Umm...that's what's going on in Portland, y'all.

Wait...What's that? You're only protecting the RIGHT kind of people? The ones who deserve their rights? Those BLM terrorists in Oregon aren't the real true Americans you're protecting? Oh, you're just using your guns to protect the rights of white folks who support Trump? CoolCoolCool. Just make sure your MAGA hat doesn't interfere with your sight picture.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/20/20 6:51 am • # 113 
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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/20/20 7:37 am • # 114 
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Lincoln Project reminds me of ABC in 2015.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/20/20 7:46 am • # 115 
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Coming soon: American Civil War: Part Deux


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/21/20 6:36 am • # 116 
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And how do we spell Banana Republic? How about Amerika?

'Deeply Disturbing': New York Supreme Court Judge Rules Protesters Can Be Detained Indefinitely
"This is suspension of habeas corpus, it is unconstitutional," said Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Jake Johnson

A New York State Supreme Court judge on Thursday rejected a petition seeking the immediate release of hundreds of protesters who had been held by the New York Police Department for more than 24 hours, ruling that extraordinary circumstances justify indefinite detention.

"It is a crisis within a crisis," wrote Justice James Burke in his ruling. "All writs are denied."

Burke's decision was met with alarm by New York lawmakers and activists who immediately condemned the ruling as an unlawful suspension of the right of habeas corpus, which requires the government to justify detention of a person before a court. Hundreds of New Yorkers have been arrested in recent days during mass protests over the ...

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PostPosted: 07/22/20 4:38 am • # 117 
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Nothing Can Justify the Attack on Portland
The question of whether these arrests are appropriate has a clear answer—at least in a nation that purports to live under the rule of law.

QUINTA JURECIC AND BENJAMIN WITTES

The Trump administration has faced outrage since reports first surfaced of federal agents in unmarked vehicles picking up and detaining protesters in Portland, Oregon. Rather than backing down, though, President Trump appears to have decided to go all in: In a July 20 interview, he threatened to send “more federal law enforcement” to New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Baltimore, and Oakland—cities run by “liberal Democrats,” he asserted. The question of whether or not the administration has the legal authority to take such action will be fought out in legal challenges. But the question of whether or not these arrests are appropriate has a clear answer—at least in a nation that purports to live under the rule of law.

Asked on July 17 by an NPR reporter whether the reporting was true, Ken Cuccinelli, a senior Department of Homeland Security official, didn't seem troubled by the department's activities. Yes, he said, at least one person had been arrested in this fashion in Portland—though he wouldn’t say whether others had been as well, and if so how many. Cuccinelli added that this was how the Trump administration planned to respond to demonstrations at federal buildings and monuments elsewhere, too. “This is a posture we intend to continue not just in Portland, but in any of the facilities that we’re responsible for around the country,” he declared. And days later, he doubled down on CNN, insisting that the government had “intelligence about planned attacks on federal facilities” in Portland: “If we get the same kind of intelligence in other places … we would respond the same way.”

Reports of unidentified federal law-enforcement officials patrolling areas of Portland—and conducting arrests by scooping suspects up into vans—have generated a lot of anxiety. The Atlantic writer Anne Applebaum argued that the government’s actions amount to “performative authoritarianism.” Mary McCord, a lawyer who previously oversaw national-security issues at the Justice Department, warned The New York Times that manhandling Portland residents in this way “sends the message that these people are terrorists and need to be treated like terrorists.” And Oregon’s congressional delegation wrote a letter to the U.S. attorney general stating that the Portland arrests “are more reflective of tactics of a government led by a dictator, not from the government of our constitutional democratic republic.” Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler and Ron Wyden, the senior senator from Oregon, both decried the arrests as unconstitutional.

There will be time to sort out the legalities of the federal government’s actions. The attorney general of Oregon has filed suit against various federal agencies and officers involved in one arrest, arguing, “Ordinarily, a person ... who is confronted by anonymous men in military-type fatigues and ordered into an unmarked van can reasonably assume that he is being kidnapped and is the victim of a crime.” The American Civil Liberties Union has also sued the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Marshals Service. The chairs of three House committees have requested an internal DHS investigation of the matter. Between these varied proceedings, the Trump administration will have to answer legal questions like whether it’s really okay for unidentified federal officers and agents to patrol streets, and whether an agency whose mission is to patrol the border is properly used without training for crowd control. The administration will also have to justify the propriety of the individual arrests both in any prosecutions of those detained and in any civil suits filed.

But let’s leave the legalities aside for now. Because whether the Trump administration has the technical legal authority to deploy this show of force in this particular matter does not answer the question of whether it should do so. The use of federal officers in this manner is corrosive of democratic culture, it makes for bad and ineffective law enforcement, and it’s likely physically dangerous both for the law-enforcement officers and for the protesters in question.

According to The New York Times, Homeland Security officers were deployed under the department’s authority to protect federal property—including, in this case, the Portland federal courthouse. The deployment of armed forces comes along with increased domestic intelligence operations. Yesterday, Lawfare reported that the Department of Homeland Security’s little-known intelligence arm had authorized intelligence collection on people connected to threats to monuments and statues, having designated the protection of such monuments a homeland-security mission following President Trump’s monument-protection executive order last month.

The existence of the department’s authority to protect federal property is uncontroversial. The federal government has the power to defend federal buildings and facilities from civil unrest, and a variety of federal laws protect federal property from attack and vandalism and federal officials from interference with their discharge of the government’s business.

While this authority certainly extends to the power to investigate federal crimes and arrest those suspected of them, it is not some general authority to patrol the downtowns of major cities and pick up and detain protesters merely because a federal building may be in the neighborhood.

Likewise, federal law-enforcement officers should conceal their identities only under highly specific circumstances—none of which involves crowd control at a protest or policing a public area. Officers might reasonably go undercover in an effort to infiltrate a criminal organization, for example. Federal air marshals are generally unidentified so they can blend in with passengers on commercial flights—preventing would-be hijackers from knowing which flights are patrolled. But it should be quite unthinkable for armed officers exercising coercive arrest powers in the streets of an American city to not identify themselves by name and affiliation.

A similar situation to the one in Portland arose in Washington, D.C., last month, when the president deployed National Guard units and a smorgasbord of federal law-enforcement agencies, including officers from the Department of Homeland Security, during protests over the killing of George Floyd. The deployment of anonymized federal muscle in various locations in the district angered many people, and rightly so. These recent actions in Portland are more jarring still.

For better or worse, residents of D.C. are used to a significant federal law-enforcement presence in their daily lives—albeit one that’s quite open and overt. A significant area of the city is patrolled by the United States Capitol Police, for example; uniformed Secret Service officers protect embassies; the United States Park Police has jurisdiction over national parkland, which is abundant in the city. And one or more unmarked dark SUVs accompanying some official-looking car is a pretty normal affair. But even a certain baseline comfort with a heavy federal presence didn’t prepare D.C. for an invasion of little green men. How much more shocking it must be for people in Portland, who lack that general familiarity, to suddenly have unidentified officers snatching people off the street and hustling them into unmarked vehicles.

There are additional concerns. The tactical divisions of the Homeland Security Department from which the officers in Portland appear to hail—Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE)—are not typically deployed at protests, but charged with enforcing immigration law and guarding the U.S. border. And as an internal department memo obtained by The New York Times shows, the officers sent into Portland’s streets were not trained to handle crowds. “If this type of response is going to be the norm,” the memo cautions, “specialized training and standardized equipment should be deployed to responding agencies.”

All of which brings us to the dangers—for everyone involved—of protecting federal buildings in this particular fashion. Sending out officers untrained for demonstrations risks violence if the agents end up in situations they don’t know how to handle. Recall that some of the protests in the wake of Floyd’s death swung out of control in large part because of ill-considered police actions. This anonymized deployment risks compounding that problem. Because if, as Oregon’s attorney general hypothesizes, a protester ”confronted by anonymous men in military-type fatigues and ordered into an unmarked van” were to “reasonably assume that he is being kidnapped and is the victim of a crime,” he might plausibly resort to violence in self-defense. This may be a particular risk if the person in question happens to be suspicious of police authority in the first place. And the risk may be further heightened by the fact that various militia groups have been known to organize armed groups in defense of supposed law-enforcement interests. Ambiguity about an officer’s identity or power to make an arrest serves the interests of neither law enforcement nor protesters.

So why is the Trump administration sending into American cities officers who aren’t appropriately trained for the mission, are acting on legal authority that will require litigation to defend, and are being deployed to address a problem that the federal government could address by means far less provocative and in a fashion far less likely to escalate disorder?

The answer is unfortunately obvious. Having given up on controlling the pandemic that has now killed more than 140,000 Americans, and faced with dimming reelection prospects, Trump is doing his best to substantiate the tough-guy vision of the presidency that has always appealed to him. During earlier stages of his administration, he played out this fantasy along the southern border of the United States by deploying troops to the American Southwest and warning about “caravans” of travelers illegally entering the country. Now, as officers typically tasked with enforcing the border have been deployed into Portland, Trump’s apocalyptic warnings about the need for a brutal response to any perceived threat have also moved from the edge of the country into American cities.

The message is as simple as it is ugly: The caravan isn’t just coming north through Mexico. It is already here—in the efforts to take down statues, in the protests, in the pockets of disorder in American urban areas and in the gatherings of people exercising their First Amendment rights to object to police misconduct. The caravan, in fact, is the city. And only Trump can protect you from it—whether it is what you see when you look south or what you see when you look downtown.

Fortunately, it doesn’t seem to be working. Last night in Portland, as happened last month in Washington, D.C., peaceful protests only grew in response to the federal show of force. If Trump follows through on his promise to export the federal muscle to other cities, the anonymous agents may be met with more large crowds defying Trump’s efforts at vilification and coercion.

SOURCE


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/22/20 4:38 am • # 118 
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Duplicate post


Last edited by shiftless2 on 07/22/20 8:45 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/22/20 6:47 am • # 119 
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#117

Fellow by the name of Adolph did the same thing to Jewish people.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/23/20 3:55 am • # 120 
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"I've done more for black Americans than anybody with the possible exception of Abraham Lincoln." ~ Trump


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/23/20 4:37 am • # 121 
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Had to check that this is real but it is ... way to go Dads!

Dads With Leaf Blowers Join Wall Of Moms In Portland Protests

by Cassandra Stone

Image


The Portland dads are bringing leaf blowers to the protest to combat the tear gas set forth by police
For nearly two months, the people of Portland, Oregon have been taking to the streets to call for police reform and to protest police brutality against the Black community. Recently, a group of local moms gathered to form a wall between protesters and the federal agents who were dispatched to Portland to terrorize the city under the guise of “ending the protests.” Now Portland dads are joining the moms in the streets, complete with leaf blowers, to call for an end against police-sanctioned violence and murder against Black people.

Why leaf blowers? Because the militarized police force that has overrun Portland is weaponizing tear gas against protestors, and these dads are using their favorite power tool to blow the dangerous substance away from the crowd — which in recent days, has ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/23/20 8:33 am • # 122 
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They're now arresting people because they "might" commit a crime in the future ...

DHS Chief Says His Federal Agents Are ‘Proactively’ Arresting People In Portland

Cristina Cabrera

Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf spun his unidentified federal agents’ random detainment of nonviolent anti-police brutality protesters in Portland, Oregon as some kind of pre-crime measure on Tuesday night.


“Because we don’t have that local support, that local law enforcement support, we are having to go out and proactively arrest individuals,” Wolf said during an interview on Fox News. “And we need to do that because we need to hold them accountable.”

He derided the “ridiculous” notion that federal law enforcement shouldn’t take over a city without local leaders’ permission.

“You need to hold individuals accountable, and when we don’t do that, I think we get what we see in Portland today,” the Trump administration official said.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler has repeatedly demanded that the Trump administration withdraw the feds from his city, asserting during a CNN interview on Sunday that their presence is “actually leading to more violence and more vandalism.”

“People are being literally scooped off the street into ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/24/20 10:59 am • # 123 
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AN AIR FORCE SPECIAL OPERATIONS SURVEILLANCE PLANE IS LURKING NEAR PORTLAND DURING FEDERAL CRACKDOWN
Sam Biddle

WHILE ANONYMOUS FEDERAL agents have thrown protesters into unmarked vans and fired tear gas at Portland’s mayor in recent days, an Air Force surveillance plane designed to carry state-of-the-art sensors typically reserved for war zones has circled the Oregon city’s outskirts from above.

The plane, a DO-328 “Cougar,” was spotted via the open source flight tracking website ADS-B Exchange, allowing the public to monitor its course. The Intercept reviewed this flight data, confirming tight, circular flights consistent with surveillance operations in and around Portland.

The aircraft is a ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/24/20 11:07 am • # 124 
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Can anyone say "martial law"?


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 07/25/20 4:51 am • # 125 
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Do Americans Get That Trump is Instituting Martial Law?
Trump Wants to Use Martial Law to Terrorize Americans — and Steal the Next Election

umair haque

Yesterday, the Mayor of Portland was gassed by the secret police of storm troopers that Donald Trump has sent to occupy the city.

Wait. What? Let’s read that sentence again.

Yesterday, the Mayor of Portland was gassed by the secret police of storm troopers that Donald Trump has sent to occupy the city.

If I wrote that sentence five years ago, you would have laughed at me. It would have seemed impossible. Inconceivable. Outlandish. And yet here we are.

Shortly before that, Trump announced that he was sending his new secret police’s shock troops…men in camouflage body armor, carrying machine guns, abducting people off the streets, and now gassing mayors…nationwide.

If I wrote that sentence five years ago, you never would have read another word I wrote. And yet here we are.

Where is this, though, this strange new territory America finds itself in? What’s really happening here?

Something that those of us who’ve lived through — and survived — authoritarian-fascist collapses know all too well. We’ve seen it before, maybe, like me, several times over. We know how it begins, and how it ends — usually — too. None of that’s to be a know-it-all blowhard. It’s to warn, as seriously as I can. You probably have an inkling of what I’m about to say, but your rational side denies it. Your gut is right, and your brain — which has never lived through this kind of collapse before — is wrong.

Trump is instituting martial law. Yes, really. That is what sending a secret police of shock troops across America is. No, not suddenly, all at once, in a kind of sweeping and obvious way. But rather, in the time-honored way that authoritarian-fascists do. One step at a time. A process. A creeping martial law. One which is all too easy to normalize and accept, because ...

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Quote:
... most of the people in the administration running this have not been confirmed by the senate.

But yes, I think that many Americans do. Of those that do, half of them are scared. And the other half welcome it, because it is exactly what they want, they expect it will impose on the rest the obedience to their notions of god (and lifestyle and gender and all the rest of Gilead) that their they want to impose on the rest of America, and the world at large. Dominionists by name and nature.


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