- Joined
- Feb 4, 2018
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Because the level of hatred is that deep. The lack of empathy is there. There are some that are that dedicated. We could easily see how much the left tries to pull that can be spun into good PR. But the other thing is, some people really want MAGA dead.lol why would they?
They've got the whole system (government, corporations, media) on their side now.
There's absolutely no benefit to gay grassroots violence when you can press the boot on your opponent's face in a top-down, perfectly legal and "peaceful" manner.
Wtf is trump going to nuke ? California ? Oh..
No you HAD all those opportunities until the right memed itself into storming the capital getting in deadly fights with the police and ultimately failing to overturn the election through force. You are now back where you were a few days after Charlottesville except this time instead of controlling the entire government the Dems are taking over in less than two weeks.But now we're hitting a problem: what do we do with that energy? We have all the energy in the world but if it's not organized and smart, it'll dissipate into nothing and everyone who's told to organize on the right either tries to bullshit you about going innawoods, goes doomer, tells you to stop glowing or is glowing. We haven't had a better opportunity to gather scores of local and state victories in ages now but the mindset is absolutely fucked on the right.
John Maus was there too apparently (who is pretty good). These people are too based to be putting out hipster shit.View attachment 1840643
Modern 80's music Pitchfork darling canceled for hiding MAGA messages in all his music
Edit: Journo didn't even spell his name correctly in the headline
They're more likely to get angry. You know, like on the sixth.Of course they won't kill them. Better to keep them as a scapegoat and warning to the rest if they step out of line.
Keep your enemies alive and demoralized so you have an enemy. That's how all dictatorships work.
Nah, house members and staff were freaking out when they were forced to shelter in close quarters and a number of Republicans delegates and staffers refused to wear masks. Several said it was super spreader event. I guess in two weeks we will see if the Trumptards actually managed to kill a few congressmen by default.Nigger, this is (yet more) proof it's fake and gay and the powers that be know it. They're not mentioning it because they simply forgot to keep propagating it (or don't want it to overshadow the whole "insurrection"), it's not them being apathetic to people dying or whatevs.
lol, as if Joe Biden isn't all but fellating Mike Pence and talking up the need for a "strong and principled" Republican Party as early as yesterday. He genuinely thinks he can hug and sermonize his way through a national divide. He's not FDR. He's Neville Chamberlain. He has an overwhelming advantage and yet is desperate to piss it all away so he comes off as nice and peaceable, because he's terrified of more unrest. The Surveillance state will ramp up to what it was during Bush/Obama, but that isn't nearly enough.No you HAD all those opportunities until the right memed itself into storming the capital getting in deadly fights with the police and ultimately failing to overturn the election through force. You are now back where you were a few days after Charlottesville except this time instead of controlling the entire government the Dems are taking over in less than two weeks.
You really see this as an opportunity to win elections instead of an unmitigated disaster
SHADFAN![]()
The warnings were frequent. In September, FBI director Christopher Wray said domestic terrorism was the greatest threat to American citizens, adding that white supremacists made up the largest share of that threat. On October 6, the Department of Homeland Security named white-supremacist groups as “the most persistent and lethal threat in the homeland.” Two days later, the FBI announced the arrest of 13 men in Michigan for allegedly plotting to kidnap and execute the governor of Michigan. Which is why national-security experts were shocked, but not surprised, by Wednesday’s riots, in which Trump loyalists and far-right extremists stormed the Capitol.
President Trump approached violent extremism the same way he approached climate change and the pandemic. He ignored it and then tended to it for political gain, even as his own security officials sounded the alarm. From his infamous “very fine people on both sides” remarks after Charlottesville, to his refusal to disavow QAnon conspiracists, to his incessant demands to “liberate” states where strict COVID-19 rules were in effect, to his defense of Kyle Rittenhouse, the militia member charged with killing two George Floyd protesters in Wisconsin, Trump made the country more vulnerable to far-right extremist violence. Experts agree Wednesday’s violence is an escalation, not a climax.
“This is an enduring issue for the rest of the country, not just Washington, D.C.,” said Javed Ali, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council. “Empirically, [Wednesday’s riot] showed a proof of concept — it worked. Beyond inauguration, what events, statehouses, or government buildings, will be subjected to this? People can swarm these places quite easily thanks to social media.”
On Thursday, President-elect Joe Biden called Wednesday’s rioters “domestic terrorists,” which some have interpreted as a willingness to give federal prosecutors and law enforcement officers broader authority to investigate and charge extremists. In recent years, lawmakers have debated whether a federal statute should criminalize domestic terrorism, simplifying the current process which requires prosecutors to make cases against violent extremists using a wide range of charges that often don’t explicitly mention the word terrorism, even when the crimes meet the federal definition of domestic terrorism. For example, prosecutors charged Christopher Hasson, a Coast Guard lieutenant who stockpiled arms and ammunition with the intent of carrying out a mass murder in the name of a white homeland, with firearms and drug charges despite the fact that prosecutors had explicitly called Hasson a domestic terrorist.
“A domestic-terrorism statute would certainly help investigators,” said Seth Jones, a counterterrorism expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “But the data suggests that there are plenty of people who aren’t associated with a group that are still going to be willing to conduct attacks. You’re not going to be able to use a domestic-terrorism statute or designation on someone who may be sympathetic to Atomwaffen Division, but he’s operating on his own. He’s never had any ties. He’s not providing material support.” While the Trump administration avoided the issue for nakedly political purposes, resistance to a new statute isn’t divided along neat partisan lines. Those who oppose one say it would run the risk of infringing on First Amendment rights.
“You wouldn’t expect a new law that gives more authority to be used on white supremacists and far-right militants — you’d expect it to be used on groups being investigated, but prosecutors don’t have a way to charge,” said Mike German, a former FBI agent and fellow with the Brennan Center for Justice’s liberty and national security program. “You see the way the Trump administration went after protesters involved in the DisruptJ20 protests, the way the Obama administration’s FBI and Justice Department went after environmental groups and Standing Rock water protectors and Black Lives Matter activists. The problem isn’t a lack of authority, but a lack of attention on white supremacists and far-right militants. It’s not as if they’re charging a lot of white supremacists for decades but not successfully convicting them. They have a pretty good record when they actually pay attention to the violence.”
For some, the Trump administration’s efforts to label Antifa a terrorist organization was a parable, proof that any new statute granting the government broad authority to classify groups of Americans could be misused. In 2018, Jason Blazakis, a former counterterrorism official at the State Department and a professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, argued in favor of a law that would allow federal agencies to label individuals as “Specially Designated Terrorists” and groups as “Domestic Terrorist Organizations.”
“I’ve walked back my view over the past two years,” Blazakis said recently. “Unfortunately, politics being what it is, I worry that politicians would use it as a mechanism to chill free speech.”
Despite his comments on Thursday, Biden has yet to map out a clear plan to address domestic far-right extremism. Biden launched his presidential bid with a video that recounted the violent 2017 white-supremacist rally in Charlottesville, and he continued to reference that rally throughout his campaign. During the first presidential debate in September, he pushed Trump to disavow the Proud Boys. Now, as Inauguration Day draws near, counterterrorism experts are eager to see where homegrown extremism will rank on the new administration’s list of priorities.
While domestic terrorism isn’t mentioned on Biden’s transition website, his campaign website includes a plan to establish a task force to “focus on the connection between mass shootings, online harassment, extremism, and violence against women.” Jake Sullivan, Biden’s choice for national security adviser, has said the president-elect asked him to “reimagine national security” to include “threats to democracy, racial justice, and inequality in all forms.”
“My concern is that the Biden administration will think things were going swell during the Obama administration and that all we have to do is go back to what we were doing then without recognizing that there was a problem during that period as well,” German said. “What I would hope the Biden administration is focused on is collecting the appropriate data and presenting a clear picture of the threat before we develop new methods to address the threat.”
Across the board, experts agree that more data is essential. The FBI does not share its data on domestic terrorism, and when it does, it’s packaged in imprecise categories such as “racially motivated violent extremists,” which doesn’t distinguish between violence perpetrated by white supremacists and acts by so-called Black Identity Extremists (a term that should make anyone familiar with the FBI’s history of investigating civil-rights activists uneasy).
For some, Biden’s experience is an auspicious starting point. “Just the fact that Biden’s going to run a normal process, that alone will make us safer because you’ll actually have people paying attention and addressing these issues,” Elizabeth Neumann, a former senior Homeland Security official in the Trump administration, told USA Today. Incoming Attorney General Merrick Garland, for one, who oversaw the prosecutions of the Oklahoma City bombers and the Unabomber, seems to offer an indication of Biden’s intention to prioritize domestic terrorism. Garland’s deputy attorney general, Lisa Monaco, previously served as chief counterterrorism advisor to Barack Obama. But conspicuously absent from Biden’s recent announcement of National Security Council posts were key positions that address counterterrorism and homeland security.
“I have a hard time believing they’re going to come up with a status quo approach,” said Ali. “It wouldn’t square with the reality of the threat.”
Of course it was Florida Man. Who else? What is he gonna steal next, the moon? The Arc de'Triumph? You can't stop Florida Man!
Don't forget, during all of this, the retards at the treasury have been tag-teaming with the FED to fuck purchasing power into the dirty, what's left of it anyway. 50 million out of work, small businesses knowingly destroyed for the ongoing "Great Reset" wealth transfer, Big Tech Monopolies actively showcasing their coming oligarchy status every day now for the plebs. Fun times ahead.I think The Troubles is good way to put it. When I say “hot”, I consider it to be both sides going “fuck it” and just start blasting away, whether it’s guns, bombings, stabbing sprees, or whatever else. Full on paramilitary units dishing out punishment, having funerals that are treated like political ones or a regular military funeral, and even doing things like having communities of their supporters paint murals and political parties being accused of being a wing (I don’t think our two party system will have that aspect).
Given that our country is more spread out than Belfast and Derry, and most strongholds are pretty far apart? How long before...all of this?
Even if he were FDR, the country isn't 90+% homogenous like it was back then, we are dieversified, and the warring tribes mixed together in the great salad bowl are about to blow.lol, as if Joe Biden isn't all but fellating Mike Pence and talking up the need for a "strong and principled" Republican Party as early as yesterday. He genuinely thinks he can hug and sermonize his way through a national divide. He's not FDR. He's Neville Chamberlain. He has an overwhelming advantage and desperate to piss it all away so he comes off as nice and peaceable, because he's terrified of more unrest. The Surveillance state will ramp up to what it was during Bush/Obama, but that isn't nearly enough.
As if the Far Left aren't any less disenchanted with the Democrats and are unable to understand that nothing they want will ever materialize.
Probably not. The riots thread hit page 2000 in a week, and it has constant new material to post over.The riots thread has accumlated 113K posts and counting over a nine month period.
Think this thread will match that at a shorter time?
I know you're here to troll but Cville was a disaster because of unironic Nazis and Spencer plus the fat woman having a heart attack. No one but the most deluded wignats were going to avow that.No you HAD all those opportunities until the right memed itself into storming the capital getting in deadly fights with the police and ultimately failing to overturn the election through force. You are now back where you were a few days after Charlottesville except this time instead of controlling the entire government the Dems are taking over in less than two weeks.
You really see this as an opportunity to win elections instead of an unmitigated disaster
SHADFAN![]()
The fire were white supremacists.Not a word about far-left extremism.
All the building and cars most likely set themselves on fire.
Pretty much is going to depend on what happens over the next few days. If this was it, and nothing else happens, then the thread will die out in a couple of weeks. If people retaliate, it could easily blow the riot thread out because this will be damn near the only place to talk about it outside of alt-chans.The riots thread has accumlated 113K posts and counting over a nine month period.
Think this thread will match that at a shorter time?
The most persistent and deadliest threat in the US has been black gangs for the past decades. They kill more people in one week than all white supremacists in a decadeNot a word about far-left extremism.
All the building and cars most likely set themselves on fire.
gold has real applications besides currency (as jewelry, and as an electrical conductor in electronics) that guarantee a certain baseline value, and its supply is limited by its rarity and cost of mining.Gold is also monopoly money because we made up its value along with the value of everything else on planet earth. I could fly over to a remote island in the Pacific Ocean and convince the natives that hermit crab shells are the most valuable resource there is, and they'd have a hermit crab shell based economy in no time.
The call for Weiser’s resignation or recall comes after an interview with Bridge Magazine, in which Weiser said he didn’t know if he blamed President Donald Trump for the violence at the Capitol.
“I didn’t read any of that stuff, and I didn’t watch television. I watched Michigan destroy Minnesota in basketball, and that kind of contest is something that I strongly support,” Weiser told Bridge.
There's going to be a lot of republicans cowering at the feet of illogical, powermad, bloodthirsty mobs.Michigan Republicans who spent months pushing false claims of voter fraud condemned violence that erupted Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol, but denied their actions influenced rioters who supported President Donald Trump.
“Are we not allowed to look into election concerns?” said Sen. Tom Barrett, R-Potterville, one of 11 Michigan senators who sent a letter to Congress on Tuesday asking lawmakers to investigate voter fraud claims.
“Does looking into concerns make us violent?”
Such equivocations ring hollow to racial justice activists like Angela Waters Austin, founder and co-leader of Black Lives Matter Michigan.
Black Michigan leaders said they found it impossible to ignore the racial undertones of a mostly-white mob forcibly entering the U.S. Capitol.
If the people storming the Capitol had been Black, said KB Stallworth, chair of the Black Caucus Foundation of Michigan and a former state representative, they never would have made it inside.
“We’d be dead on the steps,” he said.
Why dey wypipo treat us like crinimals?K.B. Stallworth also served in the Legislature — but at that time went by Keith Stallworth. K.B. is also the Keith Stallworth who pleaded guilty to a felony in federal court in 2003. He was accused of helping a gang launder money through a Detroit strip club he owned, according to Free Press reports at the time.
Detroit News calling it a 'pro-trump insurrection'. Journalism.Prosecutors decided for now not to proceed with charges against Leslie Grimes, one of the six Michigan people arrested during the insurrection at the Capitol on Wednesday, according to a District of Columbia official with knowledge of the situation.
Aha! Tranny privilege at play.Grimes was identified by the police as Logan Grimes when arrested. Grimes is a transgender woman who uses feminine pronouns, according to her father.
Leslie is not a Trump supporter. Neither is her dad.
Grimes says Leslie, 25, had gone to DC with friends to counter-protest the Trump supporters who would later storm the Capitol Building on Wednesday.
"Heading to D.C. with my boo ... (expletive) The Proud Boys," Leslie wrote on Facebook Tuesday."
A Trump supporter near the site of the original protest kicked Leslie in the chest, knocking the wind out of her, Grimes said. Her friends picked her up and they fled in the vehicle, which was pulled over, he said. When police discovered the weapon, Leslie took responsibility for it, the father said