AP: US terrorism alert warns of politically motivated violence.

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
the guy who thought 80% of pregnancies were being miscarried based on a third rate article from some right wing retard site for dumb jerkoffs is owning us all with the evidence and reason nazi who thinks black people are a separate, subhuman species
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Book 'An Ugly Truth' Looks At Facebook And Its 'Battle For Domination'

Reporters Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang join Morning Joe to discuss their new book 'An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook's Battle for Domination.'
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
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On Thursday, KVOA reported that police responded to an incident at Mesquite Elementary School in Tucson, Arizona after a dispute over COVID-19 safety protocols led to protesters threatening to zip-tie the principal and make a citizen's arrest.

The trouble started when a Mesquite student was asked to quarantine after coming into close contact with someone who had contracted the novel coronavirus.

However, this apparently angered the child's parents and other local residents, who moved to aggressively confront the school's principal.

"Three individuals and the child involved drove over to the school in order to protest the decision," reports KVOA. "The three individuals were later identified as one of the child's parents, another community member and a local business owner, who live-streamed the confrontation over his business' Instagram account. Over the Instagram live, the business owner reportedly shared his discontent over the situation and threatened to use zip ties to arrest the principal of Mesquite Elementary School. The zip ties could also be seen in the video."

The three individuals eventually dispersed by the time Tuscon police arrived on the scene.

In recent months, as the highly infectious Delta variant of COVID-19 has caused a resurgence of infections, school openings have been threatened, and controversies have flared up around whether to impose mask mandates.

In some states, like Florida and Texas, governors have outright sought to block mask mandates at the local level, which has led to legal battles. Meanwhile in Arizona itself, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey has tried to earmark federal COVID-19 relief only for schools that do not mandate masks, which the Biden administration has warned may be illegal.
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
Maybe the should take the NRAs advice and arm teachers, then they can shoot the fuckers making threats against them on school property.
I keep trying to tell people the anti gun stance is not a good one to have when the crazy folks are pretty big fans of them.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
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In a video posted to Twitter by the Activated Podcast and highlighted by Voice of San Diego editor in chief Scott Lewis, a man identified as Derek Greco claims he and fellow anti-mask activist are now the acting school board -- and he is its president --for the city of Poway which located in northern San Diego.

As Andrew Dyer of the San Diego Union-Tribune reported, "The Poway Unified Board of Education ended its Thursday meeting early after a group of people protesting mask-wearing mandates interrupted the proceedings, officials said," adding the board issued a statement saying, "a small group forced its way into the district office, pushing past staff members, and refused to leave. The board was set to meet under closed session and then hold its regular meeting at 6 p.m."

As VOSD's Lewis wrote, "the group that stormed Poway's school board meeting pretended to have become the new real school board and cheered their new jobs."

In the video posted by Greco, he claims the board abandoned their jobs and his group brought along a "constitutionalist" who gave them a thumbs-up to vote themselves into the jobs since they had a quorum.

"The board vacated their seats tonight," Greco asserted before adding, "We then brought in a constitutionalist, we held a quorum and we voted in a new board and you are looking at the new president of the Poway Unified School District apparently."

He then went on to complain that his group was "libeled and slandered" by the members of the board, and accused them of lying when they stated that San Diego County Sheriff's deputies asked them to abandon the room for their own safety.

Greco added that he was looking forward to meeting with the local media to discuss where the new board will go from this point.
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/communities/san-diego/story/2021-09-10/anti-masking-protesters-disrupt-poway-unified-school-board-meetingScreen Shot 2021-09-11 at 4.47.24 PM.png
POWAY —
The Poway Unified Board of Education ended its Thursday meeting early after a group of people protesting mask-wearing mandates interrupted the proceedings, officials said.

The board was expected to discuss its safety protocols and public health guidance updates. They never got to those items.

According to a statement issued by the board Thursday evening, a small group forced its way into the district office, pushing past staff members, and refused to leave. The board was set to meet under closed session and then hold its regular meeting at 6 p.m.

Instead, the board members adjourned before the regular meeting could begin.

“This is an unfortunate example of modeling inappropriate behavior for our students and children who were present,” the board said in a statement. “The Board encourages civil discourse but this type of behavior will not be tolerated at any meetings.”

According to witnesses, there were around 25 protesters outside the school district offices in Carmel Mountain Ranch. They were carrying signs that read, “Let Them Breathe, unmask our kids,” “Recall Gavin Newsom” and “Critical Race Theory teaches hate, racism, division.”

Let Them Breathe is a group that wants masks to be optional and to end mask mandates for children and adults, according to its website. It has raised about $127,000 on GoFundMe to fund legal action against California for its mask mandates for students. The group promotes anti-mask protests across California from San Diego County to Stanislaus County and more.

The group’s founder Sharon McKeeman said Friday that what happened at the Poway board meeting was not organized or endorsed by Let Them Breathe. She said parents requested fliers and t-shirts, but that was the extent of the organization’s involvement in what happened at the Poway meeting. The group’s Instagram page shared a post about the “mask-choice rally” in Poway with information about the meeting date and district address.

McKeeman said Let Them Breathe does not organize rallies, but shares information about rallies organized by parents on the group’s social media accounts.

She said the group does not encourage or endorse anyone entering a school board meeting that has been posted as a strictly virtual meeting, but leaders of the group have attended public meetings that were in-person in the past.

Gabriela Dow, a parent of two students enrolled in Poway Unified schools, said Let Them Breathe is providing a platform and movement for people to spread misinformation. She said the group should condemn the actions that took place that prevented school officials from conducting important school district business.

“The name of the group Let Them Breathe is in and of itself misinformation, masks don’t prevent you from breathing ... they can’t breathe if they get COVID and are hooked up to a ventilator,” Dow said.

Dow said she stopped by the school district meeting on Thursday to provide a thank you note to district staff for their work. She said she had been to many meetings previously, but had never seen anything like the events of Thursday night.

“This was a whole different thing,” she said. “The district staff just looked stunned.”

The school board said in the statement that the public was notified that there would be limited in-person attendance at the meeting because of COVID safety protocols. The meeting was livestreamed and accessible virtually to the public — many of whom signed up in advance to speak online.

“However, due to the ongoing presence of protesters who refused to leave the meeting room and verbally abused the staff, law enforcement advised adjourning the meeting to ensure the safety of our staff and students,” the board said.

The San Diego Police Department, which the board said had advised the members to adjourn the meeting, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It’s unclear when the meeting will be rescheduled.
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Here are the idiots who recorded themselves LARP'ing as a school board.


The Karen filming telling the actual school board that they can go is something that I can't describe. I really hope that they all end up in jail for long enough to shake their faith in their privilege to terrorize.
 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
I really hope that they all end up in jail
Your fear is palpable. (That means it's obvious and nearly visible)

I really hope you don't suffer a long and horrible death from the shame of your coming vaccine(s) regret.

I wish you a speedy recovery from your instilled obedience. You are not alone in your shame, millions will be joining you, soon, if they survive.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Your fear is palpable. (That means it's obvious and nearly visible)

I really hope you don't suffer a long and horrible death from the shame of your coming vaccine(s) regret.

I wish you a speedy recovery from your instilled obedience. You are not alone in your shame, millions will be joining you, soon, if they survive.
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
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Two of the Republican "show ponies" accused of fomenting the Jan. 6 insurrection are now decapitating President Joe Biden's ability to protect national security, according to a new report.

Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Josh Hawley (R-MO) have been blocking scores of nominees to critical national security positions in the Departments of Defense, State, Justice and Homeland Security, leaving the United States more vulnerable to attack, argued Daily Beast columnist David Rothkopf.

"Among the lessons we learned from the 9/11 Commission Report is the imperative of swift confirmation of a new administration's nominees, especially in the national security and foreign policy realm," said assistant Secretary of State and department spokesperson Ned Price. "Yet today, some 80 State Department nominees — including some of our most important posts — are pending before the Senate. Some of those have already been voted out of committee on a strong bipartisan basis and merely await a floor vote. The bottom line is that America needs its full team on the field if we are to confront challenges and seize opportunities most effectively. And, right now, we don't have that team at our disposal."

The 9/11 Commission found that only 57 percent of such positions were filled as of Sept. 11, 2001, while today only 26 percent of the new administration's appointees have been confirmed, including just one ambassador.

"That this is not more of a scandal is scandalous," said Loren DeJonge Schulman, vice president for research at the Partnership for Public Service. "The broken and deeply politicized Senate confirmation process made our country less safe then — the 9/11 attacks spotlighted that. It has worsened significantly since that time and it makes us less safe now."

"Our incredible body of federal civil servants is why this trend is an embarrassment, not a continuous disaster," Schulman added. "They serve admirably and responsibly no matter the season. However, there are real limits to the power, reach, authority, and effectiveness of acting officials. Many are performing multiple roles. There is no denying the 'substitute teacher' perception even with the most competent acting officials. Further, long-term utilization of acting officials — particularly when hampered by Senate inaction — actually ends up undermining Congressional oversight."

Cruz put a hold on 30 nominees until the Biden administration agreed to sanction the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project that will bring gas from Russia to Europe, and Hawley threatened to block all nominees until top officials resigned over the Afghanistan withdrawal.

"If an enemy of the United States wanted to decapitate America's national security leadership, they could hardly do a better job of it than Sens. Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley have by blocking scores of top nominees, leaving critical positions unfilled by the men and women the president of the United States has selected for those jobs," Rothkopf wrote. "The hypocrisy of criticizing Biden's foreign policy while they hobble it would be mind-blowing if it wasn't coming from two reckless partisans who egged on the mob that eventually stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6."
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/article/police-7d957f74410074dab59b62bb3c389a25
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The newly installed chief of the U.S. Capitol Police says the force, still struggling six months after an insurrection that left its officers battled, bloodied and bruised, “cannot afford to be complacent.” The risk to lawmakers is higher than ever. And the threat from lone-wolf attackers is only growing.

In an interview with The Associated Press, J. Thomas Manger said his force is seeing a historically high number of threats against lawmakers, thousands more than just a few years ago. He predicts authorities will respond to close to 9,000 threats against members of Congress in 2021 — more than 4,100 had been reported from January to March.

“We have never had the level of threats against members of Congress that we’re seeing today,” Manger said. “Clearly, we’ve got a bigger job in terms of the protection aspect of our responsibilities, we’ve got a bigger job than we used to.”

Manger touted changes that have been made in intelligence gathering after the department was widely criticized for being woefully underprepared to fend off a mob of insurrectionists in January. Officials had compiled intelligence showing white supremacists and other extremists were likely to assemble in Washington on Jan. 6 and that violent disruptions were possible. Police officers were brutally beaten in the insurrection. Five people died.

The events of that day have redefined how the U.S. Capitol police and other law enforcement agencies in Washington approach security. Extreme measures put into place two weeks ago for a rally in support of those jailed in the riot aren’t a one-off, they might be the new normal. Propelled by former President Donald Trump, the awakening of domestic extremist groups and the continued volatility around the 2020 election have changed the calculus.

Manger said putting up temporary fencing around the Capitol and calling in reinforcements was a prudent decision. It may not be the same for every demonstration.

“It’s really going to depend on the intelligence we have beforehand,” he said. “It’s going to depend on the potential for violence at a particular demonstration.”

With Manger, the police force got a longtime lawman. He served as chief in Maryland’s Montgomery County, outside Washington, from 2004 to 2019. Before that, he led the Fairfax County, Virginia, police department. Those jobs, as well as a leadership position in the Major Cities Chiefs Association, have made him a familiar face in Washington law enforcement circles and on Capitol Hill.

He took over in late July, months after the former chief resigned amid the fallout from the insurrection. The Sept. 18 rally was Manger’s first test — and he was taking no chances.

“We just were in a position where we could not allow another January 6th,” he said. “And I really needed to ensure that the men and women of the Capitol Police department understood that we had the resources we need, the training that we needed, the equipment that we needed, and the staffing that we needed to ensure that they could do their job and do it safely.”

In the end, police far outnumbered the protesters and the Capitol officers were mocked by some for going overboard. But Michael Chertoff, a Homeland Security secretary during the George W. Bush administration, said it’s just smart policing to learn from mistakes and be better prepared the next time, and so what if there’s too many police milling around — if the result is no one is killed or hurt.

“When you get demonstrations that are advertised or pitch to right wing or left wing extremists, I think you’re going to see that they’re going to lean into a visible show of protection, maybe more than they need but enough to make it clear they won’t be overwhelmed again,” he said.

Chertoff, who now runs the Chertoff Group security and cybersecurity risk management, said such fortifications won’t be necessary for every free speech event planned in the nation’s capital, but law enforcement must be better prepared when it comes to people who have expressed sympathy for Jan. 6, because there is strong reason to believe they’re sympathetic to the idea of using violent force to disrupt government. Because it already happened.

The Capitol Police are part security agency, part local police — it has an annual budget of approximately $460 million and about 2,300 officers and civilian employees to police the Capitol grounds and the people inside the building, including all the lawmakers and staff. By contrast, the entire city of Minneapolis has about 800 sworn officers and a budget of roughly $193 million.

A scathing internal report earlier this year found that serious gaps in tactical gear including weapons, training and intelligence capabilities contributed to security problems during the Jan. 6 melee. In his report, obtained by the AP, Capitol Police Inspector General Michael A. Bolton cast serious doubt on the force’s ability to respond to future threats and another large-scale attack.

But then a second task force later charged with reviewing Jan. 6 said the Capitol Police already has the ability to “track, assess, plan against or respond” to threats from domestic extremists who continue to potentially target the building.

The report recommended a major security overhaul, including the funding of hundreds of new officer positions and establishing a permanent “quick response force” for emergencies.

But those changes would require massive influx of money. In a $2.1 billion measure in July, Congress delegated nearly $71 million, with much of that funding going to cover overtime costs.

Still, Manger said, “I think that what we have in place today is an improvement over what we had a year ago or nine months ago.”

The event, which Republican lawmakers and Trump and his allies have sought to downplay and dismiss, has prompted a surge in applications to join the force. Manger likened it to police and firefighter applications after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Manger also defended keeping on Yogananda Pittman, the Capitol Police official who led intelligence operations for the agency ahead of January’s attack. Pittman, who was elevated to acting chief with a tenure marred by a vote of no-confidence from rank-and-file officers on the force and questions about intelligence and leadership failures, is back in charge of intelligence and protecting congressional leaders.

“This notion that I should come in and just fire everybody on the leadership team because they failed on January 6th ... first of all, this department was in enough chaos without me firing everybody,” he said, “and then where would I have been without any experience on my leadership team to rely on and to assist me going forward?”
 
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