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No small thing


 

?Ding dong Trump¡¯s Twitter account is dead ?
This is big
Thank you karma




Sal


 

On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 05:16 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Ding dong Trump¡¯s Twitter account is dead ?
This is big
Thank you karma
This is imperative. Throw the megaphone out and the guy becomes even more impotent. All he has is his rage and bluster. He is a windbag. His hate will continue to foment among those who are also filled with rage. The ugly underbelly of America and her worst citizens has been exposed. It was always there but trump gave it a platform and threw some fertilizer on it. They must impeach and we have an immediate future of dire threats of violence towards all sorts of targets including politicians, black and brown people and those who oppose trump. No one is really safe. Every GOP member has a target on their back. There is no making the mob happy. They are out for blood and will spill it, for sure. Most rational people have now seen who trump really is. Pandering to his base by not going after him whole hog is an erroneous notion. There is no winning them over at this point. So, nail the bastard for all he's worth. His life as a free man is over.


WillyTex
 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 09:06 AM, awb wrote:
This is imperative. Throw the megaphone out and the guy becomes even more impotent.
The ban will only amp up online conspiracy groups, cloud computing, and online social media surveillance.


WillyTex
 

On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 07:16 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Trump¡¯s Twitter account is dead
Read on the internet:

"..if you think the election was unfree and unfair, as 30-40% of people apparently do according to polling, the fake election was the attack on democracy, and it already happened, making the government illegitimate!"


 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

If Trump wasn¡¯t headed for prison before (a big if) he surely is now. ?Unless he¡¯s planning on making a run for it his life as a free man is indeed over. ?And hopefully with it any perks of being ¡°president.¡±

And what did he accomplish? ?NOTHING. ?Except to make accomplices of some of the other GOP lowlifes... which probably makes him happy. ?Even their local papers are calling for Cruz and Hawley to resign. Good! ?Did you see Hawley¡¯s fist pump to the rioters? ?These POSs are using the tools of democracy to trash democracy. And Pence? ?Even after his life was put in significant danger he still refuses to invoke the 25th or even take Pelosi¡¯s calls. His sycophancy is only exceeded by his rudeness... and for all I know by avoiding Schumer et al he may be in some kind of ?violation of his oaths as well. Clearly these GOP traitors have no problem throwing the whole government under the bus when it suits them, it¡¯s almost as if they¡¯ve all taken a huge, obscenely large gulp of...



Sal


On Jan 9, 2021, at 9:06 AM, awb via groups.io <abater@...> wrote:

?On Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 05:16 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Ding dong Trump¡¯s Twitter account is dead ?
This is big
Thank you karma
This is imperative. Throw the megaphone out and the guy becomes even more impotent. All he has is his rage and bluster. He is a windbag. His hate will continue to foment among those who are also filled with rage. The ugly underbelly of America and her worst citizens has been exposed. It was always there but trump gave it a platform and threw some fertilizer on it. They must impeach and we have an immediate future of dire threats of violence towards all sorts of targets including politicians, black and brown people and those who oppose trump. No one is really safe. Every GOP member has a target on their back. There is no making the mob happy. They are out for blood and will spill it, for sure. Most rational people have now seen who trump really is. Pandering to his base by not going after him whole hog is an erroneous notion. There is no winning them over at this point. So, nail the bastard for all he's worth. His life as a free man is over.


 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 07:37 AM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
These POSs are using the tools of democracy to trash democracy. And Pence? ?Even after his life was put in significant danger he still refuses to invoke the 25th or even take Pelosi¡¯s calls.
Great line. Pence is scared for his life. However, he has put the fact that he will be seen as a "traitor" by the tRumpsters ahead of his duty to the country and Constitution, in effect a betrayal of monumental import.? I still hope against hope he will decide to invoke the 25th.? It would help burst the Q myths about tRump's invincibility, for one.? He'll probably pardon him (if Trump resigns - lol).?

The Republicans are no more.? The ones who aren't tRumpsters should declare themselves Independents and caucus with the Democrats to create a supermajority in Congress. Negotiations should occur within the pro-Democracy party.? Ice these guys out and render them impotent.? It will help to get them voted out.? Future candidates running for office need to be vetted and their allegiance to tRump exposed and used against them. The RNC is effectively the fundraising arm of the POT.? They welcomed him with open arms as their cult leader.? A violent cult whose purpose is to take democracy and the government down.? Personally, I believe we have to start talking in stark terms. There are millions of believers and secondary followers. I'm looking forward to the prosecutions, distracting as they may be, and his being carted off to prison. That will help a lot, a lot.
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Em


 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 07:06 AM, awb wrote:
So, nail the bastard for all he's worth. His life as a free man is over.
Exactly.? Disempower him and render him impotent.? Twitter did the exact right thing.? A little late.? Others platforms need to follow. Immediately.??
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Em


 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Pretty sure Facebook and Instagram did too, altho I¡¯m not sure for how long.

Sal


On Jan 9, 2021, at 11:37 AM, Emily Mae via groups.io <emily.mae50@...> wrote:

?On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 07:06 AM, awb wrote:
So, nail the bastard for all he's worth. His life as a free man is over.
Exactly.? Disempower him and render him impotent.? Twitter did the exact right thing.? A little late.? Others platforms need to follow. Immediately.??
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Em


 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 09:30 AM, Emily Mae wrote:
He'll probably pardon him (if Trump resigns - lol).?
If tRump doesn't resign and Pence invokes the 25th with the body that Congress approves if the Cabinet won't do it, there would be a peaceful transition of power with presidents from both administrations in attendance. Don't tell me why that just occurred to me!
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Em


 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Peaceful transfer of power? ?No way Trump is going to let that happen if he still has any say in the matter at all, more violence is supposedly planned for the 17th.

Sal


On Jan 9, 2021, at 7:33 PM, Emily Mae via groups.io <emily.mae50@...> wrote:

?On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 09:30 AM, Emily Mae wrote:
He'll probably pardon him (if Trump resigns - lol).?
If tRump doesn't resign and Pence invokes the 25th with the body that Congress approves if the Cabinet won't do it, there would be a peaceful transition of power with presidents from both administrations in attendance. Don't tell me why that just occurred to me!
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Em


 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 08:09 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Peaceful transfer of power? ?No way Trump is going to let that happen if he still has any say in the matter at all, more violence is supposedly planned for the 17th.

Sal
I'm still holding to my opinion that the storming of the Capital was the best thing that ever happened for "our" side. It was a bridge too far, a red line crossed, an act that disgusted even many Repugs. It was the most perfect example of why trump and his ilk are so hideous, so deranged and so desperate. We would be a in a very different place right now if Wednesday hadn't happened. And yes, there will be more blood and others will be killed and maimed and it will most likely include members of Congress. It will become apparent how and why the mob was able to access the Capital with so little real resistance and trump and those who are related to him by blood or simply enabled him to the end will be pariahs. The jokers, the so-called patriots and men happy to dress up and scream the injustices that plague them while smearing their own feces on the walls and rampaging the streets and hallways will strike again even as trump's power and influence wanes until it exists only in the darkest corners of the internet. He is very much done but the hate unleashed on America will live on in its various forms for many months, perhaps years, to come. Hate won't be destroyed - it will simply recede back underground from where it came before trump encouraged it to emerge as a tsunami.


WillyTex
 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 01:33 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Pretty sure Facebook and Instagram did too, altho I¡¯m not sure for how long.
Let's just call it what it is - censorship.? Don't say Trump was banned for breaking the rules.

The Ban of Trump on Twitter Is an Unacceptable Act of Censorship


WillyTex
 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 09:06 AM, awb wrote:
This is imperative. Throw the megaphone out
In more normal times, this ban would be considered frightening! YMMV.

Now big-tech owns the media. Go figure.

"The ability of a handful of people to control our public discourse has never been more obvious."

Twitter Shows Where Power Now Lies


 

On Sat, Jan 9, 2021 at 08:09 PM, Sal Sunshine wrote:
Peaceful transfer of power? ?No way Trump is going to let that happen if he still has any say in the matter at all, more violence is supposedly planned for the 17th.
Yes, the word "peaceful" applies only to the heavily protected area.? tRump has incited a civil war.? This isn't a one-off.? Luckily, I think the fact that most of the "army" just aren't demonstrating much intelligence. lThe tRump thumbprint is all over the tepid response.? He left Biden a civil war and an unchecked pandemic.
Hawley and Cruz and Flynn and all the Republicans who voted not to certify are part of the movement to dismantle and overthrow the government. I expect the FBI is going to get the authority to go after domestic terrorists.?

This article summarized what "we the sane ones" are dealing with.?

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The problem with devotion to a prophet of falsehoods is that reality eventually intrudes.

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It was a disorienting sequence for legions of supporters who believed Trump¡¯s lies that the election had been stolen from him but that he would prevail and reclaim it ¡ª especially those who had already descended into deeper, more disturbing conspiracies.


On the eve of the assault on the Capitol, Flynn delivered an incendiary speech riddled with falsehoods, claiming that more dead voters had cast ballots for Biden than filled the cemeteries of Gettysburg and Normandy.??He then issued a veiled threat to members of Congress. ¡°Those of you who are feeling weak tonight, those of you who don¡¯t have the moral fiber in your body ¡ª get some tonight because tomorrow we the people are going to be here,¡± Flynn said.

?


Clint Watts, a former FBI counterterrorism analyst, compared the rhetoric of Flynn, Giuliani and Trump with the radicalizing messages from leaders of al-Qaeda and??that so worried U.S. security officials in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

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¡°A decade ago, we worried [about] al-Qaeda ideologues inciting violence with speech, sending terrorists into places like [the] Capitol,¡± Watts said in a Jan. 7 post on Twitter. ¡°What did we observe over the past week by our elected leaders, their surrogates and their supporters?¡±


https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/trump-capitol-mob-attack-origins/2021/01/09/0cb2cf5e-51d4-11eb-83e3-322644d82356_story.html

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Em


 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 08:45 AM, Emily Mae wrote:
Yes, the word "peaceful" applies only to the heavily protected area. Which is ironic. tRump has incited a civil war.? This isn't a one-off.? Luckily, most of the "army" just aren't demonstrating much intelligence.
Corrected!
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Em


 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 06:43 AM, awb wrote:
I'm still holding to my opinion that the storming of the Capital was the best thing that ever happened for "our" side. It was a bridge too far, a red line crossed, an act that disgusted even many Repugs.
It brought things sharply into focus. Finally. Hard to ignore five people dead.? ?


?
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Em


 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 08:58 AM, Emily Mae wrote:
On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 06:43 AM, awb wrote:
I'm still holding to my opinion that the storming of the Capital was the best thing that ever happened for "our" side. It was a bridge too far, a red line crossed, an act that disgusted even many Repugs.
It brought things sharply into focus. Finally. Hard to ignore five people dead.? ?
And trump refuses to fly the flag at half staff for the fallen policeman and has not mentioned him at all.


 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 08:58 AM, Emily Mae wrote:
On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 06:43 AM, awb wrote:
I'm still holding to my opinion that the storming of the Capital was the best thing that ever happened for "our" side. It was a bridge too far, a red line crossed, an act that disgusted even many Repugs.
It brought things sharply into focus. Finally. Hard to ignore five people dead.? ?


?
--
Em

The day America realized how dangerous Donald Trump is

Updated 6:40 PM ET, Sat January 9, 2021

(CNN)When the history of the 45th presidency is written, Wednesday, January 6, will go down as the day America realized how dangerous President??really is.

In the span of hours, the country finally witnessed the price of its five-year experiment turning its election process into a reality show that produced an unhinged megalomanic as commander-in-chief who amassed so much power through his lies and fear-mongering that he was able to engineer an insurrection as a final act that left democracy dangling by a thread.
Wednesday's siege at the Capitol marked the culmination of Trump's years-long quest to cultivate a fiercely loyal base that would do anything for him by playing on their fears and resentments as he lured them into believing his incessant lies about the sinister motives of government, election fraud and his own conduct.
The consequences were deadly: five people have died as a result of Wednesday's riot, including a Capitol Police officer. Some of Trump's supporters were armed and ready for war: an Alabama man allegedly parked a pickup truck with 11 homemade bombs, an assault rifle and a handgun two blocks from the Capitol hours before authorities discovered it, according to federal prosecutors. Another man allegedly showed up with an assault rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, telling acquaintances he wanted to shoot or run over?.??were found near the headquarters of the Republican National Committee and the Democratic National Committee as authorities tried to dispel the mob and secure the Capitol.
But three days later, Trump appears no more aware of the consequences of his actions than on the day of the riot when he delighted in the mayhem. Bunkered at the White House with an ever-shrinking circle of aides, he has offered no remorse for inciting the crowd and offered only a forced denunciation of their actions. Aides, weary and disgusted, refuse to come near him. His central line to the outside world, Twitter, was severed Friday night. People who admired him, worked for him and followed him down dark paths before now say he has crossed into a delusional place, entirely detached from reality.
Supporters of President Donald Trump climb the west wall of the the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
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Wednesday's shocking events can be traced to the inception of Trump's candidacy. From the earliest days of the 2016 presidential race, his rallies crackled with tension and anger -- a testament to his skill in finding the fault lines on issues of class and race and exploiting them to draw in followers who felt marginalized and wronged by their leaders. His supporters had hungered for a charismatic leader like him who would empower the "silent majority" and serve as a voice for their grievances. He thrilled them as he blasted through societal norms and the guardrails of democracy, while offering safe harbor to White supremacists, conspiracy theorists, anti-government renegades, racists and anti-Semitic activists who fell in line behind a political figure who would channel their rage in exchange for their fealty.
As he lurched from one shocking maneuver to the next, Trump commanded the constant attention of the press, broadening his universe of followers as he used Twitter as his megaphone. By threatening to punish his critics and by firing civil servants who tried to check his thirst for power, he cowed members of the Republican Party and his own aides, who became complicit in his unraveling of democracy. Meanwhile, much of America grew numb to his circus act, shrugging off the magnetic power of Trumpism as though it was a passing fad.

Trump faces fallout

That all changed Wednesday as the country watched the mob encouraged by Trump scale the walls of Capitol, beating back police officers as they smashed through the historic building's doors and windows, shattering glass to force their way in bearing metal pipes, sticks and other weapons. Lawmakers from both parties were forced to cower below the seats in their respective chambers before being evacuated to secure locations, as the insurrectionists ransacked congressional offices and attempted to occupy the nation's seat of government on the day Congress was affirming President-elect Joe Biden as the winner of the 2020 election. The barbarism of the day was underscored by chilling reports that some of the Trump faithful were on the hunt for Vice President Mike Pence ¡ª who had refused to accede to the President's demand that he overthrow the election results and was presiding over the counting of the Electoral College votes.
As the horrifying riot unfolded in the "people's house," it became clear that Trump had finally gone too far. His political capital was already weakened by the Republicans' defeats in two runoff races in Georgia that were poisoned by the President's lies about voter fraud ¡ª with some in the GOP openly blaming Trump for their resulting loss of the Senate majority.
And the breach of the barricades that put the lives of the nation's lawmakers in danger began to break -- at least for now -- the spell that Trump has cast over his party. When order was restored some outraged Republicans condemned the President for his role in inciting the violence; others signaled it was time to move on and rebuild the??after four years in which the President has tried to bully them into submission.
With Democrats now poised for full control of Congress, Trump was now facing real consequences for his actions. During the overnight certification of results, which had been delayed by the rioters, the rumblings began among Democratic members of Congress about whether he could be ousted through the??for a second time to prevent him from holding office again.
Momentum has only grown among Democrats for fast-track??beginning next week, and the latest draft of the resolution obtained by CNN included one article of impeachment for "incitement of insurrection." Many Republicans, however, say that step is futile for a President who has less than two weeks left in his term.
Still as the glass was being swept up from the Capitol grounds, some?. More than a dozen administration officials, including two Cabinet secretaries, have resigned citing their concerns with Trump's response to the riot.
"I want him to resign. I want him out. He has caused enough damage," Alaska Sen.??told the Anchorage Daily News in a report published Friday, making her the first Republican senator to call on Trump to resign because of Wednesday's riot.
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Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, a frequent Trump critic who favored acquitting Trump in the first impeachment trial last year, said Friday during an interview on Hugh Hewitt's radio show that he was seriously considering whether he would vote to remove the President from office once articles of impeachment are introduced. "There are a lot of questions that we need to get to the bottom of," he said.
Sasse also voiced concerns about Trump's response to the riot, noting that senior White House officials had told him that Trump "wanted chaos on television" and was "confused about why other people on his team weren't as excited as he was" as rioters pummeled Capitol Police trying to get into the building.
"The question of 'Was the President derelict in his duty?' That's not an open question. He was," the Nebraska Republican said.
Earlier, Republican Utah Sen. Mitt Romney -- the lone GOP senator to vote to convict Trump in 2020 -- called Wednesday's invasion of the Capitol "an insurrection incited by the President," and Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, a member of the GOP leadership team, said the combination of the losses in the Georgia Senate races and the storming of the Capitol underscored the GOP's need to move beyond Trump.
"Our identity for the past several years now has been built around an individual," Thune told CNN this week. "You got to get back to where its built around a set of ideals and principles and policies."
Facing staff resignations and a looming impeachment, Trump made a meager attempt to mitigate the damage by finally acknowledging he won't be serving a second term in a prerecorded video Thursday evening. But the next day, he was tweeting about his supporters having a "giant voice" and said he would not attend President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration, a hint that he would continue his efforts to delegitimize the election results.
That was the final straw for Twitter, which announced that it was??"due to the risk of further incitement of violence." With his political fate hanging in the balance, he had been silenced, at least for the moment.

A day that encapsulated the danger of Trump

For weeks, while advancing the false claims that the presidential election was rigged and mired in fraud, Trump had whipped up excitement about the January 6 certification of results, inviting his supporters to descend on Washington and promising it would be "wild."
He arrived at the Ellipse to address the "Save America March" shortly after his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani warmed up the crowd by falsely suggesting voting machines were "crooked" and insisting that Pence could change the election outcome, which the vice president did not have the power to do. "Let's have trial by combat!" the former New York Mayor told the crowd as they awaited the President.
Backstage, Trump's son and his girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle, recorded themselves dancing to the soundtrack and encouraging Trump supporters to "fight."
President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a rally Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
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Inciting the crowd with an address threaded with lies -- including that "the states got defrauded" in the election and "want to revote" -- Trump stirred anger toward his vice president, telling the crowd once again that he hoped Pence would "do the right thing" -- pressuring him to toss out the election results, which would have been illegal and beyond the bounds of his constitutional authority.
He already knew that his vice president would not take that step. Pence had informed him in a tense conversation that he could not overturn the election results, leading Trump to curse at him, according to a source familiar with the conversation. But Trump did not let up at the Wednesday rally as he railed against "weak Republicans" and "pathetic Republicans" who refused to bend to his whims, while calling lawmakers who planned to contest the election results "warriors."
"We're gonna walk down to the Capitol. And we're gonna cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women," the President said as he marshaled the crowd for action. "You'll never take back our country with weakness, you have to show strength and you have to be strong."
But as his supporters marched down Pennsylvania Avenue and began their assault on the Capitol, Trump had returned to the White House consumed with his schemes for overriding an election that he lost with 232 electoral votes to Biden's 306. To the dismay of his aides, he delighted in watching the riot that injured dozens of officers and sent fears of a coup racing across the Capitol. Aides struggled to get him to understand how serious the situation had become. House Minority Leader?, one of the President's staunchest allies, had a "heated exchange" with the President as rioters overran the Capitol building, urging him to denounce the attack and try to quell the violence, according to a source briefed on the exchange. But Trump declined to do so. Asked on Fox whether he expected Trump to address the situation, McCarthy said only: "I don't know."
Trump did not even attempt to secure the safety of the vice president, even though several of his supporters who were part of the violent mob were heard shouting "Where's??" in the midst of their Capitol rampage. Those threats alarmed Pence and his family, a source close to the vice president told CNN's Jim Acosta, widening the breach between the President and Vice President.
In fact as the siege unfolded, Trump demonstrated the callous depths of his narcissism by trying to pressure senators to derail the affirmation of the election results, as they feared for their safety in the midst of a riot he had incited.
CNN reported Friday that Trump mistakenly called Republican Sen.??on his personal cell phone as the rampage was unfolding while trying to reach Sen. Tommy Tuberville, a newly elected Republican from Alabama. Lee fielded the President's call shortly after 2 p.m. ET, at a time when senators had been evacuated from the Senate floor to protect them from the approaching mob. Lee handed Tuberville his phone, a spokesman for the senator confirmed to CNN, and the President proceeded to try to convince Tuberville to slow down the certification of the Electoral College vote. The call ended when the senators were moved to a secure location.
At the White House, Trump's daughter and senior adviser Ivanka Trump and chief of staff Mark Meadows tried to convince Trump to record a message that would direct the rioters to stand down.
But the resulting message satisfied no one as he ad-libbed, telling the insurgents who had stormed the Capitol: "We love you. You're very special."
On Thursday, the??and condemnations of the President by former Trump staffers continued as shaken staff members cited real concerns about the stability and continuity of government. On Capitol Hill, GOP lawmakers expressed anger about Trump's role in that dark moment in the country's history.
Trump went about his business, including awarding the Presidential Medal of Freedom to a pair of professional golfers in the East Room. His attempts to proceed as normal angered some aides even further.
With the President increasingly isolated, Trump's aides, including his daughter, Meadows and White House Counsel?, warned him that he was in real danger of being removed or impeached. Though reluctant to denounce his supporters, he agreed to record a second video released Thursday where he acknowledged a new administration is coming -- without congratulating Biden. (Cipollone is now among those who are considering resigning, two sources familiar with his thinking told CNN's Pamela Brown.)
But Trump's thinking hadn't changed.
"I think that video was done only because almost all his senior staff was about to resign, and impeachment is imminent," a White House adviser, who spoke with senior officials as the debacle was unfolding, told CNN's Jim Acosta. "That message and tone should have been relayed election night ... not after people died."
Later, Trump appeared to some aides like he regretted taping the spot, asking those around him whether it was being well received.
The arrests of Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol began to pile up Friday including Derrick Evans, a??who is being charged with entering a restricted area and entering the US Capitol, and Richard Barnett of Arkansas who was photographed sitting at a desk in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office during the Capitol siege. Barnett was charged with knowingly entering and remaining in restricted building grounds without authority, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds as well as the theft of public property, federal officials said Friday.
Lonnie Leroy Coffman of Alabama, who allegedly parked the pickup truck with the weapons cache near the Capitol Hill Club near the Capitol, told police he also had mason jars filled with "melted Styrofoam and gasoline" -- a combination that could have the same effect as napalm if it exploded, court documents said, because "it causes the flammable liquid to stick to objects that it hits upon detonation."
While the possibility of removal of the President through the 25th Amendment looks increasingly remote, in part because Pence has no interest in participating in that process, more Republicans are turning their attention to helping Biden transition into the job.
McCarthy rejected calls for Trump's impeachment Friday, but referred to Biden as the President-elect for the first time: "I have reached out to President-elect Biden today and plan to speak to him about how we must work together to lower the temperature and unite the country to solve America's challenges," the California Republican said.
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After Trump indicated in one of his final tweets that he won't attend Biden's inauguration, the President-elect expressed relief at the prospect of his absence Friday, stating it was the one of the few things they had ever agreed on. Pence, however, would be welcome to attend, Biden said.
Wednesday's events, Biden argued, proved that Trump is "not fit to serve." If the nation were six months from inauguration, Biden said, he would be all for "moving everything" to get Trump out of office, including invoking the 25th Amendment. But with less than two weeks to go, the President-elect said he was focused "on us taking control" and would leave decisions about impeachment up to the Congress.
The President's encouragement of a mob Wednesday, Biden said, reminded him of what happens in nations with tin horn dictators. But he said the country's realization of the danger Trump poses could make his job easier as he attempts to unite a divided country -- though that remains an open question.
"I've had a number of Republicans who are former colleagues call me. They are as embarrassed and mortified by the President's conduct as the Democrats are," Biden said Friday. "What this President has done is ripped the band-aid all the way off to let the country know who he is, and what he's about, and how thoroughly unfit for office he is."


 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Six, one of the Capitol police committed suicide yesterday or today ? His death and the five others are all on Trump, Cruz, Hawley etc. ?

Sal


On Jan 10, 2021, at 10:58 AM, Emily Mae via groups.io <emily.mae50@...> wrote:

?On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 06:43 AM, awb wrote:
I'm still holding to my opinion that the storming of the Capital was the best thing that ever happened for "our" side. It was a bridge too far, a red line crossed, an act that disgusted even many Repugs.
It brought things sharply into focus. Finally. Hard to ignore five people dead.? ?


?
--
Em


 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 09:43 AM, awb wrote:
And trump refuses to fly the flag at half staff for the fallen policeman and has not mentioned him at all.
So very sad. Trump has never cared about human life.? Except his own and his children's.? I'm sure he's figuring out how he's going to get back on Twitter via some surrogate I'd guess.? I hope each of these companies has an "anti-terrorism" group.? It's time to step up.??

Also, good article. Yep, he's an unhinged megalomaniac.? He literally put a hit out on Pence.? God was with Congress that day.??
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Em