• 'More violence' if Biden doesn't listen, says Proud Boys leader

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Friday, February 05, 2021 08:11:00
    From: slider@anashram.com

    The Biden administration has just launched a review into domestic
    terrorism in the wake of the siege on the Capitol.

    A number of groups are being looked at, including the Proud Boys. Canada recently designated it as a terrorist entity, in part for its alleged role
    in the 6 January riot.

    https://news.sky.com/story/more-violence-if-biden-doesnt-listen-says-proud-boys-leader-12208871

    Online, there's also been a crackdown, with apps closed and groups like
    the Proud Boys denied access.

    But the group's leader, Enrique Tarrio, told Sky News the clampdown will backfire if Mr Biden doesn't find a way to listen to people's grievances.

    "I think that, yes, there will be more violence," he said.

    "You keep silencing people. You keep de-platforming them, de-financing
    them, dehumanising them, and they're going to react. It's an expected reaction."

    Seven members of the group are facing charges in connection to the riot,
    three on conspiracy charges, which Mr Tarrio thinks are overblown and will ultimately not stick.

    But many argue tougher action is exactly what's needed. And it's not just
    the actions of those who went to the Capitol on the 6th that are under the microscope, but the political rhetoric in Washington too.

    Republican ties to conspiracy theories and militia groups are under
    scrutiny, with rising concern about politicians giving a mainstream
    platform for extreme ideas.

    One congressional freshman from Colorado has sparked a lot of controversy.

    Congresswoman Lauren Boebert has been accused of embracing the far right.
    On the day of the Capitol riot she tweeted "Today is 1776", and last year declared "I am the militia".

    A Democrat colleague claimed she may have led a reconnaissance tour of the Capitol days before the siege.

    Ms Boebert vehemently denied that accusation, stating that she only showed
    a small group of family members. She has also condemned the violence.

    But in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, Mayor Jonathan Godes is one of group of local politicians who've called for an investigation into Ms Boebert's
    links to militia groups.

    Forty minutes away in Rifle, Colorado, where Ms Boebert runs an open-carry restaurant called Shooters Grill, support is easy to find for the pro-gun congresswoman.

    One customer, Charles, tells me: "I think she's a champion… Good looking little old gal with a pistol gets elected to Congress out of this town,
    are you kidding me? That's like rock star."

    Ms Boebert's business is a bit of a local mecca for pro-gun enthusiasts.

    One of the men charged in connection with the riot, Robert Gieswein, was pictured outside the restaurant with a rifle.

    He's allegedly affiliated with the 3 Percenters Movement that says it aims
    to protect Americans against government tyranny.

    But Mike Morris, a co-founder of 3 Percent United Patriots, said wearing 3 Percenters insignia doesn't mean you're a true member.

    "It's just like saying, you know, how did you feel when the Unabomber
    bombed somebody when he was wearing Nikes?

    He says he condemns the violence at the Capitol, but believes - like
    Enrique Tarrio - that an online crackdown is forcing people underground
    and making them more extreme.

    Back in Rifle, gun shop owner Edward Wilks - who says he's provided
    security for Lauren Boebert at events - says longstanding, pro-second
    amendment militia are being unfairly conflated with violent extremists and
    that the real threat comes from the radical left.

    "Republicans, conservatives, gun owners, stereotypically speaking, tend to
    be more level-headed and calm," he insists. Antifa, he believes, are far
    more of an issue.

    What struck me the most in investigating those charged in connection with
    the Capitol is how broad they were.

    The images of combat fatigues in the Capitol painted an extreme portrait
    of the rioters. A lot of attention has focused on extreme groups.

    But early investigations suggest there were many more individuals, middle
    aged and middle class and often unaffiliated to any organisation.

    Driving round some of the neighbourhoods of those charged and speaking to
    some of their friends, you get a sense that there is something much deeper
    and complex that America needs to confront.

    People without criminal pasts felt compelled to risk breaking the law on January 6th.

    After years of deepening resentment they were convinced the election was stolen, enraged by the idea of a freedom sucking pandemic.

    Rachel Nielsen, a domestic extremism analyst in Colorado, told me it
    created a "breeding ground for extremism".

    It didn't take long for America to get to the point it did at the start of
    this year, but it could take much longer to repair the damage. Listening
    and understanding people's rage may be the key to that.

    ### - awww the poor militia, everyone's pickin' on them now??

    so misunderstood and marginalised, and when all they wanted was a bit
    of... anarchy! LOL !

    was a time when 'everyone' knew the gun-toting militia were just a bunch
    of nuts?

    not anymore though! now they's rock stars!?

    riiiiiight.... :D

    wallyworld madness rules again!

    roflmao...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From chris rodgers@1:229/2 to All on Sunday, February 07, 2021 08:17:47
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qQ__xrUF3Y

    consider this perhaps all of us are guests here.

    the grand designer brought everyone here as a 'guest'

    you don't own anything, even the body you are in was

    given to you. So act like the guest you are, what else

    can a poor guest do? :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From o'Mahoney@1:229/2 to allreadydun@gmail.com on Monday, February 08, 2021 16:17:43
    From: libertidad@south.south.com

    On Sun, 7 Feb 2021 08:17:47 -0800 (PST), chris rodgers
    <allreadydun@gmail.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qQ__xrUF3Y

    consider this perhaps all of us are guests here.

    the grand designer brought everyone here as a 'guest'

    you don't own anything, even the body you are in was

    given to you. So act like the guest you are, what else

    can a poor guest do? :)

    Considered, and disposed.

    We are ihabitants on a little goldilocks world circling a standard GO
    orange star with a bit over 5 billion years of fusion left before it
    burns out and goes all wihite dwarf, after annihilating the close
    planets such as earth when it expands into a preceding red sun in its
    death throes.

    We'll all be so long gone then our entire "civilizatioin' won't be
    memory in any of the inconceviebly different organisms extant then, if
    there are in fact any at all.

    The sun, our star, being completely standard middle spectrum, is one
    of around 300.000.000.000 in this galaxy alone.

    Our galaxy is one in around 2,000,000,000,000 galaxies we can observe
    because light can still reach us from a diameter of 95 billion light
    years - our observable cone of light and therefore universe.

    300 billion * 2 trilliion = 600,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars we
    can observe. If there's around 6 planets per star, that's around 1,800,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 planets, not counting the dark
    planets shooting through space with no star anchoring them
    gravitationally. There are trillioins of them, evidently.

    And that is only the observable universe. There is a strong belief
    that the universe is in fact infinite. That this density of star
    matter and planets and other lumps of matter extends through space,
    forever and eternally.

    So, are we really "guests' here?

    I think not. We're random, we die and that's it. All over, red
    rover.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From chris rodgers@1:229/2 to o'Mahoney on Monday, February 08, 2021 16:42:26
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    On Monday, February 8, 2021 at 12:17:48 AM UTC-8, o'Mahoney wrote:
    On Sun, 7 Feb 2021 08:17:47 -0800 (PST), chris rodgers
    <allre...@gmail.com> wrote:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qQ__xrUF3Y

    consider this perhaps all of us are guests here.

    the grand designer brought everyone here as a 'guest'

    you don't own anything, even the body you are in was

    given to you. So act like the guest you are, what else

    can a poor guest do? :)

    Considered, and disposed.



    So, are we really "guests' here?

    I think not. We're random, we die and that's it. All over, red
    rover.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8zUawrwyAg

    stop at 1:55 there chief. Your friends do treat you like a guest.
    So sez Grace the Slick way back in '67. Therefore it might be
    true. Keep watching that little video daily for about a week,
    and see it perhaps as the grand designer is talking to you.
    Stretch your imagination a little. I'm referring to the "Be our Guest"
    you tube video. Consider it as a little self therapy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)