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Thread: Impeachment or the 25th before the 20th?

  1. #161
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    Some of the arrested rioters. One is the son of a County Supreme Court Judge, who is a much respected member of the Jewish community. Another a retired Air Force Lt. Colonel. [ no surprise there really. ] Most seem to be your average crazy.

    Capitol riot arrests: The MAGA mob leaders arrested so far (msn.com)
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  2. #162
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    The Republican Senators who have indicated they will vote for impeachment. I think a lot depends on what the President does between now and the 20th. Although it seems highly unlikely it would pass through the senate, the President has burned a lot of bridges.

    The House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump and the Senators who might join them (msn.com)
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  3. #163
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    Quote Originally Posted by bob10 View Post
    Some of the arrested rioters. One is the son of a County Supreme Court Judge, who is a much respected member of the Jewish community. Another a retired Air Force Lt. Colonel. [ no surprise there really. ] Most seem to be your average crazy.

    Capitol riot arrests: The MAGA mob leaders arrested so far (msn.com)
    The FBI has identified former and serving, police, fire fighters. military and are interested in finding a group in camo that moved thru the crowd in "Ranger File" The formation, known as "Ranger File," is standard operating procedure for a combat team that is "stacking up" to breach a building — instantly recognizable to any U.S. soldier or Marine who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. The formation, known as "Ranger File,"... - FOX6 News Milwaukee | Facebook
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  4. #164
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    Let's hope Donny's not too au fait with Nepaleon's antics.
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  5. #165
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    Don’t forget the extreme Left are not exactly enamoured with Biden. It probably helps explain why there were BLM and Antifa members identified in the crowds too. I would love to know who stole Pelosi’s laptop though!!
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  6. #166
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    Quote Originally Posted by cripesamighty View Post
    Don’t forget the extreme Left are not exactly enamoured with Biden. It probably helps explain why there were BLM and Antifa members identified in the crowds too. I would love to know who stole Pelosi’s laptop though!!
    Totally debunked that Antifa/BLM people were in the crowd.

    Rioters are learning there are consequences for actions, so are trying for a get out of gaol free card.
    Jenna Ryan, Who Took Jet to Capitol Riot, Asks Donald Trump for a Pardon

  7. #167
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    Quote Originally Posted by RANDLOVER View Post
    The FBI has identified former and serving, police, fire fighters. military and are interested in finding a group in camo that moved thru the crowd in "Ranger File" The formation, known as "Ranger File," is standard operating procedure for a combat team that is "stacking up" to breach a building — instantly recognizable to any U.S. soldier or Marine who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. The formation, known as "Ranger File,"... - FOX6 News Milwaukee | Facebook
    There are so many ex-military types in the US making money out of " training " wannabes off the street in the tactics used in various situations, but they owe their existence more to Hollywood than Afghanistan. However, there are a minority of radical angry veterans who have embedded themselves in groups such as the White Supremacist movement, but these people are not silly enough to draw attention to themselves. What you are seeing is the " wannabes " getting their 15 minutes of fame. If the professionals had been there, we would be talking a different story today. [ But I don't think they are foolish enough to join in with that rabble] .My take on the " ranger file " Silly sods.

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    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  8. #168
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    Just an addition to my previous post. A former helicopter mechanic, not exactly a member of a Marine TAG.

    Last week’s storming of the Capitol attracted a wide range of people, but at least some of the individuals who made it into the building’s inner chambers appear to be members of militia groups, acting with a degree of coördination. Wearing tactical gear, they moved in an organized fashion, using handheld radios and headsets to communicate.
    Far-right groups at the Capitol included the Oath Keepers, the Three Percenters, the Proud Boys, and the Boogaloo Bois, as well as smaller local organizations.

    Donovan Crowl, a fifty-year-old former marine, who had served as a helicopter mechanic on an amphibious assault ship in the Persian Gulf, in 1990, was among the uniformed men. At the Capitol, Crowl wore a combat helmet, ballistic goggles, and a tactical vest with a handheld radio. In a video, he can be seen in a line of people making their way through the crowd up the Capitol steps, each with a hand on the shoulder of the one in front.
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  9. #169
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    Will they, or won't they? That is the question. From the New York Times.

    Murkowski signals she is open to convicting Trump as the timing of the Senate impeachment trial remains unclear.







    Senator Lisa Murkowski speaks at a news conference in the Capitol building.Credit...Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

    Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, said on Thursday that the House had acted “appropriately” in impeaching President Trump, signaling possible support for convicting him at a Senate trial in a statement that called his actions “unlawful” and said that they warranted consequences.
    Ms. Murkowski said the second impeachment of Mr. Trump stood “in stark contrast” to the first, which she and virtually every other Republican opposed. She said Mr. Trump had perpetuated “false rhetoric that the election was stolen and rigged” and launched a “pressure campaign against his own vice president, urging him to take actions that he had no authority to do.”

    And though Ms. Murkowski did not commit to finding the president guilty, saying she would listen carefully to the arguments on both sides, she strongly suggested that she was inclined to do so.

    “On the day of the riots, President Trump’s words incited violence, which led to the injury and deaths of Americans — including a Capitol Police officer — the desecration of the Capitol, and briefly interfered with the government’s ability to ensure a peaceful transfer of power,” Ms. Murkowski said.

    Her remarks came the day after the House — with support from 10 Republicans — impeached the president on a single charge of “incitement of insurrection,” and as Republicans faced the prospect of a trial that could begin as soon as next week.

    Republicans were racing to gauge the political dynamics of a vote to convict Mr. Trump, which would open the door to disqualifying him from holding office in the future. Most of them kept their powder dry publicly, but were privately struggling to reconcile their own disdain for the leader they supported loyally for years and their fear of a backlash from a political base more devoted to Mr. Trump than any other party figure.

    Though few Republicans had gone on record in such stinging terms, Ms. Murkowski was not alone in breaking from the president. Senators Mitt Romney of Utah, Ben Sasse of Nebraska, Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania and Susan Collins of Maine had spoken out harshly against Mr. Trump, leaving colleagues to speculate that they could vote to convict him and bar him from ever holding office again.


    Even Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, indicated to colleagues that he was undecided about whether to convict Mr. Trump, and privately told advisers he approved of the impeachment drive and believed it could help the party purge Mr. Trump.

    Others in the party, led by Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, were pushing back hard against a conviction, warning it would harm the party and the country, as federal authorities cautioned about continued violent threats from pro-Trump extremists.

    With Mr. McConnell sending mixed signals about where he would come down, Republican strategists and seniors aides on Capitol Hill believed he could ultimately swing the result one way or another. If all senators voted, it would take 17 Republicans joining all Democrats to convict Mr. Trump. If they did, it would only take a vote by a simple majority of senators to disqualify Mr. Trump from ever holding office again.

    Nicholas Fandos
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

  10. #170
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    The GOP, a party divided.



    Representative Liz Cheney had issued a scathing statement the day before the impeachment vote repudiating President Trump.Credit...Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

    A group of President Trump’s most strident allies in the House is calling on Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the No. 3 Republican, to resign from her leadership post after she voted to impeach Mr. Trump, dramatizing the bitter rifts within the party and setting up a messy internal feud that could define its future.

    Members of the ultraconservative Freedom Caucus, including the chairman, Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona, as well as Representatives Jim Jordan of Ohio and Matt Gaetz of Florida, are circulating a petition calling on Ms. Cheney to step down from her role as chairwoman of the House Republican Conference, arguing that her vote to impeach Mr. Trump had “brought the conference into disrepute and produced discord.”


    Ms. Cheney was one of 10 Republicans to break with the party on Wednesday and vote to charge the president with “incitement of insurrection” for his role in urging on a mob that stormed the Capitol.

    “One of those 10 cannot be our leader,” Mr. Gaetz said in an interview on Fox News’s “Hannity” on Wednesday evening. “It is untenable, unsustainable, and we need to make a leadership change.”

    Ms. Cheney has brushed aside calls to step down, saying that she was “not going anywhere” and calling her break with Mr. Trump “a vote of conscience.” Several Republicans, including some members of the Freedom Caucus, have begun to circle the wagons around her.

    “The entire party would be wise to heed the words of Ronald Reagan: ‘The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and an ally, not a 20 percent traitor,’” said Representative Michael Burgess, Republican of Texas. “Yesterday, Republicans jumped on the calls for unity and healing no matter how they decided to vote. Removing Liz from her leadership position would be divisive and a distraction we cannot afford.”

    Representative Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, who also voted to impeach Mr. Trump, said that Ms. Cheney in the last week had “gained immeasurable respect,” and suggested that it was Republicans like Mr. Jordan who should be shoved aside in the wake of the siege and the impeachment it prompted.

    Since the discussion is opened, though, we may have to also have a discussion about who in our party fomented this, and their roles as ranking members,” he said.
    The debate over Ms. Cheney’s leadership post reflects the deep fractures in the Republican Party over Mr. Trump, who has demanded total loyalty from his party and, up until recently, largely received it.

    While prominent figures have recoiled from Mr. Trump’s incendiary brand of politics in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 riot, worrying that it could spell ruin for their party, a large minority faction — many of them in the House — remains unwilling to abandon him. Republicans are scrambling to determine the political consequences of doing so, and whether they would pay a steeper political price for breaking with the president or for failing to.

    Senate Republicans are facing just such a dilemma as they contemplate how to vote in an impeachment trial that could start as early as next week.

    Both Representatives Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader, and Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the minority whip, voted against impeaching Mr. Trump, though Mr. McCarthy said the president bore responsibility for the siege and deserved a censure.

    Ms. Cheney, by contrast, had issued a scathing statement the day before the impeachment vote in which she said: “There has never been a greater betrayal by a president of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constitution.”

    But she chose not to speak during debate on the House floor. Many Democrats — who have long reviled her and her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney — quoted her approvingly in their own speeches.

    Catie Edmondson
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

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