AMERICA KNOWS WHY THEY WANT TO TAKE AWAY YOUR RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS

Kyle Rittenhouse took out three ANTIFA punks by exercising his 2nd Amendment right, that is to “Bear Arms.” Imagine if he did not have this right, where would he be? DEAD!

The socialist left wish it that way because they want total control of the populace. In other words they are currently bedeviled by the 2nd Amendment and to diminish your God given right to self defense, they affectively will reduce you to a nothing.

.

MSNBC host blasts GOP ‘White supremacists’ after Rittenhouse verdict: ‘I find these people disgusting’

Liberal MSNBC host Tiffany Cross blasted Republican members of Congress as “White supremacists” on Saturday, one day after a Wisconsin jury acquitted Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse.

Cross, host of “The Cross Connection,” specifically took aim at U.S. Reps. Matt Gaetz of Florida and Paul Gosar of Arizona, Mediaite.com reported. Her comments came during a conversation with The Nation journalist Elie Mystal, who was also critical of the GOP.

During the conversation, Cross referred to 18-year-old Rittenhouse as “this little murderous White supremacist,” even though the jury agreed Rittenhouse acted in self-defense last year when he shot three people, killing two, and that all three people he shot, like Rittenhouse, were White.

HANNITY – “SUE THEM ALL”

Hannity advises Rittenhouse on response to media, Democrat smears: ‘Sue them all’

Boston’s congresswoman Ayanna Pressley called Rittenhouse a ‘domestic terrorist’ in 2020

In his Opening Monologue, host Sean Hannity suggested acquitted Illinois teenager Kyle Rittenhouse sue several Democratic officials and media pundits for what he called slanderous behavior.

“Kyle Rittenhouse should sue them all, all of them,” said Hannity. “Starting with Joe Biden.”

Then-candidate Joe Biden included an image of Rittenhouse in a 2020 campaign video calling out “White supremacists.”

Hannity also pointed to other officials including Boston’s Democratic congresswoman, Ayanna Pressley – as well as Texas gubernatorial candidate Robert F. “Beto” O’Rourke, New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler, St. Louis Democratic Rep. Cori Bush – along with outlets CBS News and NBC News & MSNBC.

In 2020, Pressley tweeted that Rittenhouse was a “17-year-old white supremacist domestic terrorist” and falsely claimed he “drove across state lines armed with an AR-15.”

Rittenhouse, an Illinois resident, procured the weapon used in the shooting incident while in Wisconsin. Pressley further asked that the media “fix [its] damn headlines.”

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MARCH 24: U.S. Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) speaks before the swearing in of Kim Janey as the Mayor of Boston at City Hall on March 24, 2021. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 24: U.S. Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) speaks before the swearing in of Kim Janey as the Mayor of Boston at City Hall on March 24, 2021. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images) (Getty)

The host also pointed to Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from the Twin Cities  – who characterized Rittenhouse as a “domestic terrorist that executed two people”

On “Hannity,” the host went on to point to other more recent examples of left-wing outrage, including from Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.

In a fiery tweet earlier in the evening, the Upper West Side lawmaker called the verdict a “miscarriage of justice” and suggested the DOJ take a closer look at the “precedent” it set.

“Kyle Rittenhouse based on the law and the evidence and video evidence and testimony is innocent,” Hannity said. “He acted in self-defense. This is backed by eyewitness accounts and even the prosecution’s star witness backed this up in court. A jury confirmed what has been obvious for months – obvious to everyone acting in good faith.”

Hannity advises Rittenhouse on response to media, Democrat smears: ‘Sue them all’

Boston’s congresswoman Ayanna Pressley called Rittenhouse a ‘domestic terrorist’ in 2020

In his Opening Monologue, host Sean Hannity suggested acquitted Illinois teenager Kyle Rittenhouse sue several Democratic officials and media pundits for what he called slanderous behavior.

“Kyle Rittenhouse should sue them all, all of them,” said Hannity. “Starting with Joe Biden.”

Then-candidate Joe Biden included an image of Rittenhouse in a 2020 campaign video calling out “White supremacists.”

Hannity also pointed to other officials including Boston’s Democratic congresswoman, Ayanna Pressley – as well as Texas gubernatorial candidate Robert F. “Beto” O’Rourke, New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler, St. Louis Democratic Rep. Cori Bush – along with outlets CBS News and NBC News & MSNBC.

In 2020, Pressley tweeted that Rittenhouse was a “17-year-old white supremacist domestic terrorist” and falsely claimed he “drove across state lines armed with an AR-15.”

Rittenhouse, an Illinois resident, procured the weapon used in the shooting incident while in Wisconsin. Pressley further asked that the media “fix [its] damn headlines.”

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MARCH 24: U.S. Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) speaks before the swearing in of Kim Janey as the Mayor of Boston at City Hall on March 24, 2021. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 24: U.S. Representative Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) speaks before the swearing in of Kim Janey as the Mayor of Boston at City Hall on March 24, 2021. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images) (Getty)

The host also pointed to Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from the Twin Cities  – who characterized Rittenhouse as a “domestic terrorist that executed two people”

On “Hannity,” the host went on to point to other more recent examples of left-wing outrage, including from Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.

In a fiery tweet earlier in the evening, the Upper West Side lawmaker called the verdict a “miscarriage of justice” and suggested the DOJ take a closer look at the “precedent” it set.

“Kyle Rittenhouse based on the law and the evidence and video evidence and testimony is innocent,” Hannity said. “He acted in self-defense. This is backed by eyewitness accounts and even the prosecution’s star witness backed this up in court. A jury confirmed what has been obvious for months – obvious to everyone acting in good faith.”

WAITING FOR THE ARBERY VERDICT – GUNNED DOWN IN COLD BLOOD BY WHITE RACISTS- WE ARE TALKING EMMETT TILL

A picture of Arbery held by a protester

The racially charged case of three men accused of killing a black jogger last year in the US state of Georgia has drawn national attention. The community at the heart of the incident is on tenterhooks as the trial nears its end.

Ahmaud Arbery was shot on 23 February 2020 in a confrontation with Gregory and Travis McMichael. It took more than two months for the men to be arrested, along with the neighbour who filmed the death.

Lawyers for Mr Arbery’s family have called his death a “modern-day lynching”. The McMichaels argue that they were defending themselves while trying to make a “citizen’s arrest”.

Here’s what we know so far.

Who is on trial?

Gregory McMichael, 65, his son Travis, 35, and their neighbour William “Roddie” Bryan, 52, were arrested in May last year. Mr Bryan joined the McMichaels in their pursuit of Mr Arbery.

They each face nine charges, including murder and aggravated assault. They have pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors allege that Travis McMichael used a racial epithet and an expletive directed at Mr Arbery as he lay on the ground. The men deny racism.

What has happened in the trial?

From the prosecutors:

Prosecutors have argued racism was a key factor in the case. In her opening statement, lead prosecutor Linda Dunikoski told the jury: “All three of these defendants did everything they did based on assumptions – not on facts, not on evidence.”

On 8 November, the jury saw footage from police body cameras in the moments just after Mr Arbery was killed. Prosecutors used the video in court in an effort to undermine the defence’s argument that the three men were simply trying to detain Mr Arbery.

“You had no choice,” the elder McMichael is heard telling his son, Travis, as the first officer approaches. Mr Arbery is shown on the ground just a few steps away.

Despite protests from prosecutors, only one black member is seated on the the 12-person jury. Defence lawyers ruled out some African-American candidates for the panel, citing their possible preconceived bias on the case under questioning.

Prosecutors rested their case on 16 November after showing jurors graphic photos of Mr Arbery’s shotgun wounds.

From the defence:

The defence is employing a two-part strategy: citizen’s arrest and self-defence.

“It was obvious that he was attacking me, that if he had gotten the shotgun from me, it was a life-or-death situation,” Travis McMichael told the court after choosing to testify at his own trial.

He spoke using police terminology and at one point cried on the stand, saying he thought of his son during the confrontation.

The attorneys caused controversy late in the trial when one objected to “black pastors” sitting in the courtroom. Lawyer Kevin Gough called it an attempt to intimidate the mostly white jury. He later apologised for the remarks, which Judge Timothy Walmsley called “reprehensible”.

Judge Walmsley also rejected a mistrial request from the defence, which came after lawyers for the accused argued that Mr Arbery’s mother’s sobs in court had unfairly influenced the jury.

What We Know About the Shooting Death of Ahmaud Arbery

Mr. Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, was chased by armed white residents of a South Georgia neighborhood. They are now facing trial on murder charges.

Follow updates on the trial over the killing of Ahmaud Arbery.

ATLANTA — Three white Georgia men stand accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old unarmed Black man, after suspecting him of committing a series of break-ins in their neighborhood outside of the coastal city of Brunswick, in South Georgia.

Opening statements in the trial of the three men — Gregory McMichael, 65; his 35-year-old son, Travis McMichael; and their neighbor, William Bryan, 52 — began in early November. It is one of the most closely watched trials with civil rights overtones in the United States since the murder conviction of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who knelt on the neck of a Black man, George Floyd, for roughly nine minutes. The video of that killing created an international uproar and raised serious questions about the treatment of minorities at the hands of the police.

The slaying of Mr. Arbery was also captured on a videotape that was widely viewed by the public. And the trial of his accused killers will also bring up issues of policing — although in this case, it will involve questions about private citizens and their rights to detain people who they believe to be breaking the law.

Those rights in Georgia were spelled out in a controversial Civil War-era statute that was significantly weakened by state lawmakers in direct response to the outrage over the Arbery killing. Lawmakers also passed Georgia’s first hate crimes law as a result of the shooting.

All of that sets up a remarkable kind of trial in which the defendants will claim they are not guilty based in part on an old law that their actions helped to dismantle. At the same time, they will not be charged under the new Georgia hate crimes law, though all three have also been indicted under the federal hate crimes statute.

For the state murder charges alone, all three men, who have been detained in a Glynn County, Ga., jail for more than a year, face possible life sentences.

The Daily Poster

Listen to ‘The Daily’: The Shooting of Ahmaud Arbery

Mr. Arbery, a 25-year-old black man, was pursued and killed. But no one was arrested until a video of the confrontation was released months later.

 

 

0:00/26:08

Listen to ‘The Daily’: The Shooting of Ahmaud Arbery

Mr. Arbery, a 25-year-old black man, was pursued and killed. But no one was arrested until a video of the confrontation was released months later.

Archived Recording (Gregory Mcmichael)

Hello?

Archived Recording

911, what’s the address of your emergency?

Archived Recording (Gregory Mcmichael)

I’m out here at Satilla Shores. There’s a black male running down the street.

Archived Recording

Satilla? Where at Satilla Shores?

Archived Recording (Gregory Mcmichael)

I don’t know what street we’re on. Stop right there! Damn it, stop. Travis!

Archived Recording

Sir? Hello, sir? Sir, where are you at?

Michael Barbaro

From The New York Times, I’m Michael Barbaro. This is “The Daily.”

Archived Recording

Hello? Hello?

Michael Barbaro

Today, the death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery and my colleague Richard Fausset’s investigation into it.

It’s Monday, May 11.

Richard, how did you first hear about this story?

Richard Fausset

I learned about this story in early April. I was up to my eyeballs in coronavirus coverage, along with my other colleagues in the national desk. And on April 2, my colleague Kim Severson, a food writer for The Times here in Atlanta, and a dear friend of mine, sent me a very brief note. And it said, “Look, you are busy. But this one’s looking pretty troubling.”

She included a link to a story in The Brunswick News down in Brunswick, Georgia. And it looked to be a story of two armed white men, who were chasing an unarmed black man by the name of a Ahmaud Arbery through their neighborhood, and that that chase ended with a confrontation and with the black man being killed.

The local coverage also showed that one of the men who was involved in this chase was a former police officer on the county police force, who had also spent years as an investigator in the district attorney’s office. And although the shooting had occurred on February 23, here we are in April, and no one had been arrested for it.

It was very disturbing. And it seemed like there were a lot of unanswered questions. And I really didn’t know if I could answer them. But I had to set it aside for a while, just because we had this avalanche of news rolling in.

So 10 or 11 days after getting this initial email from Kim, I started filing a flurry of open records requests. And I had a sense of what I was pretty sure I could get from this from covering previous controversial shootings in Georgia. I knew that I should be able to get a copy of the incident report, which is this brief summary that police file of what they saw when they arrived at the scene. I was pretty sure I could get the 911 call recordings, which I don’t think anybody had asked for yet. And then there was this other really just last-minute request that I filed. And I filed it with the county. And it was really just kind of a fishing expedition that I filed that turned out to be the most important public records request. And in that request, I asked for all of the emails to and from public officials from the day of the shooting up to mid-April.

Michael Barbaro

So essentially, you were trying to figure out if people in power in this community in the hours after this shooting are doing what you might expect them to do, which is saying oh, my god. Did you hear about this? What do we do? What do you think? That kind of thing.

Richard Fausset

Yeah. I thought maybe there would just be some chatter. They might have just been gossiping. You know, there just might have been a kind of, “oh, my god” kinds of emails. I didn’t quite know what to expect. But I think that was my first thought. So under Georgia law, all of those entities have three days to respond to my request. And of course, in an ongoing homicide investigation, there are a lot of things they can say that they’re not going to give me. So I talked to my editor, and we decided that I would wake up super early, drive down to Glynn County, Georgia — which is about four and a half or five hours from my home base in Atlanta — to a neighborhood called Satilla Shores, and do some social-distancing reporting. Satilla Shores is a middle-class neighborhood — you know, ranch houses and a few nicer homes that look like retirement homes. It’s kind of out of the way. There’s moss hanging from the oaks. I mean, it’s dramatically beautiful. And it kind of evokes Faulkner — I mean, Faulkner with ranch houses. And Satilla Shores is in the unincorporated part of Glynn County. Glynn County is a majority white place. It’s about 27 percent black. And like almost every part of the south, it has a very tragic and awful racial history, a history of lynchings of black men in the late 19th century. So I pulled up and parked my car near the McMichaels’ home. This is the home of the two men who chased Ahmaud. And almost as soon as I parked, a woman came out. And she started asking me what I was doing there. And I told her. She told me she’d called the police on me. And she told me she was armed.

Michael Barbaro

Wow.

Richard Fausset

You know, I think there was just a lot of tension in the neighborhood. And people were suspicious of my presence there. One very angry woman drove up to me as I was just walking the street and asked me repeatedly what I was doing there in a pretty hostile way. I came across another couple, and they had already made up their mind that Ahmaud Arbery deserved what he had gotten.

Michael Barbaro

Wow.

Richard Fausset

So on Thursday night, I drove back to Atlanta. And on Friday morning, I received the response to this last public records request that I had filed. And Michael, as you know, a lot of times, those kinds of public records requests just bring back just a bunch of dross, you know, just garbage.

Michael Barbaro

Yeah.

Richard Fausset

But in this case, when I opened this fat email attachment, I knew immediately that I had found something pretty explosive.

Michael Barbaro

What was that?

Richard Fausset

So the first document in this file was a three-page memo written by a district attorney in Waycross, Georgia named George Barnhill, who at the time was the prosecutor in the case. And the prosecutor in a case like this often advises the local police as to whether or not there’s sufficient probable cause to go to a judge and ask for an arrest warrant. Mr. Barnhill, in this letter, laid out an extensive justification — legal justification — for why he believed there was not sufficient probable cause to issue any arrest warrants for anyone. And his argument was that Mr. Arbery had committed a burglary, and that the men who pursued him were justified in pursuing him under Georgia’s Citizen Arrest law. It said that the man who shot Ahmaud Arbery, Travis McMichael, was justified in doing so because Mr. Arbery had grabbed the shotgun. He had initiated the fight. And Travis McMichael was allowed to use deadly force to protect himself under Georgia’s Use-of-Force statute. And it said, of course, that the men were legally armed under Georgia’s open-carry law. But there were a lot of pieces of this that I knew a lot of lawyers and even other prosecutors were very likely going to take issue with.

Michael Barbaro

So in this prosecutor’s telling, everything that these two men did in this interaction that resulted in Arbery’s death, despite the fact that he was unarmed, was completely legal. They were allowed to carry the guns. They were allowed to make a citizen’s arrest. They were allowed, in his telling, to defend themselves from this unarmed man.

Richard Fausset

In Mr. Barnhill’s words, it was his conclusion there was insufficient probable cause to issue arrest warrants at the time.

Michael Barbaro

And in your mind, what makes this so explosive?

Richard Fausset

I mean, what’s explosive here is that you have this well-detailed legal justification for an action that I knew many people would see as one that just violates their basic sense of what’s right. You had two armed white men in a truck chasing after an unarmed black man in a suburb in the deep south. There’s a confrontation. The black man is shot and killed. And no one has been arrested. And there’s an argument now, a legal argument, that no one should be arrested.

Michael Barbaro

So what happens next?

Richard Fausset

So I reported my story about this case. And I included this information about this district attorney, who gave this legal justification for why no one should be arrested. It also included the fact that, by that point, that district attorney had recused himself for a conflict of interest. It turns out that his son worked in the local district attorney’s office with Greg McMichael, one of the men who had pursued Ahmaud Arbery. And the reaction to this story was pretty strong. But we were also in the midst of a pandemic. And we were social distancing. And the country was locked down. And so the kinds of protests that we’ve seen crop up in big cities and in other places when issues like this come to light were not materializing.

Michael Barbaro

Right.

Richard Fausset

And so it was sort of unclear, really, where this whole drama was headed. But then on Tuesday, a video emerged online. It was a 36-second video. And it showed the last violent moments of Ahmaud Arbery’s life. And that started to change everything.

[Music]

Michael Barbaro

We’ll be right back.

Richard, what exactly does this video show?

Richard Fausset

The video appears to be shot from a moving car. And it shows a man running, presumably Ahmaud Arbery. He’s approaching a white pickup truck. There’s a man in the bed of the truck — Greg McMichael. And there’s a man standing outside the truck with a shotgun — his son Travis. Mr. Arbery jogs to the right, presumably in an effort to just get away from Travis McMichael. But they tangle, and it’s violent. And you can see the shotgun between them. There’s a shotgun blast and more fighting. They go offscreen for a moment. There’s a second shotgun blast and more fighting. And then there’s a third shot. And you can see Mr. Arbery turn as if to run further. But then you see him crumple and fall to the pavement.

Michael Barbaro

Richard, what do we know about where this video came from and who shot it?

Richard Fausset

The video was shot by a third man who was also engaged in the pursuit of Ahmaud Arbery.

Michael Barbaro

So another man in the neighborhood, who was essentially chasing him?

Richard Fausset

Right.

Michael Barbaro

And how does this video and all those details you just described change our understanding of this event?

Richard Fausset

Well, it appears there’s some contradiction in the initial story that Greg McMichael laid out in the initial police report. In it, Mr. McMichael said that he and his son pulled up beside Ahmaud Arbery. And they shouted “stop,” and they’d been shouting it before. And it was at that moment that Travis McMichael gets out of the truck with his shotgun. But the video shows that they were actually waiting for him in the truck. He was being blocked in because you had a third man, the man with the cell phone video, who was chasing him.

Michael Barbaro

So it very much shows him being trapped by these pursuers.

Richard Fausset

Yeah, it looks like he’s trapped.

Archived Recording

The shooting took place back in February. And at the time, it remained a largely local story. But all that changed yesterday. Some video of the shooting went viral on the internet.

Richard Fausset

I mean, it’s one thing to read about a man struggling for his life and being shot and killed. And I think, just emotionally, it’s just a totally different story when you see it.

Archived Recording (Stacey Abrams)

I believe that there should be immediate investigation of charges. It looks like murder.

Richard Fausset

Stacey Abrams, the former gubernatorial Democratic candidate in Georgia, spoke out about it in an interview. LeBron James, the basketball star, tweeted about it.

Archived Recording

“We’re literally hunted every day, every time we step foot outside the comfort of our homes,” he said.

Richard Fausset

Joe Biden spoke about it in an interview.

Archived Recording (Joe Biden)

Well, it sure looks like murder to me. At a minimum, it needs a thorough investigation.

Archived Recording (Brian Kemp)

Earlier this week, I watched a video depicting Mr. Arbery’s last moments alive.

Richard Fausset

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, a Republican who has created a lot of ill will among people of color, particularly in Georgia, for a very divisive campaign, talked about the need for Georgians to find justice in this case.

Archived Recording (Brian Kemp)

I can tell you it’s absolutely horrific. And Georgians deserve answers.

Michael Barbaro

So just looking at this video, it seems pretty uncomplicated what’s going on here.

Richard Fausset

It’s not entirely uncomplicated. There’s another video that’s emerged. And this one appears to be a surveillance video from a house on the block. And it shows a man who appears to be Mr. Arbery going inside of a house that’s under construction near the McMichaels’ house. It’s sort of unclear what he’s doing there. And his family’s lawyer has said that, yes, he stopped by a house, by a property that was under construction while he was jogging. But still, the idea of an unarmed man out for a jog being chased down and killed by armed civilians, no matter what he was doing in the midst of the jog, is really what’s resonated so widely. And in fact, it’s become very much a rallying cry.

Archived Recording

I’m running for Ahmaud today. He’s the young man that was gunned down in Georgia while jogging.

Richard Fausset

People were going out and jogging in solidarity with Ahmaud. They were using the hashtag, “I run with Ahmaud.”

Archived Recording 1

This morning’s run, 2.23 miles. I run with Ahmaud, baby.

Archived Recording 2

I run with Ahmaud.

Archived Recording 3

2.23 — we with you, young king.

Archived Recording 4

2.23 for Ahmaud. Let’s go. I haven’t run in 10 years, but I’m doing it.

Richard Fausset

They’re running 2.23 miles as a way of noting the day that he was killed: February 23.

Archived Recording (Protestors)

No justice, no peace. No justice! No peace!

Richard Fausset

And then late last week —

Archived Recording (Protestors)

No justice! No peace!

Richard Fausset

— hundreds of protesters gathered in the streets of Glynn County, Georgia in masks and gloves.

Archived Recording

This is about corruption and cover-up by the Glynn County Police Department.

Richard Fausset

It felt like the ball was rolling downhill and gathering force every moment.

Archived Recording (Protestors)

This is not a murder. This was an assassination.

Michael Barbaro

At this point, Richard, how are people thinking about this case? And how is that differing from the way that it was first described in that memo that you unearthed with your public records request?

Richard Fausset

So I think what you saw from this mass protest was a fundamental disagreement with the legal analysis in this document that I dug up. People were calling this a lynching. They were evoking the context of the southern past and the American present. They just thought it was wrong.

Michael Barbaro

And at this point, as these protests are mounting, what is the status of the legal case?

Richard Fausset

Well, a lot starts happening. In my original reporting on this case, I noted that the D.A., George Barnhill, had recused himself. And there was a new prosecutor. As just the interest in this case exploded last week, he announced that he thought that the case should be presented to a grand jury in Glynn County for consideration of criminal charges being brought against the men involved in Mr. Arbery’s death.

Michael Barbaro

So that’s a very big change from the last prosecutor on the case.

Richard Fausset

Right. This is a total 180. He also invited the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to get involved. And the bureau launched its own independent investigation. And by Thursday night, Greg McMichael and his son had been arrested and charged with murder.

[Music]

Michael Barbaro

What’s fascinating about that is that the video seems to describe what had been laid out in your reporting and in these legal documents beforehand. Right? There’s not a giant gap between them.

Richard Fausset

Yeah. I think what this video did is it really moved this case from the local stage to a global stage. And although we can’t know, for now at least, what the reasoning of this new district attorney was for saying the case needs to go before a grand jury, for indeed arresting these men, there’s no question that he’s now making decisions in a universe where many more people are paying very close attention.

Michael Barbaro

Right. It was no longer a local prosecutor writing a memo explaining why no one should be prosecuted, knowing that no one was paying all that much attention.

Richard Fausset

Right.

For me, it was just a very surreal moment because I’m thinking back to that moment, which is a very private one. I’m in my house. The country is locked down. This email comes. And it has this very controversial legal opinion from a very obscure prosecutor.

Michael Barbaro

Right.

Richard Fausset

And I felt like one person in on a conversation in a very closed and constrained system. And now, it seems like this whole story has just been blown out into the open.

Michael Barbaro

So Richard, where does this case stand right now?

Richard Fausset

So the McMichaels are currently in a jail in Glynn County. They haven’t had a chance to enter a plea of guilty or not guilty. But the pandemic is still playing a role here. The Georgia court system has declared that a grand jury can’t be impaneled due to the coronavirus until after June 12, and that that stay could be extended at the discretion of the chief justice of the State Supreme Court if the pandemic continues to linger.

Michael Barbaro

What has been the response from Ahmaud Arbery’s family?

Richard Fausset

Ahmaud’s mother, Wanda Cooper, has maintained from the beginning that she believes her son, who was known to stay in good shape, was simply out for a jog. And I think there is some sense of relief that arrests have finally been made in this case after so many weeks of waiting. But I think they know that they’re only at the beginning of a new stage in this case and it could take a very long time to see it to its end.

[Music]

Michael Barbaro

Richard, what do you make of this case that you have now been working on for about a month or more?

Richard Fausset

Well, it’s hard not to talk about this case without talking about the historical context of extrajudicial killings of people of color in the south and in the whole country. And I think a lot of people were shocked and dismayed by the details of this case. But they weren’t necessarily shocked that it happened. And I think one of the things that we’re starting to sketch out here are the systems in place, things like Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law, that might allow for the perpetuation of these kinds of problems. And I think even though we’re all looking closely at these systems, no one’s sure whether this story, as tragic as it is, may in the end serve to change them.

Michael Barbaro

Richard, thank you very much.

Richard Fausset

Thanks, Michael.

Michael Barbaro

On Friday, a lawyer representing Ahmaud Arbery’s family called for a civil rights investigation, focused not only on the men who pursued and shot him, but the broader justice system that took weeks to prosecute them. On Sunday night, Georgia’s attorney general asked the federal government to conduct a similar investigation.

[Music]

We’ll be right back.

Here’s what else you need to know today.

Archived Recording (Mike Pence)

The president and I not only will be tested every day, but I think everyone that comes into contact with the president will be tested every day. And so —

Michael Barbaro

The Trump Administration is trying to contain an outbreak of the coronavirus inside the White House after an aide to Vice President Mike Pence and a valet to President Trump tested positive. That has prompted at least three top officials leading the government’s response to the pandemic, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, to begin two weeks of self-quarantine.

Archived Recording

Do you wear a mask? Are you going to continue to show up for work at the White House?

Archived Recording (Kevin Hassett)

You know, I’ve got a mask right here. And the fact is that I practice aggressive social distancing. I’ll wear a mask when I feel it’s necessary.

Michael Barbaro

In an interview with CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday, Kevin Hassett, a top economic advisor to the president, acknowledged that a sense of fear has crept into the White House.

Archived Recording (Kevin Hassett)

It is scary to go to work. I think that I’d be a lot safer if I was sitting at home than I would be going to the West Wing. But it’s a time when people have to step up and serve their country.

Michael Barbaro

As of Sunday night, the death toll in the U.S. reached nearly 80,000. And infections around the world surpassed four million.

[Music]

That’s it for “The Daily.” I’m Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

Listen 26:08

Mr. Arbery, 25, was a former high school football standout who was living with his mother outside the small city of Brunswick. He had spent a little time in college but seemed to be in a period of drift in his 20s, testing out various careers, working on his rapping skills and living with his mother. He also suffered from a mental illness that caused him to have auditory hallucinations.

Click here for the Emmett Till Murder – No man should have to suffer like this

Emmett Till
Emmett Till.jpg

Till in a photograph taken by his mother on Christmas Day 1954
Born
Emmett Louis Till

July 25, 1941

Died August 28, 1955 (aged 14)

Cause of death Lynching (bullet wound and mutilation)
Resting place Burr Oak Cemetery
Alsip, Illinois
Education James McCosh Elementary School
Parent(s) Mamie Carthan Till-Mobley
Louis Till

Emmett Louis Till (July 25, 1941 – August 28, 1955) was a 14-year-old African American who was lynched in Mississippi in 1955, after being accused of offending a white woman in her family’s grocery store. The brutality of his murder and the fact that his killers were acquitted drew attention to the long history of violent persecution of African Americans in the United States. Till posthumously became an icon of the civil rights movement.

Emmett Till.jpg

KYLE RITTENHOUSE – NOT GUILTY ON ALL COUNTS – WAITING FOR OBAMA TO OPEN “da Mout”

Facing a menace, Kyle had no choice but to protect himself from the ANTIFA CROWD. He was facing a life-death situationhis life hung in the balance. He did what any sensible person would do when faced with a death threat, defend himself by all means necessary;  pulling the trigger was his only option. The three punks were looking for trouble, they got it; two of them found their maker, the other, lucky for him, is still alive.

 

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AG GARLAND CRIMINAL INTENT – PERJURY AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL

Garland has gone after parents who question “critical race theory.” Says this is not happening, but we say otherwise. Garland’s daughter is promoting CRT through several initiatives.

GOP rep accuses Merrick Garland of ‘perjuring’ himself after explosive FBI whistleblower docs released

Emails surfaced Tuesday alleging the FBI created a ‘threat tag’ to label angry parents

Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., accused Attorney General Merrick Garland of”perjuring” himself after an FBI whistleblower released documents showing the agency was reportedly instructed to use counter-terrorism tactics against angry parents.

Rep. Murphy and Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., appeared on “Fox & Friends First” on Wednesday to discuss the report and how it impacts Garland’s recent testimony as parents across the nation push for more influence in the classroom.

“This brings that really to a point that Attorney General Garland basically perjured himself in front of Congress and should really face the consequences before this,” Murphy said. “The mama bears woke up and saw what was being done to their children, and that is not wrong for them to speak out.”

Following the early October announcement from the Department of Justice to target parents opposed to aspects like critical race theory who’ve allegedly engaged in “harassment, intimidation and threats” against various school boards across the country, a concerning connection has come to light regarding AG Merrick Garland’s daughter.

“I think it is vital that Attorney General Garland come back and answer more questions,” Foxx said. “He did not say it didn’t happen. He said, I cannot imagine it happening. So there are many, many ways not to answer a question and not tell the truth.”

AG GARLAND MUST COME BACK TO CONGRESS AFTER WHISTLEBLOWER CLAIMS HE LIED ABOUT FBI TARGETING PARENTS: HAWLEY

The email, dating back to Oct. 20, was sent just weeks after Garland issued a controversial memo directing the Justice Department to probe alleged threats involving school boards across the nation.

“There are been some silver linings in the pandemic, and one of them is that what was being taught to their children was actually brought home right in their face on the folks’ computer screens, and they could see this,” Murphy said.

The U.S. Attorney General’s daughter happens to be married to the co-founder of a company that peddles resources to schools to foster more “equitable” school environments – a term that often accompanies CRT proponents.

What has the potential to raise some eyebrows would be the “Social Emotional Learning” product sold by the company run in part by the son-in-law of AG Garland, as it seems to have elements of CRT basked into the product sold by the company.

BIDEN’S CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE DEALING FOR BILLIONS OF DOLLARS

If Congress was controlled by Republicans there would be no doubt that Biden would have been impeached, tried and convicted. His past is prelude. We start with his Ukrainian threat to have the prosecutor fired who was investigating Burisma. Add to that his son Hunter was forced on to Burisma’s board to the tune of one million per year. His job was to introduce the Burisma higher-ups to the administration in a “quid pro quo”  shakedown. Joe was good at shakedowns having honed his skills during his senate career.Burisma-logo.png

https://www.wsj.com/video/opinion-joe-biden-forced-ukraine-to-fire-prosecutor-for-aid-money/C1C51BB8-3988-4070-869F-CAD3CA0E81D8.html

https://www.foxnews.com/us/texas-church-under-fire-lets-go-brandon-chant

https://www.sportskeeda.com/nfl/news-f-k-joe-biden-chant-erupts-nfl-game-days-echoed-across-college-football-stadiums

Hunter has upped his game selling worthless art for hundreds of thousands of dollars; buyer unknown! Another shakedown by “la famiglia.”

POLITICS

You’re a damn liar, man!’ – Joe Biden blasts Iowa voter, calls him ‘fat’ after man repeats Ukraine smear

Hunter Biden linked to 2016 identity theft involving deceased brother

Newly submitted court documents link Hunter Biden, the son of Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden, to an identity theft case from 2016 when he was allegedly being checked into an unidentified Arizona facility.

The controversies escalated on November 20, 2019, when DNA results confirmed he fathered a child with a different woman while dating Hallie Biden, his brother’s widow. While he dismissed the claims by the child’s mother, Lunden Alexis Roberts, earlier in the year, court filings now assert that he accepts the child is his.

PUBLISHED:  | UPDATED: 

“I have no response.”

That was Dementia Joe Biden’s response Friday when he was finally asked about the devastating expose of his son Hunter’s emails and so much more.

Those revelations included the crack-addled Hunter whining to one of his daughters that he has to pay 50% of all the cash he collects to “Pop,” and that as part of a shady Chinese deal, the so-called “remuneration package” would include “10 held by H for the Big Guy.”

“I have no response,” the Big Guy told a CBS reporter. “It’s another smear campaign, right up your alley.”

But he didn’t deny it. Biden — or more precisely, his keepers — haven’t disputed the veracity of the Biden Crime Family documents, or that they are from Hunter’s laptop. They were obtained legally, after an “inebriated” Hunter abandoned the computer at a repair shop, according to the New York Post.

The usual alt-left suspects — the AP, NBC “News,” Rep. Adam Schiff — went through the tired motions of trying to blame it all on, who else, the Russians. But seriously, how many times can these hacks cry wolf, even to Wolf Blitzer?

Dementia Joe’s keepers have always understood that Hunter was capable of getting Pop into this kind of a jam. That’s how far gone Hunter Biden is.

Which is why last year they commissioned one of their Democrat stenographers with a press pass to try to inoculate the campaign. The Bidens ordered up a sob story about Hunter in one of their party organs called The New Yorker.

At the beginning, the obsequious scribe engaged in that Democrat tradition of projection, accusing the Republicans of everything he was up to, “promoting, without evidence, the dubious narrative that Biden used the office of the Vice-President to advance and protect his son’s interests.”

Hunter seems to have spent time in half the high-end rehab centers in the U.S. Here’s a selection, from last year’s puff piece in The New Yorker:

“(He) soon admitted himself to Crossroads Centre Antigua for a month … he returned to Crossroads Centre … In July 2014, he went to a clinic in Tijuana that provided a treatment using ibogaine, a psychoactive alkaloid … which is illegal in America.”

Ibogaine — another link to Hunter S. Thompson. In 1972, Thompson introduced the drug to America by falsely accusing another Democrat presidential candidate, Ed Muskie, a colleague of Joe Biden’s, of going berserk on the campaign trail after overdosing on ibogaine.

“He looked out at the crowd and saw Gila monsters instead of people.”

You can see why all these foreign oligarchs would be falling all over themselves to offer such an extinguished, I mean distinguished, person such outlandish sums — $1 million a year from Burisma, $10 million a year from a Chinese company “just for introductions,” another “850” for Hunter, not to mention, of course, the 10 for “the Big Guy.”

ENEMY OF THE STATE – NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION

Two women at human rights rally The NEA consists mostly of losers who PUSH Critical Race Theory blaming the White Race for their lot in life. Nothing can be further from the truth. The White man has uplifted the lives of all peoples not withstanding their race, national origin or belief and the thanks we get are spit in our face. See below and America will understand their agenda, which is anti-American, anti democracy, anti individual initiative, anti personal responsibility. The NEA agenda is one of SOCIALISM, MARXISM AND LENINISM.

FOLKS, IT IS TIME FOR  A DUAL EDUCATION SYSTEM. WE DON’T WANT HATE TAUGHT TO OUR KIDS. CRITICAL RACE THEORY IS ANOTHER WAY OF SAYING WHITE PEOPLE ARE TO BLAME FOR EVERYTHING THAT IS WRONG IN THE WORLD. THEY CAN BRAINWASH THEIR KIDS, BUT THEY AREN’T GOINT TO BRAINWASH OURS. 

 

JUST AND SAFE SCHOOLS

We need to challenge systemic racism in school, so all students can focus on learning, instead of fearing criminalization.

Protecting Dreamers

We should not punish children for decisions they didn’t make. We should not separate families. We should provide a trusted path to citizenship for immigrant Dreamers.

Including Ethnic Studies

Students and educators are mobilizing to include voices and stories of the diverse ethnicities that have contributed to the history and culture of the United States.

GREAT PUBLIC SCHOOLS FOR EVERY STUDENT

The National Education Association (NEA), the nation’s largest professional employee organization, is committed to advancing the cause of public education. NEA’s 3 million members work at every level of education—from pre-school to university graduate programs. NEA has affiliate organizations in every state and in more than 14,000 communities across the United States.

AG WEAPONIZED – GOING AFTER BANNON –

Do we have this straight? Hillary Clinton paid for the Steele Dossier, fabricated a Russian hoax that led to the Mueller investigation, in addition to a bogus impeachment hearing.

Biden as VP, shook down Ukraine so his two bit punk cocaine addict son could leach three million dollars for access to the White House.

Hunter, thrown out of the military for behavior unbefitting the army, starts to peddle hen-scratched paintings for a half million. Buyers unknown.

Adam Schitt peddles Russian conspiracy theories by telling America that he has the goods. But through it all no Big Wig has been indicted, let alone incarcerated. Schitt basically admits he lied.

So the AG Garland peddles Critical Race Theory, finds it necessary to go after Steve Bannon because he did not comply with a subpoena to appear in front of the Intelligence Committee investigating the January 6 party at the capitol. Plus Garland is going after parents, calling them domestic terrorists.

IS THIS A MOVIE ?

 MSNBC O2021, 5:30 AM EST

On Friday, the Justice Department obtained a grand jury indictment against former Trump adviser Steve Bannon on two counts of contempt of Congress for failing to comply with subpoenas from the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The news was celebrated by supporters of the committee’s work — and of congressional oversight more generally — as a rare instance in which the executive branch agreed to enforce a politically divisive congressional subpoena against a former executive branch adviser.

"Where Revolution is the Solution" Taking back the Empire