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Insurrection fallout


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37 minutes ago, BigRedBuster said:

Is that a threat?

 

Is he saying that’s what we should use to decide if someone is charged?

 

 

They are so brainwashed. Threaten civil unrest even if trump is shown to be a treasonous president 

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can’t remember who spread this conspiracy about tours here, but this is the official response.  
 

 

“There is no evidence that Representative Loudermilk entered the U.S. Capitol with this group on January 5, 2021,” Manger wrote in a letter to Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill., the ranking Republican on the House Administration Committee. “We train our officers on being alert for people conducting surveillance or reconnaissance, and we do not consider any of the activities we observed as suspicious.”
 

in response to this

 

“Based on our review of evidence in the Select Committee’s possession, we believe you have information regarding a tour you led through parts of the Capitol complex on January 5, 2021," Cheney and Thompson wrote. "The foregoing information raises questions to which the Select Committee must seek answers. Public reporting and witness accounts indicate some individuals and groups engaged in efforts to gather information about the layout of the U.S. Capitol, as well as the House and Senate office buildings, in advance of January 6, 2021."

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1 hour ago, BigRedBuster said:

Problem is, he’s not delusional.  He knows what he’s doing. He knows it wasn’t stolen. But, he’s continuing to work the con. 
 

He’s a loose loser. :D

Got me there - 2x :clap-  One too many "O"s in loser and  - yes he is not delusional - it has been his plan to take advantage of his delusional cult members who do his battles, go to jail for him and who donate $250million to enrich him and his family. 

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18 minutes ago, TGHusker said:

Got me there - 2x :clap-  One too many "O"s in loser and  - yes he is not delusional - it has been his plan to take advantage of his delusional cult members who do his battles, go to jail for him and who donate $250million to enrich him and his family. 

 What I absolutely can not get is that this guy puts himself out as a billionaire and the greatest business man the world has ever seen....then convinces people who don't have much money to send him tons of it.  Why the f#&% would anyone that doesn't have that much want to send a bunch of money to a billionaire?  Cult.

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What’s really sad is there are still some people in cheetohs corner and who voted for him and still would again (if they ever get that chance...) after all of this.  Trump could literally steal money from their bank accounts which he basically already has and they still don’t know any better. 
 

With some people you simply can’t fix stupid.  Or ignorance.

 

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3 hours ago, suh_fan93 said:

What’s really sad is there are still some people in cheetohs corner and who voted for him and still would again (if they ever get that chance...) after all of this.  Trump could literally steal money from their bank accounts which he basically already has and they still don’t know any better. 
 

With some people you simply can’t fix stupid.  Or ignorance.

 

There are people that admit he’s a fraud, unethical, and borderline insane, but will vote for him anyway instead of a democrat…

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Clarence Thomas' wife Ginni was/is very active in the cult deprogramming work.  She had been a member of a cult in her younger days.

YET, she cannot see the Cult of Trump and Q'anon.

 

And Yes, Clarence needs to recuse himself when anything related to the 2020 election comes before the SC. 

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/untold-story-ginni-thomass-anti-101051146.html

 

Quote

The untold story of Ginni Thomas' anti-cult activism — after she was 'deprogrammed'

 

Quote

 

  In the 1980s, Virginia “Ginni” Thomas had a moment of clarity: She realized she had fallen in with a group she considered “a cult” and sought to be “deprogrammed” from it, she said in decades-old remarks obtained by NBC News.

Thomas’ involvement with Lifespring, an organization advertising training seminars purporting to help participants unlock almost superhuman potential, left her wondering what it was about herself that allowed her to be drawn in. Her successful deprogramming — considered a controversial tactic — led her to become a vigorous anti-cult crusader. For years, she was deeply involved with the nation’s largest anti-cult organization, assisting in setting up workshops for congressional staffers to combat groups like Lifespring.

“When you come away from a cult, you’ve got to find a balance in your life as far as getting involved with fighting the cult or exposing it,” Thomas told attendees at a 1986 Cult Awareness Network panel in Kansas City, Missouri. “And kind of the other angle is getting a sense of yourself and what was it that made you get into that group. And what open questions are there that still need to be answered.”

 

“Ginni Thomas was out there active in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s and then she really went a different path,” said Rick Ross, a prominent expert on cults and a former “deprogrammer” who knew Thomas through their anti-cult activism. “I admire the work she did back in the ‘80s. And she should be given credit for that.”

Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, is one of the more influential figures in conservative grassroots activism and her repeating of election conspiracies left open questions about her influence on her husband’s judicial thinking. She did not respond to multiple requests for comment from NBC News for this article and has not commented publicly on her text messages.

Two debunked conspiracies Thomas referenced in the aftermath of the 2020 election were first embraced and promoted by QAnon adherents. One theory involves claims that Democrats and other election officials were being arrested and shipped off to the Guantanamo Bay military prison in Cuba as the votes were still being counted.

Another is the idea that then-President Donald Trump had watermarked mail-in ballots so he could track voter fraud — a claim both false and implausible. Still, QAnon followers spread both claims online following the November 3 vote, and references appear in QAnon-connected videos, social media posts and message boards.

In text messages to Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows in the days after the Nov. 3 vote, she wrote “ballot fraud co-conspirators’’ were “being arrested & detained for ballot fraud right now & over coming days, & will be living in barges off GITMO to face military tribunals for sedition,” according to The Washington Post and CBS News, the The New York Times and other outlets. NBC News has not independently seen the text messages.

She also wrote: “Watermarked ballots in over 12 states have been part of a huge Trump & military white hat sting operation in 12 key battleground states.”

“I don’t know how anybody would go for that — again,” said Peter Georgiades, a Pittsburgh- based lawyer who for more than a decade specialized in suing cults, of the conspiracies Thomas referred to in her text messages.

Georgiades knew Thomas from their mutual involvement in the anti-cult movement and spoke at an anti-cult briefing for congressional staff that Thomas helped organize in 1986.

“Here is Ginni Thomas sort of getting sucked into the basically equivalent of a cult again,” said one person involved with a 1988 anti-cult briefing for congressional staffers Thomas helped organize, speaking on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retribution.

 

 

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