Anonymous ID: c90efe Feb. 8, 2021, 11:18 a.m. No.12861736   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1790 >>1816 >>2075 >>2265

Amazing Polly's "amazing" work exposed Swampy Restaurant Immigrant Food's assistance in breaching the Capitol (open 1/5/2021, closed 1/6/2021) and also allowed through locked down red zone security checkpoint in DC with large duffel bags of who knows what on Inauguration day? Cash?

 

https://immigrantfood.com/engage/advisory-board/

Provides space to engage about immigration. I'm certain this is where Antifa planned their psyop event the next day on 1-6-2021.

 

MARSHALL FITZ

MANAGING DIRECTOR OF IMMIGRATION AT EMERSON COLLECTIVE

Marshall is the Managing Director of Immigration at Emerson Collective, a social change organization founded and led by Laurene Powell Jobs. Marshall is one of America’s most well-known and respected voices on immigration policy, and a regular contributor to a wide array of news outlets including the Washington Post, The Hill, ThinkProgress (John Podesta), but also The Washington Times and Fox News. He was previously vice president for immigration policy at American Progress and a former adviser to the Obama White House.

 

TAMAR JACOBY

PRESIDENT OF IMMIGRATIONWORKS

Tamar is president of ImmigrationWorks, an organization comprised of small American business owners working to advance better immigration law. Her writing on race relations and immigration has been published in numerous outlets, including Commentary, Dissent, The Nation, The New Republic, Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and The New York Times Book Review, among others. Tamar is the former deputy editor of the op-ed page of The New York Times and was an editor at Newsweek. Her book, Someone Else’s House: America’s Unfinished Struggle for Integration, tells the story of race relations in three American cities—New York, Detroit and Atlanta.

 

ANGELA KELLEY

SENIOR STRATEGIC ADVISOR FOR IMMIGRATION AT THE OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATION

Angela has been at the forefront of policy debates and legislative work on immigration policy and was part of the creation of the Department of Homeland Security following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Angela is regularly quoted by major news organizations including The New York Times, Washington Post, POLITICO, and also has appeared on national television and radio including PBS, MSNBC, Fox, and National Public Radio. Angela began her career as a staff attorney at Ayuda, one of our five heroic NGO partners.

 

ANYA MCMURRAY

SENIOR DIRECTOR OF IMMIGRATION POLICY AND STRATEGY AT EMERSON COLLECTIVE

Anya is the Senior Director of Immigration Policy and Strategy at Emerson Collective. She focuses on broader strategy efforts, working in cultural and artistic spaces to move people’s hearts and minds on immigration policy. Anya is a former public defender who served as deputy general counsel of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

 

https://immigrantfood.com/

Anonymous ID: c90efe Feb. 8, 2021, 11:26 a.m. No.12861790   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1816 >>2075 >>2265

>>12861736

Duffel bags of maybe some cocaine for Hunter? kek!

 

Just pondering.

More Sauce to add to the previous post

 

https://dc.eater.com/2021/1/22/22242641/immigrant-food-d-c-suitcases-secret-service-secruity-inauguration-day

 

Immigrant Food, a fast-casual restaurant in D.C. that sells global fusion bowls a couple blocks away from the White House, went the extra mile to stay open this week while National Guard troops and other authorities shut down traffic leading into Inauguration Day.

 

Due to the restaurant’s location in the heart of a “red zone” perimeter, closed off to all traffic except for authorized vehicles, Immigrant Food had to halt its deliveries from vendors’ trucks during a period of heightened security stemming from the insurrection at the Capitol. By Saturday, January 16, the shop had run out of food, but it was determined to stay open despite all the uncertainty surrounding the celebration. So co-owner Peter Schechter and communications director Tea Ivanovic solved the problem by packing up massive rolling suitcases with ingredients and pulling them right down the parade route on Pennsylvania Avenue NW.

 

“On our entire block, not one single restaurant is open — we wanted to really be there for customers,” Ivanovic says.

 

Immigrant Food’s loot. Tea Ivanovic/Immigrant Food

 

The kitchen gave them a “wish list” full of chicken, daikon, potatoes, onions, curry powder, and leafy greens, which they bought at Wegman’s and Walmart near Schechter’s home base in Culpepper, Virginia. On Monday, two days before inauguration, Schechter’s wife dropped him and Ivanovic off at George Washington Circle. With bags bursting with produce and poultry, the pair made the 14-minute trek to the restaurant in the middle of an eerily quiet artery of D.C.

 

I think these photos are staged