Anonymous ID: 578e17 May 1, 2021, 2:10 a.m. No.13555929   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A man who infiltrated a group of Antifa activists in Sonoma County, California, revealed to media that the radicals have a ‘target list’ and made allusions to carrying out acts of violence.

 

The mole told a local ABC affiliate that he felt compelled to “do something” after reading the manifesto of SoCo (Sonoma County) Radical Action, which appears to encourage vandalism.

 

Identified by the media as a “Trump supporter,” the man reportedly contacted the group and told his “comrades” that he wanted to “smash the system the same as you.” The ploy apparently worked and he was granted access to their communications channel on the encrypted messaging app Wickr. After gathering documents and recordings of their meetings, he then went to the press – and the police.

 

The alleged leader of the group, “Marb,” is believed to be a 25-year-old college student who was arrested for assaulting a police officer last year in Oakland during a riot sparked by the death of George Floyd. The charges were later not filed.

 

In one reported exchange from March, Marb explains how the group was originally called SoCo Antifa, but changed their name because there were concerns that identifying as “Antifa” would put them on an “FBI watch list.”

 

Another alleged recording made by the infiltrator details plans for May 1. Marb suggests that it would be “sick” to do something “a little more extreme for National Workers' Day.”

 

"It's May Day, baby, like come out and take, take somethin' over with us, I don't, I don't (bleep) know,” the group’s leader continues.

 

A member interjects: “Let’s kill people,” followed by laughter.

 

“Let’s kill some cops,” Marb responds.

 

It’s unclear whether the exchange was in jest or a serious proposal to carry out violence. The infiltrator reached out to law enforcement about the matter. Police told local media that they were unaware of “specific” threats but that they would take any potential acts of violence “very seriously.”

 

The infiltrator also obtained the group’s “target list,” which reportedly includes addresses and phone numbers of victims that they want to dox. In one audio recording, the Antifa activists discuss how they drove out to the home of a woman who heads the Santa Rosa Republican Women Federated, a conservative political group, lamenting that it was too late at night to do any “observing.”

The list also includes Barry Brodd, a former Santa Rosa police officer who provided expert testimony in the Floyd trial, defending the actions of former Minneapolis cop Derek Chauvin. Brodd’s former home was vandalized following his testimony, but internal conversations suggest that SoCo Radical Action was not directly involved.

 

Marb has reportedly refused requests for comment when contacted by the media, but did message members instructing them not to speak to the press or law enforcement. He has also been scrubbing private and public social media accounts since learning that he was the subject of a news story, according to the media.

 

It’s still unclear whether the Antifa activists are suspected of actual criminal activity. The “Trump supporter” said his experience undercover shows that despite claims to the contrary, Antifa “are very real, and they’re a very big threat.”

 

https://www.rt.com/usa/522664-antifa-sonoma-trump-supporter-audio/

Anonymous ID: 578e17 May 1, 2021, 2:29 a.m. No.13555979   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6008

Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger warned Friday that the U.S. government and the rest of the world has to work together to avoid a "Cold War" between the the U.S. and China in the future.

 

Hosting a virtual discussion for the McCain Institute's Sedona Forum 2021, former Sen. Joe Lieberman asked Kissinger how America will able to stay true to its values and "live successfully in a world with a rising China" at the same time.

 

"It's the biggest problem for America, the biggest problem for the world, because if we can't solve that, then the risk is that all over the world a kind of Cold War will develop between China and the United States," Kissinger replied. "And in the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the Soviet Union had no economic capacity, and they had a military technological capacity, but it didn't have an elemental technological capacity as China does."

 

"But China is a huge economic power in addition to being a significant military power. So it is a very challenging task for America. And it's important that we unite on that and don't divide ourselves into one group that is in favor of the moral aspect and another one that is in favor of the strategic aspect. The two have to be linked."

 

Kissinger, who won the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating an end to the Vietnam War, related the story of how, while in Hanoi to conclude the peace talks, he declined a North Vietnamese offer to take then-POW John McCain (son of the then-commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Command) back to America with him on his plane. When Kissinger finally met the freed McCain months later at the White House, the future Arizona senator told him, "Thank you for saving my honor."

 

Recalling McCain's words, a teary-eyed Kissinger, who turns 98 next month, was overcome with emotion, pausing for several moments to collect himself before resuming.

 

"I have not known [any] person similarly dedicated to the importance of America," said the venerable foreign policy sage. "And the lessons he drew from his experiences [were] conciliation with Vietnam, democracy as an important commitment of the United States and security and human progress. He dedicated himself to this, and so, to me, he's a great symbol of the best America could do. And it was an honor for me that we remained friends for the rest of our lives."

 

https://justthenews.com/government/congress/kissinger-warns-cold-war-between-us-and-china-future-very-challenging-task