Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 8:42 a.m. No.16603043   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://twitter.com/oneunderscore__

And also, I want to say, like, you can’t drill this down to one specific traditional political subculture. I know a lot of people want to point out that this guy was a Donald Trump fan. He had, there were pictures of him draped in a Trump flag or, you know, at a Donald Trump, outside of a Donald Trump motorcade. This guy, this is part of a much larger, deeper subculture that Donald Trump is in the past of, like this guy who grew up as a child, if Donald Trump was his president, he is trying to advance the accelerationism well past Donald Trump.

This guy is part of a new wave of terror, and that’s something that we have to get our brains around right now. This is not, this is not tied to one guy. This is tied to a much larger cell of people who think they’re loners, who are really acting in concert to express their disaffection with the world by murdering a bunch of people. We have to stop that. I don’t know how to stop that. The one thing that you can stop it at the very end is the gun parts. But we have to at least, you know, try to start to learn how people are getting to this point.

Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 8:51 a.m. No.16603101   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3111

>>16603084

>Ukrainian Ambassador Andrey Melnik said there was no evidence that Nazi collaborator Bandera was responsible for the persecution of Poles and Jews in Ukraine during World War II.

Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 8:56 a.m. No.16603132   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3139 >>3146 >>3164 >>3401

>>16603112

>https://www.jpost.com/international/article-711208

I felt safer near Gaza than Highland Park -Israeli survivor of shooting

"We're physically okay but this is beyond traumatizing," Deborah, an Israeli-American resident of a Gaza periphery community visiting Chicago, told the Post.

Deborah, an Israeli-American resident of a Gaza periphery community, was with her family the Highland Park 4th of July parade when a shooter opened fire.

"I'm familiar with gunshots," she said, but at first she told herself the bangs she heard were typical 4th of July sounds — fireworks and firecrackers.

"This is Highland Park, there are no guns here," she recalled thinking. "Yes there are, America's crazy now."

Deborah ran with her small children and family, taking cover behind nearby vehicles. The kids, ages five and seven, were crying and frightened.

Police confirmed that the shooter had fired at the parade from a rooftop.

Peering out from behind the cars, Deborah saw a bleeding person being given aid. On the other side, she saw a bloodied, unmoving body. Six people had been murdered, and dozens were injured.

Police told Deborah and her family that they had to evacuate, but it was unclear where they could run to. They took shelter in a local shop.

From the shop windows they could see police running around, desperately and unsuccessfully looking for the shooter. At the time of writing the police still hadn't caught the gunman — According to police a white male around 20 years old, with long black hair and a small build, wearing a blue t-shirt.

Eventually, the authorities informed them that they could leave the area by car.

"We're physically okay but this is beyond traumatizing," Deborah said.

Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 8:58 a.m. No.16603139   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3143

>>16603132

Unable to escape terror

Her children had waited three years to visit and take part in the American Independence Day parade. Instead of enjoying the carnival, they were hiding from gunfire.

Deborah recalled how not long before the parade, her daughter had heard fire works and told her mother that she thought she heard Iron Dome, the Israeli anti-rocket defense system, activating. Deborah told her daughter that they didn't have to worry about things like that in America.

"They just can't get away from terror," said Deborah. "We live on the Gaza border and we came here for a peaceful vacation."

Residents of the Gaza periphery often face the danger of rocket and mortar strikes, among other terrorist threats. Deborah noted that at least there its known were the danger is coming from, the Israel Defense Forces are present, and there is warning before the explosive projectiles fall.

"I knew this happened in America, but you don't think it's going to happen in Highland Park," said Deborah.

Possible Jewish connection

The US had recently been rocked by deadly mass shootings, such as the Uvalde school shooting that left 19 young students and two teachers dead.

Deborah had wondered about the shooter's motives, "Is he antisemitic, is he anti-American?"

She described the Highland Park neighborhood as "pretty Jewish." Deborah added: "Something happens like this in an upper to middle class, half Jewish area you have to wonder."

At least two of the dead were reported to be Jewish, and ZAKA reported that some of the injured were Jewish as well. Among the dead was an elderly Jewish man, the emergency rescue organization said. The Israeli Midwest Consulate was reportedly in touch with the community and authorities.

The shooting happened four blocks away from a Chabad center, Chabad news reported on Monday night. In a video of the incident, it appears that a klezmer band was playing when the shooter attacked. According to Chabad, the Jewish community is often quite involved with the parade, usually having a menorah float.

The shooter was arrested later that evening — To her shock, the son of a man that Deborah had known her whole life.

Feeling "safer on the Gaza border"

"Devastated to hear the news from Highland Park, where a day of celebration became a day of tragedy," said Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid late Monday night. "My thoughts are with the families of the victims and all the American people. Today as always, Israel stands with our American friends."

"I am following the horrible news from Highland Park," said Yinam Cohen, Israeli consul general to the US Midwest. "Our hearts and prayers are with the members of the community. We thank the local authorities for their immediate response."

Deborah and her family are still emotionally recovering from the fresh trauma of the incident.

"I feel safer in Zikim on the Gaza border," Deborah told The Post. "No one is safe in America now."

Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 8:59 a.m. No.16603143   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3146

>The shooting happened four blocks away from a Chabad center. In a video of the incident, it appears that a klezmer band was playing when the shooter attacked.

>>16603139

>The shooter was arrested later that evening — To her shock, the son of a man that Deborah had known her whole life.

Anonymous ID: 523afe July 5, 2022, 9:01 a.m. No.16603153   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3220

https://www.timesofisrael.com/chabad-rabbi-says-alleged-july-4-shooter-entered-his-synagogue-on-passover/

Chabad rabbi says alleged July 4 Chicago shooter entered his synagogue on Passover

Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz, whose house of worship is near the site of Monday’s shooting in heavily Jewish Highland Park, says he sternly asked Robert Crimo to leave

Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz recognized the photo of 22-year-old Robert E. Crimo III released by police following the shooting, and realized he had encountered the suspect a few months earlier, according to the Israel National News website.

“During the last Passover holiday, that person entered the Chabad synagogue. We have an armed security guard sitting in front… I approached him and sternly asked him to leave as I noticed he was not a member of our community,” Schanowitz was quoted as saying.