Anonymous ID: 50a089 May 8, 2023, 9:19 a.m. No.18815765   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>>" I know, and I think many of the people on your panel know, that prosecutors do not have evidence in hand linking the effort of Enrique Tarrio, Stewart Rhodes, and other lieutenants of theirs, to Donald Trump. They do not have the smoking-gun evidence that shows that Donald Trump was directing an effort to violently overthrow the government. "<<<

 

Here's the transcript.

 

MSNBC

Deadline White House

4/4/23

4:00 pm EDT

 

NICOLLE WALLACE: Any minute now, Attorney General Merrick Garland is expected to hold a news conference on the Justice Department's big win in court today in its January 6th investigation.

 

More than two-and-a-half years since the disgraced ex-president told them to, quote, stand back and stand by, a call that help to galvanize the Proud Boys to serve as the tip of the spear of the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol months later, four members of the Proud Boys, including the group's leader, Enrique Tarrio, were convicted today of seditious conspiracy.

 

. . .

 

This victory by the Justice Department, while it is was a milestone, and a massive and hugely consequential federal investigation into that plot to overturn an election and overturn democracy on January 6th, only underscores questions about holding accountable the man, who the January 6th committee vice chair Liz Cheney so memorably puts it, quote, summoned the mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame of this attack.

 

Of course, we're talking about the disgraced ex-president himself.

 

. . .

 

ANDREW WEISSMANN: To your point, there has been such a call-and-response relationship to groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, and others, with the former president, that everyone is going to be thinking, okay, you've gotten not just the foot soldiers, not just their leaders, such as the leader of the Proud Boys, but what about the actual leader of what happened on January 6th?

 

. . .

 

MARCUS CHILDRESS: I'm not looking facts in a vacuum anymore. I'm understanding how these groups were built, how they were created, and then how they were inspired by the former president's words.

 

WALLACE: Yeah. And I think, even more pointedly, how they were directed. I mean, he told them when to come, and where to go, and he wanted to join them where he told them to go and where they followed.

 

. . .

 

He meant what he meant. I think there was a misperception that we understood and accepted some of the spin, that he just wanted everybody's votes. I think the truth is closer to what Ayman's was talking about. They were already so intersected into his political organization, through people who were known spokespeople and operatives for the Trump campaign and the Trump candidacy, and some of the darker artistes now very publicly known to be associated with.

 

And I wonder what you think this means, both in terms of the Justice Department having some, a real track record now of successfully prosecuting seditious conspiracy.

 

And the questions are now gonna have to deal with, as to whether or not they can prosecute Trump for the same crimes.

 

. . .

 

CAROL LEONNIG: No question, Nicolle, that in the debate, he recognized that these extremist factions really were the voice of a certain group of people that he needed on his side. And he wasn't going to cut them back, and he wasn't going to reject them when asked over and over again whether or not he wanted to deride or dismiss white supremacy and white supremacist groups, alt-right groups.

 

Second question I think you raised is whether or not Donald Trump can be charged with a crime in the wake of now this third trial and great success for the Department of Justice, in bringing and winning convictions for seditious conspiracy.

 

The key in seditious conspiracy is violence. A critical element is that you must be using force to overturn your government.

 

It's a rarely brought charge for a reason. Not a lot of people try to violenty overthrow the U.S. government. These four, in a conspiracy to do so.

 

And right now, I know, and I think many of the people on your panel know, that prosecutors do not have evidence in hand linking the effort of Enrique Tarrio, Stewart Rhodes, and other lieutenants of theirs, to Donald Trump. They do not have the smoking-gun evidence that shows that Donald Trump was directing an effort to violently overthrow the government. However, that doesn't mean they're not ever going to get it. It also doesn't mean that it exists!

 

Let's be careful about what we know and what we don't know.

https://newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/mark-finkelstein/2023/05/05/sorry-nicolle-wapo-reporter-tells-wallace-no-evidence-linking

Anonymous ID: 50a089 May 8, 2023, 10:37 a.m. No.18816020   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6037

RT: https://truthsocial.com/users/realDonaldTrump/statuses/110334106825194025I am heading to Des Moines this Saturday to rally with the Great People of Iowa! Unlike Joe Biden, I protected Iowa’s First-in-the-Nation Caucuses, and always will. Every promise I made to the people of Iowa, I fulfilled as your President, and even beyond my promises, I got Farmers 28 Billion Dollars from China, money that was unthinkable by anyone else. I also saved Ethanol, and did more for Iowa than anyone else in history—and will again!

 

@realDonaldTrump

 

28

31-Oct-2017 10:59:01 PM PDT

4ch/pol

>>147450119

 

Spy.png

>>147441102

>What must be completed to engage MI over other (3) letter agencies

During the 1950s and 60s, federal troops and federalized National

Guard forces, accompanied by military intelligence personnel, were

deployed to help integrate Southern schools23 and to help deal with

civil disorders in Detroit in 1967 and other cities the following year

after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.24 Throughout

this period military intelligence units also continued to collect data on

Americans at home who were suspected of involvement in subversive

activities.25 In the late 1960s, the Pentagon compiled personal

information on more than 100,000 politically active Americans in an

effort to quell civil rights and anti-Vietnam War demonstrations and

to discredit protestors.26 The Army used 1,500 plainclothes agents to

watch demonstrations, infiltrate organizations, and spread

disinformation. 2

' According to one report, the Army had at least one

observer at every demonstration of more than twenty people.28

The Army's activities were summed up by Senator Sam Ervin:

Allegedly for the purpose of predicting and preventing

civil disturbances which might develop beyond the control of

state and local officials, Army agents were sent throughout

the country to keep surveillance over the way the civilian

population expressed their sentiments about government

policies. In churches, on campuses, in classrooms, in public

meetings, they took notes, tape-recorded, and photographed

people who dissented in thought, word, or deed. This included clergymen, editors, public officials, and anyone who

sympathized with the dissenters.

 

http://digitalcommons.law.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6053&context=lalrev

 

>Hahahaha, Trump has had MI infiltrate Antifa and all the dissenting local govts.

 

Always 5 steps ahead!

 

Please be true.

 

Well done. Picture being painted.

 

https://qposts.online/post/28