• Some MAGAnuts Want Blood, Prepared To Die For Trump!

    From G Ron@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 14 03:26:58 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.atheism

    Supporters of former president Donald Trump are planning mass protests at
    a Miami courthouse on Tuesday, following Trump’s indictment last week.
    Many are promising to come “well-armed.”

    “MAGA will make Waco look like a tea party,” a user with the screen name 1776take2 wrote about the planned protest on the pro-Trump messaging board known as The Donald, which was instrumental to the planning of the Capitol riot. “I used to laugh when my mom said that she was afraid if she
    registered Republican she may be arrested one day. I’m not laughing any
    more. Just buying more ammo.”

    In addition to the angry comments and plans posted anonymously on far-
    right message boards, Republican lawmakers, politicians, and right-wing
    pundits have also used incendiary language about Trump’s indictment. “We
    have now reached a war phase. Eye for an eye,” GOP Rep. Andy Biggs tweeted
    to his 730,000 Twitter followers.

    Trump is facing an unprecedented 37-count federal indictment brought by
    special prosecutor Jack Smith. Thirty-one of the charges claim Trump
    willfully kept classified documents in his possession after leaving the
    White House—some of them in a bathroom at his Mar-a-Lago resort—and showed those documents to people who did not have security clearance to view
    them. When news of the indictment broke last week, members of The Donald
    made explicit threats against Attorney General Merrick Garland and his children.

    Over the weekend those threats continued, with one user posting a picture
    of Garland and writing, “America cannot allow this cowardly thug to
    destroy our democracy. This is what the Second Amendment was made for. Buy
    a gun or help organize your local militia today.”

    The former president is scheduled to appear at 3 p.m. on Tuesday at the
    Florida Southern District Courthouse in downtown Miami when he will be
    formally charged. Law enforcement is already on high alert for planned protests. Both federal and local law enforcement agencies are monitoring
    online chatter ahead of the protest and planning increased security
    measures, the Washington Post reported Sunday. And law enforcement will
    take precautions similar to those employed when Trump was arraigned in New
    York in April, which included barricades, rooftop security, street
    closures, and sharpshooters, reported 7News Miami.

    Researchers who track online extremism at the nonpartisan think tank
    Advance Democracy told VICE News that they have not so far not identified
    any “credible or definitive plans to engage in violence or large-scale disruptive activity,” but they have identified individual users who are threatening violence against Trump’s perceived enemies and at least one
    who has explicitly said they are planning on attending with guns.

    Some users on the forum were also trying to find others who were planning
    on attending Tuesday’s protest.

    “Who's coming with me on Tuesday? I will be the one in the [fuck around
    and find out] armor, easy to find, KEK on the back collar,” one member of
    The Donald wrote on Friday. “I will be there peacefully to speak up about
    this misjustice, legally I will also be armed, well armed.”

    Many of the posts on The Donald directly referenced Trump’s own posts on
    his social media platform Truth Social. Under one screenshot of a Trump
    post about his aide Walt Nauta also being indicted, one user wrote:
    “Revolution Now.” Another added: “I want blood. I want fucking blood.”

    Other members of The Donald used language associated with white
    supremacist groups that advocate for acts of violence they claim will
    hasten a race war. “Accelerate, the quicker the normies realize this isn’t
    a free country, the quicker things can be fixed,” one user wrote under a
    post about Trump’s indictment.

    But the use of military and extremist language around the protests has not
    been limited to fringe message boards: politicians and right-wing
    commentators are fanning the flames as well.

    Within minutes of Trump announcing on Truth Social that he had been
    indicted, right-wing media figures like Charlie Kirk were calling for mass protests in Miami this Tuesday. On Twitter, GOP Rep. Clay Higgins posted
    what appeared to be a battlefield command for Tuesday’s protests in a
    message that featured militia speak, referenced military grade maps, and
    told Trump supporters to “know your bridges.”

    As extremism researcher Caroline Orr pointed out, Higgins is on the House
    GOP Homeland Security Committee, which is tasked with “ensur[ing] that the American people [are] protected from terrorist attacks.”

    “The involvement of members of Congress, prominent political figures, and
    Trump himself in promoting, inciting, and even hinting at violence is a
    risk factor for acts of political violence,” Orr wrote in her newsletter
    about the comments.

    And over the weekend, multiple groups formed more concrete plans.

    The Christian conservative group Florida Republican Assembly said they chartered four buses to bring Trump fans from all corners of the state to
    Miami on Tuesday, in what they are dubbing the “America First Freedom Road Trip.”
    20230612_002145.jpg

    A flier from Florida Republican Assembly advertising their upcoming
    protest in Miami.

    Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and failed congressional candidate in Florida, has also organized what she called a “peaceful rally” to protest
    the “weaponization of government” on Tuesday outside the courthouse.

    Loomer’s plans were shared by the Telegram channel of the local Proud Boys chapter.

    Failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who many predict could
    be a possible vice presidential candidate for Trump’s 2024 run, has also organized a rally in Palm Beach on Monday night and has said she plans to
    be in Miami on Tuesday to join the protest. Over the weekend, Lake made it clear that Trump supporters should come armed.

    “If you want to get to President Trump, you're going to have to go through
    me and 75 million Americans just like me. And most of us are card-carrying members of the NRA. That's not a threat, that's a public service
    announcement,” Lake said while speaking at a Georgia Republican conference
    on Saturday. “We’re at war, people—we’re at war.”

    Trump himself has done nothing to tamp down any potential threats,
    repeatedly calling for his own supporters to turn up en masse in Miami on Tuesday, just as he did ahead of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

    Over the weekend, Trump raged on Truth Social, and called Bill Barr a
    “gutless pig” after the former attorney general called the indictment “seriously damning.” Trump also shared a meme about his indictment with a caption declaring, “THIS IS NOT A GAME, THIS IS WAR.”

    In his first post-indictment interview, Trump spoke to his former adviser
    Roger Stone, who played a key role in mobilizing the protest movement
    ahead of Jan. 6th.

    “Our country has to protest,” Trump told Stone, framing the indictment as
    a political persecution and claiming, without evidence, that the charges
    were brought only to “cover up a massive crime” perpetrated by Hunter
    Biden. “We’ve lost everything.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Skeeter@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 14 11:10:37 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.atheism

    In article <u6bc22$3ti06$1@dont-email.me>, nowomr@protonmail.com says...

    Supporters of former president Donald Trump are planning mass protests at
    a Miami courthouse on Tuesday, following Trump?s indictment last week.
    Many are promising to come ?well-armed.?

    ?MAGA will make Waco look like a tea party,? a user with the screen name 1776take2 wrote about the planned protest on the pro-Trump messaging board known as The Donald, which was instrumental to the planning of the Capitol riot. ?I used to laugh when my mom said that she was afraid if she
    registered Republican she may be arrested one day. I?m not laughing any
    more. Just buying more ammo.?

    In addition to the angry comments and plans posted anonymously on far-
    right message boards, Republican lawmakers, politicians, and right-wing pundits have also used incendiary language about Trump?s indictment. ?We
    have now reached a war phase. Eye for an eye,? GOP Rep. Andy Biggs tweeted
    to his 730,000 Twitter followers.

    Trump is facing an unprecedented 37-count federal indictment brought by special prosecutor Jack Smith. Thirty-one of the charges claim Trump willfully kept classified documents in his possession after leaving the
    White House?some of them in a bathroom at his Mar-a-Lago resort?and showed those documents to people who did not have security clearance to view
    them. When news of the indictment broke last week, members of The Donald
    made explicit threats against Attorney General Merrick Garland and his children.

    Over the weekend those threats continued, with one user posting a picture
    of Garland and writing, ?America cannot allow this cowardly thug to
    destroy our democracy. This is what the Second Amendment was made for. Buy
    a gun or help organize your local militia today.?

    The former president is scheduled to appear at 3 p.m. on Tuesday at the Florida Southern District Courthouse in downtown Miami when he will be formally charged. Law enforcement is already on high alert for planned protests. Both federal and local law enforcement agencies are monitoring online chatter ahead of the protest and planning increased security
    measures, the Washington Post reported Sunday. And law enforcement will
    take precautions similar to those employed when Trump was arraigned in New York in April, which included barricades, rooftop security, street
    closures, and sharpshooters, reported 7News Miami.

    Researchers who track online extremism at the nonpartisan think tank
    Advance Democracy told VICE News that they have not so far not identified
    any ?credible or definitive plans to engage in violence or large-scale disruptive activity,? but they have identified individual users who are threatening violence against Trump?s perceived enemies and at least one
    who has explicitly said they are planning on attending with guns.

    Some users on the forum were also trying to find others who were planning
    on attending Tuesday?s protest.

    ?Who's coming with me on Tuesday? I will be the one in the [fuck around
    and find out] armor, easy to find, KEK on the back collar,? one member of The Donald wrote on Friday. ?I will be there peacefully to speak up about this misjustice, legally I will also be armed, well armed.?

    Many of the posts on The Donald directly referenced Trump?s own posts on
    his social media platform Truth Social. Under one screenshot of a Trump
    post about his aide Walt Nauta also being indicted, one user wrote: ?Revolution Now.? Another added: ?I want blood. I want fucking blood.?

    Other members of The Donald used language associated with white
    supremacist groups that advocate for acts of violence they claim will
    hasten a race war. ?Accelerate, the quicker the normies realize this isn?t
    a free country, the quicker things can be fixed,? one user wrote under a
    post about Trump?s indictment.

    But the use of military and extremist language around the protests has not been limited to fringe message boards: politicians and right-wing commentators are fanning the flames as well.

    Within minutes of Trump announcing on Truth Social that he had been
    indicted, right-wing media figures like Charlie Kirk were calling for mass protests in Miami this Tuesday. On Twitter, GOP Rep. Clay Higgins posted
    what appeared to be a battlefield command for Tuesday?s protests in a
    message that featured militia speak, referenced military grade maps, and
    told Trump supporters to ?know your bridges.?

    As extremism researcher Caroline Orr pointed out, Higgins is on the House
    GOP Homeland Security Committee, which is tasked with ?ensur[ing] that the American people [are] protected from terrorist attacks.?

    ?The involvement of members of Congress, prominent political figures, and Trump himself in promoting, inciting, and even hinting at violence is a
    risk factor for acts of political violence,? Orr wrote in her newsletter about the comments.

    And over the weekend, multiple groups formed more concrete plans.

    The Christian conservative group Florida Republican Assembly said they chartered four buses to bring Trump fans from all corners of the state to Miami on Tuesday, in what they are dubbing the ?America First Freedom Road Trip.?
    20230612_002145.jpg

    A flier from Florida Republican Assembly advertising their upcoming
    protest in Miami.

    Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and failed congressional candidate in Florida, has also organized what she called a ?peaceful rally? to protest the ?weaponization of government? on Tuesday outside the courthouse.

    Loomer?s plans were shared by the Telegram channel of the local Proud Boys chapter.

    Failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who many predict could
    be a possible vice presidential candidate for Trump?s 2024 run, has also organized a rally in Palm Beach on Monday night and has said she plans to
    be in Miami on Tuesday to join the protest. Over the weekend, Lake made it clear that Trump supporters should come armed.

    ?If you want to get to President Trump, you're going to have to go through
    me and 75 million Americans just like me. And most of us are card-carrying members of the NRA. That's not a threat, that's a public service announcement,? Lake said while speaking at a Georgia Republican conference
    on Saturday. ?We?re at war, people?we?re at war.?

    Trump himself has done nothing to tamp down any potential threats,
    repeatedly calling for his own supporters to turn up en masse in Miami on Tuesday, just as he did ahead of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

    Over the weekend, Trump raged on Truth Social, and called Bill Barr a ?gutless pig? after the former attorney general called the indictment ?seriously damning.? Trump also shared a meme about his indictment with a caption declaring, ?THIS IS NOT A GAME, THIS IS WAR.?

    In his first post-indictment interview, Trump spoke to his former adviser Roger Stone, who played a key role in mobilizing the protest movement
    ahead of Jan. 6th.

    ?Our country has to protest,? Trump told Stone, framing the indictment as
    a political persecution and claiming, without evidence, that the charges
    were brought only to ?cover up a massive crime? perpetrated by Hunter
    Biden. ?We?ve lost everything.?

    and it never happened so you are full of it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Razor Red@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jun 14 21:00:00 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show


    Supporters of former president Donald Trump are planning mass protests at
    a Miami courthouse on Tuesday, following Trump's indictment last week.
    Many are promising to come "well-armed."

    "MAGA will make Waco look like a tea party," a user with the screen name >1776take2 wrote about the planned protest on the pro-Trump messaging
    board
    known as The Donald, which was instrumental to the planning of the
    Capitol
    riot. "I used to laugh when my mom said that she was afraid if she
    registered Republican she may be arrested one day. I'm not laughing any
    more. Just buying more ammo."

    In addition to the angry comments and plans posted anonymously on far-
    right message boards, Republican lawmakers, politicians, and right-wing >pundits have also used incendiary language about Trump's indictment. "We
    have now reached a war phase. Eye for an eye," GOP Rep. Andy Biggs
    tweeted
    to his 730,000 Twitter followers.

    Trump is facing an unprecedented 37-count federal indictment brought by >special prosecutor Jack Smith. Thirty-one of the charges claim Trump >willfully kept classified documents in his possession after leaving the
    White House-some of them in a bathroom at his Mar-a-Lago resort-and
    showed
    those documents to people who did not have security clearance to view
    them. When news of the indictment broke last week, members of The Donald
    made explicit threats against Attorney General Merrick Garland and his >children.

    Over the weekend those threats continued, with one user posting a picture
    of Garland and writing, "America cannot allow this cowardly thug to
    destroy our democracy. This is what the Second Amendment was made for.
    Buy
    a gun or help organize your local militia today."

    The former president is scheduled to appear at 3 p.m. on Tuesday at the >Florida Southern District Courthouse in downtown Miami when he will be >formally charged. Law enforcement is already on high alert for planned >protests. Both federal and local law enforcement agencies are monitoring >online chatter ahead of the protest and planning increased security
    measures, the Washington Post reported Sunday. And law enforcement will
    take precautions similar to those employed when Trump was arraigned in
    New
    York in April, which included barricades, rooftop security, street
    closures, and sharpshooters, reported 7News Miami.

    Researchers who track online extremism at the nonpartisan think tank
    Advance Democracy told VICE News that they have not so far not identified
    any "credible or definitive plans to engage in violence or large-scale >disruptive activity," but they have identified individual users who are >threatening violence against Trump's perceived enemies and at least one
    who has explicitly said they are planning on attending with guns.

    Some users on the forum were also trying to find others who were planning
    on attending Tuesday's protest.

    "Who's coming with me on Tuesday? I will be the one in the [fuck around
    and find out] armor, easy to find, KEK on the back collar," one member
    of
    The Donald wrote on Friday. "I will be there peacefully to speak up about >this misjustice, legally I will also be armed, well armed."

    Many of the posts on The Donald directly referenced Trump's own posts on
    his social media platform Truth Social. Under one screenshot of a Trump
    post about his aide Walt Nauta also being indicted, one user wrote: >"Revolution Now." Another added: "I want blood. I want fucking blood."

    Other members of The Donald used language associated with white
    supremacist groups that advocate for acts of violence they claim will
    hasten a race war. "Accelerate, the quicker the normies realize this
    isn't
    a free country, the quicker things can be fixed," one user wrote under a
    post about Trump's indictment.

    But the use of military and extremist language around the protests has
    not
    been limited to fringe message boards: politicians and right-wing >commentators are fanning the flames as well.

    Within minutes of Trump announcing on Truth Social that he had been
    indicted, right-wing media figures like Charlie Kirk were calling for
    mass
    protests in Miami this Tuesday. On Twitter, GOP Rep. Clay Higgins posted
    what appeared to be a battlefield command for Tuesday's protests in a
    message that featured militia speak, referenced military grade maps, and
    told Trump supporters to "know your bridges."

    As extremism researcher Caroline Orr pointed out, Higgins is on the House
    GOP Homeland Security Committee, which is tasked with "ensur[ing] that
    the
    American people [are] protected from terrorist attacks."

    "The involvement of members of Congress, prominent political figures, and >Trump himself in promoting, inciting, and even hinting at violence is a
    risk factor for acts of political violence," Orr wrote in her newsletter >about the comments.

    And over the weekend, multiple groups formed more concrete plans.

    The Christian conservative group Florida Republican Assembly said they >chartered four buses to bring Trump fans from all corners of the state to >Miami on Tuesday, in what they are dubbing the "America First Freedom
    Road
    Trip."
    20230612_002145.jpg

    A flier from Florida Republican Assembly advertising their upcoming
    protest in Miami.

    Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and failed congressional candidate in >Florida, has also organized what she called a "peaceful rally" to
    protest
    the "weaponization of government" on Tuesday outside the courthouse.

    Loomer's plans were shared by the Telegram channel of the local Proud
    Boys
    chapter.

    Failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who many predict could
    be a possible vice presidential candidate for Trump's 2024 run, has also >organized a rally in Palm Beach on Monday night and has said she plans to
    be in Miami on Tuesday to join the protest. Over the weekend, Lake made
    it
    clear that Trump supporters should come armed.

    "If you want to get to President Trump, you're going to have to go
    through
    me and 75 million Americans just like me. And most of us are card-
    carrying
    members of the NRA. That's not a threat, that's a public service >announcement," Lake said while speaking at a Georgia Republican
    conference
    on Saturday. "We're at war, people-we're at war."

    Trump himself has done nothing to tamp down any potential threats,
    repeatedly calling for his own supporters to turn up en masse in Miami on >Tuesday, just as he did ahead of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

    Over the weekend, Trump raged on Truth Social, and called Bill Barr a >"gutless pig" after the former attorney general called the indictment >"seriously damning." Trump also shared a meme about his indictment with a >caption declaring, "THIS IS NOT A GAME, THIS IS WAR."

    In his first post-indictment interview, Trump spoke to his former adviser >Roger Stone, who played a key role in mobilizing the protest movement
    ahead of Jan. 6th.

    "Our country has to protest," Trump told Stone, framing the indictment as
    a political persecution and claiming, without evidence, that the charges
    were brought only to "cover up a massive crime" perpetrated by Hunter
    Biden. "We've lost everything."


    I wanna see more die for trump.

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  • From Governor Swill@21:1/5 to G Ron on Wed Jun 14 19:56:44 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.atheism

    On Wed, 14 Jun 2023 03:26:58 -0000 (UTC), G Ron <nowomr@protonmail.com> wrote:

    Supporters of former president Donald Trump are planning mass protests at
    a Miami courthouse on Tuesday, following Trump’s indictment last week.
    Many are promising to come “well-armed.”

    Yeah, how did that turn out?

    Swill
    --
    Reality is an acquired taste - Matthew Perry

    Heroyam slava! Glory to the Heroes!

    Sláva Ukrajíni! Glory to Ukraine! Putin is a condom!

    Go here to donate to Ukrainian relief. <https://www2.deloitte.com/ua/uk/pages/registration-forms/help-cities.html>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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