Nancy Pelosi LIED about January 6, and her own words PROVE it



Nancy Pelosi has remained adamant that the events of January 6 were the fault of former President Donald Trump — but recently uncovered video shows her singing a different tune.

In the video — which was captured during the filming of a documentary — Pelosi claims full responsibility for the January 6 Capitol riot for her refusal to send in the National Guard.

“They caught some pretty interesting details of the mindset of Nancy Pelosi,” investigative reporter Steve Baker tells Jill Savage and Matthew Peterson of “Blaze News Tonight.”

“At one point, she tried to take the blame for not having the National Guard out there, and then she immediately turned on a dime and then started blaming former Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund for not having the National Guard there,” he explains, noting that three days before the riot, Sun had asked for permission to deploy the National Guard.

“Not only did he request for it three days in advance and was denied by the house sergeant at arms, Paul Irving, because he said that Pelosi would never go for it,” Baker says, “the day itself, the reason why it took so long for that deployment, is because this was actually sent all the way up to the DOD.”

In addition, Baker notes that he has testimony from an individual who will go on record and explain what had happened during a teleconference call inside the Pentagon that day.

That teleconference is where the phrase, “we don’t like the optics,” was hatched.

“Meaning, we don’t like the optics of the National Guard being at the Capitol,” Baker says.

“We’re going to reveal that there was a coalition of generals that were on this call, three or four of them. In fact, we have their names, and on that call, they were answering to and following the orders of ... Mark Milley, who was, of course, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,” he adds.


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Report: Pelosi and Democrat leadership played critical role in creating Capitol security plan that failed during Jan. 6 protests



A group of House Republicans released a damning counter-report Wednesday detailing key insights ignored in the narrative carefully constructed by the Democrat-led Jan. 6 select committee concerning the Capitol protests in 2021.

The 141-page report, penned by the five Republicans originally nominated to sit on the House Jan. 6 select committee, reveals how House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office and the Democrat leadership were "closely involved in security decisions in the lead up to and on January 6, 2021" and noted the reasons why the Capitol was ultimately left unprepared on the day of the protests.

The publication of this evidence — that Pelosi and other Democrats may have been instrumental in rendering the Capitol vulnerable to infiltration by protesters — comes just days after the House speaker's committee recommended that former President Donald Trump be hit with criminal charges.

What are the details?

Republican Reps. Rodney Davis (Ill.), Jim Banks (Ind.), Troy Nehls (Texas), Jim Jordan (Ohio), and Kelly Armstrong (N.D.) were nominated by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) in 2021 to sit on the Jan. 6 select committee.

Pelosi vetoed the appointment of Banks and Jordan, prompting McCarthy to pull his other his picks, reported the Hill.

That same group of congressmen noted that when "Speaker Pelosi made the unprecedented decision to reject Jim Banks and Jim Jordan from sitting on the January 6Select Committee – we knew she intended to play politics instead of addressing the massive security failures that led to that day."

"We said then that we would investigate and get to the bottom of why the Capitol was left so unprepared that day, and what needs to be done to make sure our security apparatus is never left so unprepared again," they added in a joint statement.

The House Republicans' resultant report did just that, identifying several reasons the Capitol was vulnerable on Jan. 6, 2021, and providing recommendations on ways to bolster Capitol security in the future.

McCarthy contrasted this report with the select committee's, saying the the latter "has been focused on political theater and posturing," whereas "this report answers what the American people have asked since day one: why the Capitol was so unprepared — and it outlines a plan for a more secure Capitol in the 118th Congress."

Compromised by politics

The report indicates that U.S. Capitol Police acquired enough information ahead of Jan. 6 to "anticipate and prepare for the violence that occurred." However, front-line officers and analysts in the USCP's intelligence division were "undermined by the misplaced priorities of their leadership."

USCP officers were reportedly "under-trained and ill-equipped to protect the Capitol complex." The report suggested that had all USCP officers turned up to work that day, they still would have had insufficient numbers to counter the Capitol protesters' advances.

Even if the USCP was properly equipped and trained, actionable intel was apparently siloed at the higher levels and not properly analyzed or disseminated, leaving many in the dark about potential vulnerabilities and dangers.

The U.S. Capitol Police Intelligence and Interagency Coordination Division allegedly "failed to warn USCP leadership and line officers about the threat of violence, despite the fact that IICD analysts gathered intelligence that clearly indicated a need for a hardened security posture."

The compartmentalization of actionable intelligence also occurred elsewhere for partisan reasons.

Then-House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving reportedly "succumbed to political pressures from the Office of Speaker Pelosi and House Democrat leadership."

Irving is said to have coordinated "closely with the Speaker and her staff and [to have] left Republicans out of important discussions related to security" and to have been "micromanaged" by Pelosi ahead of Jan. 6.

This proved to be particularly problematic since Irving, then a "critical member of the Capitol Police Board ... had an obligation to all Members, staff, and USCP officers to keep them safe by consulting stakeholders without partisan preference."

"Rather than coordinate in a meaningful way, Irving only provided information to Republicans after receiving instruction from the Speaker's office. In one case, Irving even asked a senior Democratic staffer to 'act surprised' when he sent key information about plans for the Joint Session on January 6, 2021 to him and his Republican counterpart," said the report.

Pelosi suggested on Feb. 9 that she had "no power over the Capitol Police."

This report underscores how that was a false statement, given that Irving "carried out his duties in clear deference to the Speaker, her staff, and other Democratic staff," citing a number of other instances in which Pelosi exerted control over security measures on the Hill.

Pelosi, who has repeatedly denied having agency or influence regarding Capitol security on Jan. 6, named her first fall guy the day after the protests.

Pelosi forced Irving's resignation on Jan. 7, despite his apparent fidelity.

In a letter disclosed in the report, a staffer in the House sergeant at arms' office wrote to Irving, "For the Speaker’s knee-jerk reaction to yesterday’s unprecedented event (and God knows how Congress lives for its knee-jerk reactions and to hell with future consequences . . . ). To immediately call for your resignation . . . after you have been denied again and again by Appropriations for proper security outfitting of the Capitol (and I WROTE several of those testimonies, dangit)..."

The staffer continued, writing, "And to blame you personally because our department was doing the best they could with what they had and our comparatively small department size and limited officer resources . . . and because other agencies stepped in to assist just a fraction too late . . . again, for Congress to demand your resignation is spectacularly unjust, unfair, and unwarranted."

The exchanges shared in the report cover ground besides expression of outrage over Pelosi's displacement of blame.

In one message, Irving references footage of USCP officers letting protesters into the Capitol.

"The video of the officers letting the protesters in absolutely outrageous [sic] me. ... It's incredulous. I just don't trust the USCP anymore. Not my issues now, but beware. Either incompetence or blatant sympathy to Trump," he wrote.

In another message, Irving considered the possibility that something more may have been behind the security breakdown at the Capitol, writing, "This is worthy of another Waco Review: much behind the scenes."

While the sergeant at arms may have been hamstrung by Democrat politicking and the USCP was left ill-equipped, concerns over optics also neutered counter-protest efforts.

The report indicated that Democrat leaders, concerned over "optics" in the aftermath of the destructive and deadly 2020 BLM riots, delayed deploying the National Guard.

Of these findings, Banks said, "Our report exposes the partisanship, incompetence and indifference that led to the disaster on January 6 and it the leading role Speaker Pelosi and her office played in the security failure at the Capitol."

Facebook to ban and remove photos and videos from Capitol protest; content labeled as 'promotion of criminal activity'



Facebook announced it would ban and remove photos and videos from the protest at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. The social media platform claims that photos and videos from Wednesday's events violate Facebook's policy of "promotion of criminal activity."

Immediately following the Capitol protest, Facebook and Instagram locked the account of President Donald Trump for 24 hours for "two policy violations."

Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube deleted videos from President Trump addressing the Capitol chaos, where he instructed his supporters to "go home," and declared that "we have to have peace."

Twitter released a statement on Wednesday that read, "In regard to the ongoing situation in Washington, D.C., we are working proactively to protect the health of the public conversation occurring on the service and will take action on any content that violates the Twitter rules."

Guy Rosen, Facebook's vice president of integrity, said the company deleted Trump's video over the risk that it would increase the risk of violence.

"This is an emergency situation and we are taking appropriate emergency measures, including removing President Trump's video," Rosen wrote on Twitter. "We removed it because on balance we believe it contributes to rather than diminishes the risk of ongoing violence."

This is an emergency situation and we are taking appropriate emergency measures, including removing President Trump… https://t.co/xmqukcUtJj
— Guy Rosen (@Guy Rosen)1609973006.0

"The violent protests in the Capitol today are a disgrace," Facebook said in a statement on Wednesday. "We prohibit incitement and calls for violence on our platform. We are actively reviewing and removing any content that breaks these rules."

Facebook also issued its "response to the violence in Washington," where the social network announced it would ban and remove photos and videos from the Capitol protest.

"Let us speak for the leadership team in saying what so many of us are feeling," wrote Rosen and Monika Bickert, Facebook's vice president of global policy management. "We are appalled by the violence at the Capitol today. We are treating these events as an emergency."

Facebook proclaimed that it has been "searching for and removing" certain content, including "praise and support of the storming of the US Capitol," "incitement or encouragement of the events at the Capitol, including videos and photos from the protestors," and "calls for protests — even peaceful ones — if they violate the curfew in DC."

Facebook claimed that photos and videos of the Capitol protest "represent promotion of criminal activity which violates our policies."

Facebook also implemented "emergency measures," including "automatically disabling comments on posts in Groups that start to have a high rate of hate speech or content that incites violence" and "using AI to demote content that likely violates our policies."

"Facebook and Instagram have both begun blocking content posted to the #StormTheCapitol hashtag," TechCrunch reported.

The social media giant concluded by saying, "We're continuing to monitor the situation and will take additional measures if necessary to keep people safe."

Facebook did not enact a similar policy of banning images and videos during the protests and riots that have been occurring regularly since late May, following the death of George Floyd while in police custody in Minneapolis.