Liberals find themselves handcuffed by their Jan. 6 'insurrection' rhetoric after Democratic radicals storm various state capitols
The Associated Press attempted to do some damage control Friday with an article criticizing Republicans' alleged exploitation of the rhetorical precedent set by the American left concerning what makes for an insurrection. The Washington Post attempted something similar earlier this month, denouncing comparisons between the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the various Democratic attacks on legislatures ever since.
For years, the characterization of the Jan. 6 riot was used to great effect, particularly as a rationale for applying harsher sentences to protesters, censoring speech online, and preventing Republicans from holding, seeking, or staying in office.
However, in recent months, Democrats and other radicals have stormed various state capitols, threatening the lawmakers therein and holding democratic processes for ransom. As keen observers have noted the staggering similarities between these incidents and the 2021 episode that the media continues to call an "insurrection," liberals have sought move the linguistic goalposts.
The duo behind the AP article, Kimberlee Kruesi, a pronoun-providing self-titled "reporterette" based in Tennessee, and so-called misinformation journalist Ali Swenson, accused Republicans of inappropriately painting recent leftist attacks on state legislatures in "darker tones."
The duo referenced the suggestion that Montana state Rep. Zooey Zephyr, born Zachary Raasch, was responsible for "encouraging an insurrection" as the latest instance of Republicans taking Democrats' lead on adopting inflammatory rhetoric.
TheBlaze previously reported that LGBT extremists stormed the Montana Capitol in support of Zephyr, who had been censured over hateful anti-Christian comments directed at his Republican colleagues last week for which he refused to apologize.
The Democratic rioters besieged the House doors, crowded the House gallery, and hurled obscenities at the Republican lawmakers below, who were instructed to clear the floor out of concern for their safety.
Hours after police restored order and carted several rioters away, the Montana Freedom Caucus issued a statement, claiming, "Representative Zephyr encouraged these actions by standing in the middle of the floor encouraging an insurrection after all members were told to move to the sides and clear the House gallery to remain in a safe location."
The AP duo noted that this was the third time in the last five weeks that Republicans "have attempted to compare disruptive but nonviolent protests at state capitols to insurrections."
Ever since the Jan. 6 riot, where an unarmed protester was killed, Kruesi and Swenson claimed, "Republicans have attempted to turn the phrase on Democrats."
Andy Nelson, Democratic Party chair in Missoula County, told the AP, "They want to ring alarm bells and they want to compare this to Jan. 6. ... There’s absolutely no way you can compare what happened on Monday with the Jan. 6 insurrection. Violence occurred that day. No violence occurred in the gallery of the Montana House."
\u201cBREAKING: The Montana House of Reps has been shut down by left-wing protesters who are there protesting the censure of transgender Democrat Rep. Zooey Zephyr, that was led by the @MTFreedomCaucus, for telling his Republican colleagues they have "blood on their hands" for passing\u2026\u201d— Greg Price (@Greg Price) 1682374006
Another instance where Republicans saw fit — on the basis of the standard set by Democrats and the media — to intimate an insurrection took place was in late March when leftists stormed the Tennessee Capitol on March 30, threatening, "No action, no peace."
Whereas the corporate media claimed the incursion was a "peaceful protest," as they had with the BLM riots that did nearly $2 billion in damage and killed between 6 and 20 people, House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R) suggested the behavior was "at least equivalent, maybe worse depending on how you look at it, of doing an insurrection in the Capitol," reported the Washington Post.
Democrats were angered by Sexton's application of their own standard.
Tennessee Democratic Rep. John Ray Clemmons said, "They are trying to dismiss the integrity and sincerity of what all these people are calling for. ... They’re dismissing what it is just to avoid the debate on this issue."
Here is some footage of the scene at the Tennessee Capitol on the day of the attack:
\u201cI deleted the last tweet because I wasn\u2019t as clear. This was a peaceful protest. Students, parents and their supporters went through Capitol security to lobby for gun control in the Capitol. No one was arrested. This shoving started when THP needed to make way for lawmakers.\u201d— Kelsey Gibbs (@Kelsey Gibbs) 1680201705
Michael Gerhardt, a law professor at the University of North Carolina who adamantly pushed for former President Donald Trump to be impeached, similarly downplayed the Tennessee incursion, telling the Associated Press, "Disrupting things is a far cry from insurrection. ... It's just a protest, and protesters are not insurrectionists."
Citing legal experts, the AP duo provided the following definition of "insurrection": "a violent uprising that targets government authority."
Although the duo strongly intimated the Jan. 6 riot satisfied this definition, having allegedly constituted "an assault on American democracy and the peaceful transfer of power," they did not spill much ink in the interest of distinguishing the episode from recent Democratic state capitol attacks.
They did, however, appeal to Harvard University law professor Laurence Tribe's sense that the Montana and Tennessee Capitol attacks did not involve "real attempts to dismantle or replace a government, so it's wrong to call them insurrections" — something that perhaps could also be said of Jan. 6.
In fact, Tribe's sense echoes past Republican remarks about Jan. 6.
Sen. Ron Johnson noted in a May 19, 2021, Fox News interview that "even calling it an insurrection, it wasn’t. I condemned the breach, I condemned the violence, but to say there were thousands of armed insurrectionists breaching the Capitol intent on overthrowing the government is just simply a false narrative. … By and large it was peaceful protest except for there were a number of people, basically agitators, that whipped the crowd and breached the Capitol."
Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.) said, "There was an undisciplined mob. ... There were some rioters and some who committed acts of vandalism. But let me be clear: There was no insurrection."
American attorney and investigative journalist Jeffrey Scott Shapiro noted in the Wall Street Journal last year that the "events of Jan. 6, 2021, are misunderstood, and the failure to correct the record could be damaging to both America’s future and its justice system. Words have to have meaning, and the continuous mislabeling of the U.S. Capitol breach as an 'insurrection' is an example of how a false narrative can gain currency and cause dangerous injustice."
While recognizing that various crimes were committed on January 6, Shapiro underlined that "not one defendant is charged with insurrection under 18 U.S.C. 2383. That’s because insurrection is a legal term with specific elements."
"The events of Jan. 6 also fail to meet the dictionary definition of insurrection, which Merriam-Webster defines as 'an act or instance of revolting against civil authority or an established government,'" continued Shapiro. "A real insurrection would have required the armed forces to quell an armed resistance. ... The misuse of words, especially involving criminal accusations, can easily result in overreaching enforcement of the law and a chilling effect on free speech, all of which have already happened — and in this case, endanger the very system the rioters’ accusers purport to protect."
Although the AP and the Washington Post are critical of Republicans' possible misuse of the terms "insurrection" or "insurrectionist," such as when Florida Republicans accused Democrats accordingly in April 2022, they are not similarly critical of the precedent set by their peers and favored politicians.
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Louisville bank shooter reportedly massacred innocents in an effort to justify more gun control in America — and Democrats were ready to oblige him
President Joe Biden, David Hogg, and other Democratic operatives blasted Republicans in the immediate aftermath of the Louisville bank massacre, in which five innocents were murdered and another eight grievously injured.
Biden, for instance, suggested just hours after the last shot was fired at the Old National Bank on April 10 that Republicans' refusal to support Democratic efforts to curtail Americans' Second Amendment rights was "unconscionable, it's reckless, and too many Americans are paying with their lives."
It now appears that the pronoun-providing Louisville shooter may have ultimately spilled blood in part to help Democrats spill ink on gun control legislation.
A neighbor of the shooter told the New York Post that the apparent gun-control activist's 13-page manifesto was discovered by his roommate Dallas Whelan. It is now in the possession of the Louisville Police Department.
The Daily Mail reported that the manifesto made three key points: "He wanted to kill himself, he wanted to prove how easy it was to buy a gun in Kentucky and he wanted to highlight a mental health crisis in America."
If accurate, then Democrats may have made use of the slaughter of Josh Barrick, Deana Eckert, Tommy Elliott, Juliana Farmer, and Jim Tutt Jr. as their killer intended.
TheBlaze previously reported that following the shooting, Biden said, "How many more Americans must die before Republicans in Congress will act to protect our communities? It's long past time that we require safe storage of firearms. Require background checks for all gun sales. Eliminate gun manufacturers' immunity from liability. We can and must do these things now."
"A strong majority of Americans want lawmakers to act on commonsense gun safety reforms. Instead, from Florida to North Carolina to the U.S. House of Representatives, we’ve watched Republican officials double down on dangerous bills that make our schools, places of worship, and communities less safe. It’s unconscionable, it’s reckless, and too many Americans are paying with their lives," added the president.
Gun-rights activist David Hogg intimated that U.S. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), whose friend Tommy Elliott was slain in the massacre, was "complicit" because of his support of gun rights.
\u201c@SenRickScott Must be tough knowing you\u2019re complicit\u201d— Rick Scott (@Rick Scott) 1681175059
Rep. Morgan McGarvey (D-Ky.) said in a statement, "Thoughts and prayers for those we lost, those who are injured, and their loved ones and families are appreciated, but today serves as a stark reminder that we need to address gun violence at the national level so no other family loses a son, a daughter, and a loved one."
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on April 11, "This is why we continue to call on Congress, uh, Republicans in Congress, to take action. This is not OK. ... We need to do more."
Spectrum News reported that Kentucky Senate Minority Leader Gerald Neal (D) also stressed that the massacre should prompt change, noting, "We must do all that we can to take effective steps to ensure a safer community."
Democrat state Rep. Keturah Herron rushed to Twitter to write, "This is happening around the country in a city daily. Today was our turn in Louisville, KY. As we hold our community tighter there must me outrage and anger. We live in a war zone and we shouldn’t have to."
The Louisville chapter of the NAACP and the Louisville Urban League called for gun control measures Thursday, reported the Courier Journal.
In a statement obtained by the Daily Mail, the mass murderer's family indicated they too reckon the shooting "is yet another indication that meaningful, common sense gun safety measures must be enacted."
Democratic strategist Max Burns of Third Degree Strategies spoke to the utility of the Louisville shooting in a CNN opinion piece, noting that in the wake of the Louisville massacre and the murder of Christians by a transgender extremist in Nashville, "the political armor that once protected firearms might finally be cracking."
The transgender extremist who murdered six Christians in Nashville on March 27 similarly penned a manifesto, but nothing yet has been revealed about its contents, despite mounting pressure on the FBI from Tennessee Republicans. While her motivations are presently more opaque than the Louisville shooter's, even if revealed, they may not ultimately matter to Democrats, who appear to have framed the anti-Christian violence as another opportunity to advance their agenda.
This apparent keenness to decontextualize and exploit was showcased Wednesday when the Biden White House once again ignored the families of the Nashville victims and instead invited to the White House the three Democratic Tennessee lawmakers who used the anti-Christian massacre as a springboard for their own gun-control activism.
The same three Democratic state representatives — Justin Jones of Nashville, Gloria Johnson of Knoxville, and Justin Pearson of Memphis — recently voted against a school safety bill that would harden security in schools and serve as a future check against the kind of attack waged by the transgender extremist because it would not impinge upon Americans' Second Amendment rights.
Body camera footage from Louisville shooting released | WNT youtu.be
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Biden invites 'Tennessee Three' to White House — but won't invite families of Covenant School massacre victims
President Joe Biden has invited the so-called Tennessee Three to the White House, but he is not inviting the families of the victims of the Covenant School massacre.
At the White House press briefing on Wednesday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre announced that Biden has invited Tennessee Democratic state Reps. Justin Jones, Justin Pearson, and Gloria Johnson to the White House. They will visit next Monday.
She explained:
Earlier this month, the president spoke to them by phone after they were subjugated to expulsion votes in the Tennessee state House for peacefully protesting in support of stronger gun safety laws following the shooting at Covenant School in Nashville. During that call, the president thanked them for their leadership in seeking to ban assault weapons and standing up for the democratic values.
When it was his turn to ask a question, Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy wanted to know: What about the families of the victims of the massacre?
"On Monday, you're going to have three of the lawmakers who protested—" he began before Jean-Pierre interrupted.
"Peacefully protested," she interjected.
"Who peacefully protested after the Nashville Covenant School shooting," Doocy continued. "Have any of the victims or their families been invited to the White House?"
"I don’t have anything to read out to you about any invite," the press secretary responded.
"Why?" Doocy pressed.
Jean-Pierre, however, could not provide an answer. Instead, she vaguely explained how Biden is "focused on getting things done" and plans to use his "bully pulpit" to continue pushing his agenda, which includes banning so-called assault weapons. Hosting the lawmakers at the White House, Jean-Pierre said, is about fostering a conversation to that end.
Despite being expelled from the Tennessee state House, both Pearson and Jones have since been reinstated by their districts.
Jones made headlines on Monday when he carried a baby-sized casket through the halls of the Tennessee Capitol to make a statement about gun violence and the need for more gun control.
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Bud Light boycott just got bigger as Dylan Mulvaney ad backlash grows
Dylan Mulvaney is a trans TikTok influencer who was catapulted to fame for documenting his “days of girlhood,” and he’s currently at the center of yet another internet breaking controversy.
Mulvaney recently has been sponsored by Bud Light, telling the world via a video he made drinking Bud Lights while dressed up to resemble Audrey Hepburn.
Bud Light even sent him a can with his face on it. Unfortunately for Bud Light, the reaction this caused has been disastrous for business, as many former drinkers are now boycotting all Anheuser-Busch beverages.
Dave Rubin of "The Rubin Report" had Spencer Klavan and John Bachman on his show to discuss.
Klavan believes “the people who should be most angry” about Mulvaney’s portrayal of “girlhood” are “gay people who are getting caricatured out of existence.”
He continues, “Now a guy that grows up like Dylan has to put on a wig and pretend to be a girl just to get noticed. It’s incredibly sad.”
Bachman agrees, saying, “This transgender movement is as some people say. It does appear to act like a social contagion. The average drama-club gay dude that we all knew in high school — it does now seem to be encouraged financially,” adding “for other reasons as well, to pursue this transgenderism.”
Bachman also believes that this is an indicator of an even larger problem in corporate America.
“You have organizations like the Human Rights Council, which is funded by the Open Society Foundations and George Soros. They are the ones setting the tone.”
He says all these corporations really care about is what the “gay mafia” will say about their advertising campaigns.
The three discuss the Daily Wire’s attempt to create products for conservatives that challenge the new “woke” branding of companies like Bud Light.
Klavan says, “It used to be that conservatism was, you know, a particular set of ideological commitments. It still is those, but those commitments now basically just amount to recognizing reality.”
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Video PROVES reinstated Tennessee Dem is a fraud
Rep. Justin J. Pearson has recently been catapulted to internet stardom after becoming known as one of the “Tennessee Three” — a group that led anti-gun protests on the floor of the state legislature after the recent mass shooting in Nashville.
Lawmakers voted to expel Pearson for his actions, but he has recently been reinstated.
Pearson has been continuing to speak out via the mainstream media with an accent and attitude that have many on the left calling him MLK 2, which has the internet — and Dave Rubin — calling him a fraud.
Why?
A campaign video of Pearson has resurfaced from 2016, in which he speaks in a much less theatrical voice. He is buttoned up, his afro is gone, and he sounds like every other inspired young man preaching unity.
In the video, Pearson says, “I’m Justin J. Pearson and I’m running for President of PSG. There are a few reasons that we’re running this campaign this year. One has to do with representation. How can we represent all voices in a conversation?”
Pearson continues, “I want to bring together different voices. Dissenting voices. Voices that may be more liberal or more conservative. In order that we can reach a point of sort of the radical middle.”
Rubin comments, “That was him as a normal person speaking in normal cadence back in 2016.”
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Tennessee Democrats who exploited Nashville massacre to push for gun control voted against bipartisan bill to make schools safer
After a transsexual radical massacred six Christians at the Covenant School on March 27, Republican Gov. Bill Lee and Tennessee lawmakers took swift action to advance legislation that would boost funding and harden security at schools in the state.
HB 322 passed both the state House with a bipartisan 95-4 vote on April 6 and the Senate on April 13 with a unanimous 33-0 vote. Lee is set to sign it into law.
The three Democrats who used the shooting as a springboard for their gun control agenda and media tour did not, however, support the legislation.
Despite having expressed concern over school shootings and invoking the memory of the slain children, Democratic state Reps. Justin Jones of Nashville, Gloria Johnson of Knoxville, and Justin Pearson of Memphis ultimately voted against the school safety bill.
The Tennessean reported that the bill would require schools to:
- lock exterior doors while students are present;
- conduct annual incident command bus safety drills, extra to the already required armed intruder drills; and
- install classroom door locks and secure visitor entry vestibules.
In addition to hardening structural security, the bill would require school districts to ensure staff and experts have the wherewithal required in the event of an emergency. Accordingly, districts must have a threat assessment team and ensure that private security guards undergo annual active shooting training.
Districts will also have to annually provide up-to-date safety plans, floor plans, and security systems access to state and local law enforcement to optimize alignment and interoperability.
While not all of the requirements extend to public charter schools, private schools, and church-related schools, they too will have to ensure that exterior doors are locked, relevant drills are routinely conducted, security guards are trained up, and safety plans are in place.
"While it may not be the full solution to the danger and violence we see in the world, it is certainly a step forward," said House Majority Leader William Lamberth (R).
The three Democrats temporarily expelled from the House — for staging what Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton (R) called an "insurrection" — opposed HB 322, as it did not satisfy their desire to infringe upon Americans' Second Amendment rights or stop access to "weapons of war."
"We don’t want gun battles at our schoolhouse door," Johnson said. "We want our kids to be safe, and to feel safe."
Pearson likened hardening security at schools to making them "more like prisons."
Jones, who has had multiple run-ins with the law, suggested that the addition of more police officers and security at schools was troubling, calling HB 322 a false solution and a "white flag of surrender."
\u201cThe TN House is hearing HB 0322 to add more police officer\u2019s to schools as a response to mass shootings and @brotherjones_ calls on the house to listen to the thousands of young people outside and take real action! #NoActionNoPeace\u201d— A is for Afro (@A is for Afro) 1680794466
Jones added, "This is an optical spectacle decision to offer these false solutions. You want exposure when we are saying we want you to do something. This is a very political, calculated decision."
Republican Rep. Scott Campbell intimated that Jones and his two comrades were guilty of what they accused the bill's supporters of, saying, "If you want to talk about playing to the cameras, that’s what just occurred."
Last week, Vice President Kamala Harris praised the trio, suggesting that their expulsion was racially motivated and calling their "insurrection" courageous, reported the Guardian.
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In The Left’s Game Of High-Stakes Blackjack, It’s Time For The Right To Double Down
The right must stop treating each political battle as a tabula rasa, unaffected by what happened before or what happens after.
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