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The New Coffee Room

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  3. The Jan 6 “nothing burger”

The Jan 6 “nothing burger”

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  • L Loki

    @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

    @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

    I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

    Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

    I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

    HoraceH Offline
    HoraceH Offline
    Horace
    wrote on last edited by Horace
    #36

    @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

    @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

    @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

    I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

    Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

    I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

    Believing what part of what I said? The part about the mob circumventing security measures honed by 60 years of experience in mob defense, came from you. I think the notion that this mob overcame any significant resistance is ridiculous, but you continue to present your descriptions as if they are ground truth fact, the denial of which a litmus test for insanity.

    Education is extremely important.

    L 1 Reply Last reply
    • kluursK Offline
      kluursK Offline
      kluurs
      wrote on last edited by kluurs
      #37

      For me, it is a very sad affair. This was a mob action. This mob was heterogenous, some peaceful, some insurrectionist, some disturbed - still most of them felt they were doing some patriotic. If the election were "stolen," then would seem reasonable for patriots to rise up and restore the appropriate leadership.

      What would have happened if they had gotten to Pence, Pelosi or Osorio might be frightening. Mobs, regardless of political persuasion, are not the best source of reasoned action.

      Police understand that a bit better than pacifists, politicians, or most internet commentators.

      My sense is that the police and some in the leadership responsible for security were concerned that an overly aggressive security presence would draw criticism. They had been criticized as being overly zealous in removing the crowd in front of the church. Some of these people may have been sensitive to that - or even more so if appointed by the President.

      As for an investigation, if we could spend years and tens of millions of dollars investigating the Clintons for things such as Christmas card mailings, Whitewater, lies in a civil court matter, Benghazi, etc., the suggestion that this be considered does not seem out of bounds with past experience. If this had happened on Obama's watch, it is not inconceivable that the GOP House and Senate might have considered doing so.

      What is incredibly sad, is that these patriots (even if misguided, misinformed or misled) will be irrevocably harmed for their actions. This political game that is being played is getting ugly.

      JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
      • HoraceH Offline
        HoraceH Offline
        Horace
        wrote on last edited by
        #38

        Yeah, mobs suck. I wish we could all agree with that, but the fact is, the left relies on mobs to express their political outrage. When right-affiliated mobs go mobbing, on the other hand, we're all in agreement that it's a bad idea.

        Education is extremely important.

        kluursK 1 Reply Last reply
        • HoraceH Horace

          @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

          Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

          I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

          Believing what part of what I said? The part about the mob circumventing security measures honed by 60 years of experience in mob defense, came from you. I think the notion that this mob overcame any significant resistance is ridiculous, but you continue to present your descriptions as if they are ground truth fact, the denial of which a litmus test for insanity.

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Loki
          wrote on last edited by
          #39

          @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

          I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

          Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

          I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

          Believing what part of what I said? The part about the mob circumventing security measures honed by 60 years of experience against mob defense, came from you. I think the notion that this mob overcame any significant resistance is ridiculous, but you continue to present your descriptions as if they are ground truth fact, the denial of which a litmus test for insanity.

          I agree that we need to let the legal system decide the guilt or innocence of people but as they say you are the average of your five closest friends and if all my friends looked at the videos and thought they were innocent I would be in rough shape.

          HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
          • L Loki

            @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

            Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

            I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

            Believing what part of what I said? The part about the mob circumventing security measures honed by 60 years of experience against mob defense, came from you. I think the notion that this mob overcame any significant resistance is ridiculous, but you continue to present your descriptions as if they are ground truth fact, the denial of which a litmus test for insanity.

            I agree that we need to let the legal system decide the guilt or innocence of people but as they say you are the average of your five closest friends and if all my friends looked at the videos and thought they were innocent I would be in rough shape.

            HoraceH Offline
            HoraceH Offline
            Horace
            wrote on last edited by
            #40

            @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @loki said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            @copper said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

            I think that when the producers weren’t getting the surge of people they wanted, they had the security guys open the doors

            Apparently there was some mixture of being ushered through open doors by security, and a mob storming through defenses prepared by security experts who had honed their craft against insurrectionists for 60 years. But hadn’t yet developed their art to the point where they don’t usher insurrectionists in.

            I know that’s sarcasm on your part but how do you feel about millions of people believing what you said?

            Believing what part of what I said? The part about the mob circumventing security measures honed by 60 years of experience against mob defense, came from you. I think the notion that this mob overcame any significant resistance is ridiculous, but you continue to present your descriptions as if they are ground truth fact, the denial of which a litmus test for insanity.

            I agree that we need to let the legal system decide the guilt or innocence of people but as they say you are the average of your five closest friends and if all my friends looked at the videos and thought they were innocent I would be in rough shape.

            I'm sure there's footage of imbeciles illegally own-goaling in the Capitol. Personally, I have hundreds of friends, and to narrow it down to the five closest would hurt the feelings of many, so I won't. But none of my hundreds of friends are of the opinion that Capitol invaders shouldn't be punished.

            Education is extremely important.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • kluursK kluurs

              For me, it is a very sad affair. This was a mob action. This mob was heterogenous, some peaceful, some insurrectionist, some disturbed - still most of them felt they were doing some patriotic. If the election were "stolen," then would seem reasonable for patriots to rise up and restore the appropriate leadership.

              What would have happened if they had gotten to Pence, Pelosi or Osorio might be frightening. Mobs, regardless of political persuasion, are not the best source of reasoned action.

              Police understand that a bit better than pacifists, politicians, or most internet commentators.

              My sense is that the police and some in the leadership responsible for security were concerned that an overly aggressive security presence would draw criticism. They had been criticized as being overly zealous in removing the crowd in front of the church. Some of these people may have been sensitive to that - or even more so if appointed by the President.

              As for an investigation, if we could spend years and tens of millions of dollars investigating the Clintons for things such as Christmas card mailings, Whitewater, lies in a civil court matter, Benghazi, etc., the suggestion that this be considered does not seem out of bounds with past experience. If this had happened on Obama's watch, it is not inconceivable that the GOP House and Senate might have considered doing so.

              What is incredibly sad, is that these patriots (even if misguided, misinformed or misled) will be irrevocably harmed for their actions. This political game that is being played is getting ugly.

              JollyJ Offline
              JollyJ Offline
              Jolly
              wrote on last edited by
              #41

              @kluurs said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

              For me, it is a very sad affair. This was a mob action. This mob was heterogenous, some peaceful, some insurrectionist, some disturbed - still most of them felt they were doing some patriotic. If the election were "stolen," then would seem reasonable for patriots to rise up and restore the appropriate leadership.

              What would have happened if they had gotten to Pence, Pelosi or Osorio might be frightening. Mobs, regardless of political persuasion, are not the best source of reasoned action.

              Police understand that a bit better than pacifists, politicians, or most internet commentators.

              My sense is that the police and some in the leadership responsible for security were concerned that an overly aggressive security presence would draw criticism. They had been criticized as being overly zealous in removing the crowd in front of the church. Some of these people may have been sensitive to that - or even more so if appointed by the President.

              As for an investigation, if we could spend years and tens of millions of dollars investigating the Clintons for things such as Christmas card mailings, Whitewater, lies in a civil court matter, Benghazi, etc., the suggestion that this be considered does not seem out of bounds with past experience. If this had happened on Obama's watch, it is not inconceivable that the GOP House and Senate might have considered doing so.

              What is incredibly sad, is that these patriots (even if misguided, misinformed or misled) will be irrevocably harmed for their actions. This political game that is being played is getting ugly.

              It's going to get much uglier...

              “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

              Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

              1 Reply Last reply
              • HoraceH Horace

                Yeah, mobs suck. I wish we could all agree with that, but the fact is, the left relies on mobs to express their political outrage. When right-affiliated mobs go mobbing, on the other hand, we're all in agreement that it's a bad idea.

                kluursK Offline
                kluursK Offline
                kluurs
                wrote on last edited by
                #42

                @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

                Yeah, mobs suck. I wish we could all agree with that, but the fact is, the left relies on mobs to express their political outrage.

                The mob actions taken last summer harmed innocents - i.e. business owners and their employees. I can sympathize with frustration that perceived justice has at times not been achieved but not not with harming others. I always recall Victor Frankl talking about walking with a fellow former prisoner from Auschwitz, coming to a field where his compatriot walked over young seedlings. Frankl suggested a different path, but the other prisoner felt that after what they had enduring they were owed the right to ignore courtesy toward the work of others. Not true.

                I keep thinking that police work has never been more difficult nor constrained than it is today. Expectations of appropriate behavior have never been higher - and respect, likely never lower. How do we attract the best to this profession under those circumstances?

                And our expectations of how to deal with the chaos of a mob destroying the lives and property of others or of the state? Watching some of the rioting last summer, more than once I saw the police capture the person most easily secured (e.g. 15 year old 80 lb suburban girl) rather than go after the linebacker sized vandal. Easier arrest - proof that something is "being done" - but we need better strategies in addressing the madness of mobs. Mobs are learning that they can control the situation - and consequences are unlikely. That is an unhealthy situation for us - again regardless of the ideology or motive of the mob action.

                1 Reply Last reply
                • HoraceH Offline
                  HoraceH Offline
                  Horace
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #43

                  Could we be doing less to discourage the woke riots? Many local governments essentially accepted them as righteous and appropriate. Could we be doing more to make an example of the Jan 6 riots? Will that example be applied to the next woke riots?

                  Education is extremely important.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • AxtremusA Offline
                    AxtremusA Offline
                    Axtremus
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #44

                    @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

                    Could we be doing more to make an example of the Jan 6 riots?

                    Definitely. An independent commission authorized by Congress to investigate the Jan. 6 riot, for example, is one of the things that we can and should do to make an example of the Jan. 6 riot.

                    HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                    • AxtremusA Axtremus

                      @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

                      Could we be doing more to make an example of the Jan 6 riots?

                      Definitely. An independent commission authorized by Congress to investigate the Jan. 6 riot, for example, is one of the things that we can and should do to make an example of the Jan. 6 riot.

                      HoraceH Offline
                      HoraceH Offline
                      Horace
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #45

                      @axtremus said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

                      @horace said in The Jan 6 “nothing burger”:

                      Could we be doing more to make an example of the Jan 6 riots?

                      Definitely. An independent commission authorized by Congress to investigate the Jan. 6 riot, for example, is one of the things that we can and should do to make an example of the Jan. 6 riot.

                      By all means, let the left slake its tribal blood lust. It will only be all the more laughable to watch the contrast in reaction to the next oppression olympics riots.

                      Education is extremely important.

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