For Many of Us, Jan. 6 Never Ended

ā€˜Over the last four years, itā€™s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day heā€™s back in office.

Wow, Clayhead! Out of 19 responses, you managed to find TWO idiots here to actually agree with you! Good one--- you're moving up in the world.
Aside from needing psychiatric treatment, if you think J6 haunts you now, just wait until tomorrow sinks in! :auiqs.jpg:
 
ā€˜Over the last four years, itā€™s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day heā€™s back in office. ā€œIt will be my great honor to pardon the peaceful protesters, or as I often call them, the hostages,ā€ he said in a speech last year. But all of us who were there and anyone who watched on TV know that those who stormed the Capitol were not peaceful protesters. Pardoning them would be an outrageous mistake, one that could mean about 800 convicted criminals will be back on the street.

It could also put me in danger, as Iā€™ve continued to testify in court and Iā€™ve given victim statements in cases against dozens of the rioters who assaulted me and my fellow officers.

I was one of the fortunate ones that day; nine people wound up dead as a result of the rampage. Two protesters had fatal medical episodes, one rioter overdosed during the uproar and another was fatally shot by a policeman while forcing her way into the House Chamber. One of my colleagues, 42-year-old Officer Brian Sicknick, suffered two strokes after the trauma of fighting off multiple protesters who sprayed him with a chemical irritant. He didnā€™t survive. Four D.C. policemen harmed in the riots later died by suicide.

My friend Harry Dunn, the first law enforcement member to prominently condemn the brazen uprising, testified about our primitive hand-to-hand fighting against improvised weaponry like flagpoles, metal bike racks and projectiles, with officers bleeding, blinded and coughing from bear spray. Called racial slurs, Harry has since retired his blue uniform. My co-worker Michael Fanone was beaten, burned and electrically shocked. He suffered a heart attack, concussion and traumatic brain injury that caused him to also leave his position at the Metropolitan Police. While physically recovering, heā€™s been the target of constant harassment from Trump supporters and has struggled to find steady work. Steven Sund, who was the Capitol Police chief, has been scapegoated and resigned under pressure.ā€™


No one should forget January 6th, when Trump committed treasonous, historic crimes: attempting to overturn a presidential election, disenfranchise millions of Americans, and disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.

For more than two hours Trump did nothing to stop the violent, lawless attack of the Capitol Building ā€“ an attack Trump himself incited.
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ā€˜Over the last four years, itā€™s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day heā€™s back in office. ā€œIt will be my great honor to pardon the peaceful protesters, or as I often call them, the hostages,ā€ he said in a speech last year. But all of us who were there and anyone who watched on TV know that those who stormed the Capitol were not peaceful protesters. Pardoning them would be an outrageous mistake, one that could mean about 800 convicted criminals will be back on the street.

It could also put me in danger, as Iā€™ve continued to testify in court and Iā€™ve given victim statements in cases against dozens of the rioters who assaulted me and my fellow officers.

I was one of the fortunate ones that day; nine people wound up dead as a result of the rampage. Two protesters had fatal medical episodes, one rioter overdosed during the uproar and another was fatally shot by a policeman while forcing her way into the House Chamber. One of my colleagues, 42-year-old Officer Brian Sicknick, suffered two strokes after the trauma of fighting off multiple protesters who sprayed him with a chemical irritant. He didnā€™t survive. Four D.C. policemen harmed in the riots later died by suicide.

My friend Harry Dunn, the first law enforcement member to prominently condemn the brazen uprising, testified about our primitive hand-to-hand fighting against improvised weaponry like flagpoles, metal bike racks and projectiles, with officers bleeding, blinded and coughing from bear spray. Called racial slurs, Harry has since retired his blue uniform. My co-worker Michael Fanone was beaten, burned and electrically shocked. He suffered a heart attack, concussion and traumatic brain injury that caused him to also leave his position at the Metropolitan Police. While physically recovering, heā€™s been the target of constant harassment from Trump supporters and has struggled to find steady work. Steven Sund, who was the Capitol Police chief, has been scapegoated and resigned under pressure.ā€™


No one should forget January 6th, when Trump committed treasonous, historic crimes: attempting to overturn a presidential election, disenfranchise millions of Americans, and disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.

For more than two hours Trump did nothing to stop the violent, lawless attack of the Capitol Building ā€“ an attack Trump himself incited.
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Oh, Jan 6 is going to come back to bite you in the ass, bucko. Now that the adults are back in charge all the crimes that the democrats committed are going to be exposed.

Oh, the horror of J6. It haunts the democrats to this day that having rigged and stolen an election to effect a coup against the United States, that 10,000 people actually cared enough to cram the steps of the Congress four years ago to exercise their constitutional right to air their grievances against the US government because they were moving ahead certifying it while shoveling all of the questions and doubts about the election under the carpet as quickly as they could while denying people the right to even debate it on social media taking away their freedom of speech.

Then when the Capitol police were ordered to thrown incendiary shock grenades into the otherwise peaceful assembly, these same people responded by beating the crap out of the malfeasant cops and kicked down the doors of the building marching inside refusing to be denied. I spent the better part of today listening to the personal accounts and horror stories of various J6ers of the injustices done to them these past four years on Cowboy Logic as if they had been sent to some 3rd world country.

And now that Joe Biden has had thousands of them arrested and deprived their due process and treated like dogs, Trump is returning to office to set them free so that they can sue the ass off the corrupt officials who perpetrated this heinous crime to the tune of ten billion dollars.

Oh, the horror marches on. At least so long as Joe Biden continues to masquerade as a legitimate president.
 
They need reparations and apologies from every member of that Congress.

About $50,000,000,000 ought to be just about right. That is about 30 million per prisoner. But then, there is the matter of compensating the mother of Ashli Babbit--- not only for the distasteful arrest of her for protesting her daughter's death, but for that bum of a cop who murdered her daughter, a guy with a decade's long history of malfeasance, discipline and incompetence as a police office who is unfit to be in any LEO position which they have tried hard to keep from the eyes of the public.

I think he alone ought to be arrested and charged for murder and that Babbitt family awarded at least 50 million dollars in compensation.
 
Why does anyone pay any attention to anything the OP says?

As justoffal stated earlier, OP is obviously a bot and look how riled up everyone is.

Ignore it.

Pretty fucking simple.
 

I never like that guy. :nono:
He's too full of himself.
Fish handshake. Fuck that.
Grabbed his hand and it was like a day old Nile Perch and shit.
That ain't some kinda man I'm gonna like.
The fish handshake motherfuckers are always out to con ya.
 
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I never like that guy. :nono:
He's too full of himself.
Fish handshake. Fuck that.
Grabbed his hand and it was like a day old Nile Perch and shit.
That ain't some kinda man I'm gonna like.
The fish handshake motherfuckers are always out to con ya.
I used to listen to him at work 9am - 12, before Rush came on.

I think he's a bit too tightly wound. He breaks out in a sweat over what he's found out about the Deep State.
Had a nervous breakdown several years ago.
But he's the one that let everyone know that George Bush was part of the Deep State.
He also knows that some really evil people are running the Vatican.
 
ā€˜Over the last four years, itā€™s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day heā€™s back in office. ā€œIt will be my great honor to pardon the peaceful protesters, or as I often call them, the hostages,ā€ he said in a speech last year. But all of us who were there and anyone who watched on TV know that those who stormed the Capitol were not peaceful protesters. Pardoning them would be an outrageous mistake, one that could mean about 800 convicted criminals will be back on the street.

It could also put me in danger, as Iā€™ve continued to testify in court and Iā€™ve given victim statements in cases against dozens of the rioters who assaulted me and my fellow officers.

I was one of the fortunate ones that day; nine people wound up dead as a result of the rampage. Two protesters had fatal medical episodes, one rioter overdosed during the uproar and another was fatally shot by a policeman while forcing her way into the House Chamber. One of my colleagues, 42-year-old Officer Brian Sicknick, suffered two strokes after the trauma of fighting off multiple protesters who sprayed him with a chemical irritant. He didnā€™t survive. Four D.C. policemen harmed in the riots later died by suicide.

My friend Harry Dunn, the first law enforcement member to prominently condemn the brazen uprising, testified about our primitive hand-to-hand fighting against improvised weaponry like flagpoles, metal bike racks and projectiles, with officers bleeding, blinded and coughing from bear spray. Called racial slurs, Harry has since retired his blue uniform. My co-worker Michael Fanone was beaten, burned and electrically shocked. He suffered a heart attack, concussion and traumatic brain injury that caused him to also leave his position at the Metropolitan Police. While physically recovering, heā€™s been the target of constant harassment from Trump supporters and has struggled to find steady work. Steven Sund, who was the Capitol Police chief, has been scapegoated and resigned under pressure.ā€™


No one should forget January 6th, when Trump committed treasonous, historic crimes: attempting to overturn a presidential election, disenfranchise millions of Americans, and disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.

For more than two hours Trump did nothing to stop the violent, lawless attack of the Capitol Building ā€“ an attack Trump himself incited.
If you were able to let go of the phony "insurrectionist" slogan it would help your mental health problems.
 
ā€˜Over the last four years, itā€™s been devastating to me to hear Donald Trump repeat his promise to pardon insurrectionists on the first day heā€™s back in office. ā€œIt will be my great honor to pardon the peaceful protesters, or as I often call them, the hostages,ā€ he said in a speech last year. But all of us who were there and anyone who watched on TV know that those who stormed the Capitol were not peaceful protesters. Pardoning them would be an outrageous mistake, one that could mean about 800 convicted criminals will be back on the street.

It could also put me in danger, as Iā€™ve continued to testify in court and Iā€™ve given victim statements in cases against dozens of the rioters who assaulted me and my fellow officers.

I was one of the fortunate ones that day; nine people wound up dead as a result of the rampage. Two protesters had fatal medical episodes, one rioter overdosed during the uproar and another was fatally shot by a policeman while forcing her way into the House Chamber. One of my colleagues, 42-year-old Officer Brian Sicknick, suffered two strokes after the trauma of fighting off multiple protesters who sprayed him with a chemical irritant. He didnā€™t survive. Four D.C. policemen harmed in the riots later died by suicide.

My friend Harry Dunn, the first law enforcement member to prominently condemn the brazen uprising, testified about our primitive hand-to-hand fighting against improvised weaponry like flagpoles, metal bike racks and projectiles, with officers bleeding, blinded and coughing from bear spray. Called racial slurs, Harry has since retired his blue uniform. My co-worker Michael Fanone was beaten, burned and electrically shocked. He suffered a heart attack, concussion and traumatic brain injury that caused him to also leave his position at the Metropolitan Police. While physically recovering, heā€™s been the target of constant harassment from Trump supporters and has struggled to find steady work. Steven Sund, who was the Capitol Police chief, has been scapegoated and resigned under pressure.ā€™


No one should forget January 6th, when Trump committed treasonous, historic crimes: attempting to overturn a presidential election, disenfranchise millions of Americans, and disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.

For more than two hours Trump did nothing to stop the violent, lawless attack of the Capitol Building ā€“ an attack Trump himself incited.

LOL

Your cult is weird.
 

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