Re: Breaking News, Politics version
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 5:48 pm
Permanent Portfolio Forum
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11757
Well, I remember seeing businesses being burned to the ground and statues being toppled all over the country in the past year and democrats in authority doing nothing to stop it. If you only watched CNN and MSNBC maybe you didn't see it but they covered it on Fox News.
See, Mark?
It is indeed and I wouldn't support it for a second.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 4:33 pm Of course breaking into the Capitol building and committing any kind of violence is unacceptable.
But the easy and intellectually lazy response is "it's all Trump's fault". As often happens with these fast-moving events, it will take time to discover and understand all of the details and sort through the competing narratives.
sophie wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 7:32 amIt is indeed and I wouldn't support it for a second.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 4:33 pm Of course breaking into the Capitol building and committing any kind of violence is unacceptable.
But the easy and intellectually lazy response is "it's all Trump's fault". As often happens with these fast-moving events, it will take time to discover and understand all of the details and sort through the competing narratives.
However, I find it interesting that the media widely condemned the protester's actions, even going so far as to say that it "threatened the Republic" whatever that means, after spending several months condoning much worse violence by BLM.




Can't say I've seen anyone saying Trump had nothing to do with it at all. But context is everything. People are being foolish if they disregard the decades of neglect of millions of average Americans that led to Trump, the relentless attacks on him and his supporters, and the complete lack of accountability for the bad behavior of politicians, our critical institutions, and much of the media. Add in our chaotic, non-transparent election system and no real adjudication of objections based on the merits and some people are finally going to lose their sh*t at some point.Cortopassi wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 8:23 am Nah, he had NOTHING to do with this at all. He didn't egg them on. He didn't call for them to come to Washington.
Let me be 100% clear here. I do not and did not support any of the violence that happened over the summer either. Jesus, this is the capitol of the United States. I have to agree with many comments I have heard that if the crowd looked like BLM protesters, there would be a lot more dead and arrested people today vs. the relatively very light treatment these people got.
I hope every face is put into a recognition system and these people get the book thrown at them.
It was really like the zombie apocalypse.
Which is the most telling aspect of all this. For the entire summer, the darlings of the "progressive" Left set entire cities on fire, and were were told that what was needed was a "national conversation."sophie wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 7:32 amIt is indeed and I wouldn't support it for a second.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 4:33 pm Of course breaking into the Capitol building and committing any kind of violence is unacceptable.
But the easy and intellectually lazy response is "it's all Trump's fault". As often happens with these fast-moving events, it will take time to discover and understand all of the details and sort through the competing narratives.
However, I find it interesting that the media widely condemned the protester's actions, even going so far as to say that it "threatened the Republic" whatever that means, after spending several months condoning much worse violence by BLM.
First line, agreed. Both for Trump/blue collar workers who feel left out, and to the BLM supporters who also feel left out and abused.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 9:06 am
Too many people feel they are not being heard and supported by their government. They come from different perspectives and express it in different ways, but that's what is at the root of all of this.
Also... the guy in the last photo is dressed in all black, with a black backpack and a helmet. How many Trump supporters dress like that? Not saying it's impossible, but it's also possible that not everything is what it seems.

To clarify, by "different perspectives" I did mean to include BLM and any other groups, so we agree.Cortopassi wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 10:13 amFirst line, agreed. Both for Trump/blue collar workers who feel left out, and to the BLM supporters who also feel left out and abused.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 9:06 am
Too many people feel they are not being heard and supported by their government. They come from different perspectives and express it in different ways, but that's what is at the root of all of this.
Also... the guy in the last photo is dressed in all black, with a black backpack and a helmet. How many Trump supporters dress like that? Not saying it's impossible, but it's also possible that not everything is what it seems.
One could go back from that and say "no _____, no rally". Who should be "allowed" to call a rally at the Capitol? And who should decide?Cortopassi wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 10:13 am Second line -- I really don't care if in the end it was simply a small radical group, whether Antifa, BLM, Proud Boys, whatever that started the storming of the Capitol. Trump called for the rally. No rally, no storming. This one seems pretty black and white to me.
Certainly there may have been some supporters there because of what was going on inside even without a call for a rally, but Trumps' call for a rally and his speech poured gasoline on a small, smoldering fire that likely would have remained peaceful.
Perhaps a sleeping giant has been awakened, or perhaps not, we'll see. Do you think we'll see politicians offering to take a knee and seek to understand them?dualstow wrote:It was clearly Trump's words -- quoted in Corto's post-- that drew this mob. However, I think they're going to cause trouble this year after Trump is out of office.
Well, then what about Kamala Harris' words, egging on violent BLM actions? Why wasn't she called to account for that?
What do you feel would be an appropriate characterization of and response to what happened at the Capitol yesterday?Maddy wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 9:25 amWhich is the most telling aspect of all this. For the entire summer, the darlings of the "progressive" Left set entire cities on fire, and were were told that what was needed was a "national conversation."sophie wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 7:32 amIt is indeed and I wouldn't support it for a second.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 4:33 pm Of course breaking into the Capitol building and committing any kind of violence is unacceptable.
But the easy and intellectually lazy response is "it's all Trump's fault". As often happens with these fast-moving events, it will take time to discover and understand all of the details and sort through the competing narratives.
However, I find it interesting that the media widely condemned the protester's actions, even going so far as to say that it "threatened the Republic" whatever that means, after spending several months condoning much worse violence by BLM.
What a pathetic pile of hypocrites.
Of course he, or anyone has the right to call for a rally / protest.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 11:00 am
One could go back from that and say "no _____, no rally". Who should be "allowed" to call a rally at the Capitol? And who should decide?
She should be.
Ha, no.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 11:00 amPerhaps a sleeping giant has been awakened, or perhaps not, we'll see. Do you think we'll see politicians offering to take a knee and seek to understand them?dualstow wrote:It was clearly Trump's words -- quoted in Corto's post-- that drew this mob. However, I think they're going to cause trouble this year after Trump is out of office.
Me too.Cortopassi wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 11:22 amI would fully support tossing him out early with the 25th amendment like is being discussed, even with only 13 days left, just for the symbolism.
Indeed. When I watch video of the Capitol police standing down and only weakly pushing back against the protesters, it seems to me that there are only two possible explanations that make sense:tomfoolery wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 12:08 pmDo you think it’s a skin color thing or do you think the police support Trump after being demonized by Democrats for the entire year.yankees60 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 2:34 pm
If you can view this you can see that if the police had used 1/100 the amount of force they'd routinely use against certain other protestors.....this crowd would have easily backed right down.
Hard to believe if all the protestors were black they would have been treated with such deference and kid gloves and zero aggression towards them.
And this article written in September seems prescient: The Coming Coup?The obvious result of yesterday’s conflagration will be a feeble attempt at a purge by the Mitt Romneys, Liz Cheneys, and Adam Kinzingers (ha!) of the GOP. This will fail because their constituency is not just outnumbered, it is utterly dominated by the populist iconoclasts. A party of the right that rejects the mob of people who spent their hard-earned, working-class money to drive to Washington, D.C., and wave a flag as deplorables will never win, or deserve to, any more than a party of the left could reject naming something Black Lives Matter plaza.
What will happen next is obvious: A total crushing, anti-free speech effort that treats Trump-supporting groups like Branch Davidians. An effort to restore the fundamentally unserious neocons as the voice of reason in the room. A hardening of the bounds of the People’s House to keep people away from politicians. A use of any levers of government power — including audits, regulation, and lawfare — to harass conservatives now categorized as seditionists and terrorists by the incoming president who falsely claims to want to unite the country. And above all, a doubling down on all the policies and efforts put in place to crush exactly the type of people who showed up at the Capitol yesterday in a foolish, desperate attempt to make themselves heard.
The rioters failed in their effort and ensured their marginalization. But marginalization doesn’t mean evaporation. They’re still here. They’re still Americans. And they’re not going away. How our politicians handle that will dictate a lot about the next several years.
Apparently Facebook has already suspended Trump's account indefinitely, and YouTube is banning any videos from anyone that suggests there was fraud or errors that would have overturned the election.The events of the last few months may be interpreted as an attempted color revolution that failed to gain enough steam, or as a trial run for the fall. Is the Trump Administration prepared? ... Once the ruling class gives word that the narrative is “Trump lost,” all the president’s social media accounts will be suspended. The T.V. channels, with the likely exception of Fox News, will refuse to cover anything he says. Count on it.
c) In the video I saw last night it looked like the police were just totally undermanned in terms of being able to repel that many people pushing forward.Tortoise wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 12:22 pm Indeed. When I watch video of the Capitol police standing down and only weakly pushing back against the protesters, it seems to me that there are only two possible explanations that make sense:
a) The storming of the building was a staged event to generate such outrage at Trump and his supporters that Congress would be even less likely to vote in favor of any objections raised during the electoral vote counting. (Yeah, yeah... conspiracy theory. Unlikely.)
b) The Capitol police were at least somewhat sympathetic to the anger of the protesters who were storming the building. (Much more likely.)
And why would that be, if everyone with a few functional brain cells knew there was going to be tremendous outrage from one side or the other on Jan 6th regardless of how Pence and Congress decided to handle the electoral votes?barrett wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 12:55 pmc) In the video I saw last night it looked like the police were just totally undermanned in terms of being able to repel that many people pushing forward.Tortoise wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 12:22 pm Indeed. When I watch video of the Capitol police standing down and only weakly pushing back against the protesters, it seems to me that there are only two possible explanations that make sense:
a) The storming of the building was a staged event to generate such outrage at Trump and his supporters that Congress would be even less likely to vote in favor of any objections raised during the electoral vote counting. (Yeah, yeah... conspiracy theory. Unlikely.)
b) The Capitol police were at least somewhat sympathetic to the anger of the protesters who were storming the building. (Much more likely.)