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I saw the video. She did nothing but try to climb through a broken window next to a door, and got shot for it.
I really wonder if Sicknick got vaccinated before the riot. Multiple strokes in younger healthy people are a calling card of the vaccine.
Everyone in Congress had access to the coronavirus vaccine before the rest of the general public. That’s not just Representatives and Senators, but also their staffers and employees at the Capitol. That would almost certainly include the Capitol police officer force. Maybe Sicknick refused to get the vaccine when it was offered to him. To be clear: We absolutely don’t know the answer to that question. But maybe he did. We started seeing Members of Congress (and staffers) getting first access to the vaccines in late December – just a week or two before the Capitol protests.
Between January and March of 2021, we had 1,524 Americans die from reactions to the coronavirus vaccine. Only about 25% of the US population had been vaccinated by that point. To put that in perspective, we had 3,679 firearm deaths during that same period (out of a population of 330 million). That means that as of today, you are about 64% more likely to die from the coronavirus vaccine than you are to die of a gunshot wound. (And please do the math yourself before attacking me in the comments. It’s not that hard.)
We now know that Brian Sicknick did not die at that hands of Trump supporters, which is a good thing. But his sudden blood-clot death raises questions that no one in the media seems willing to ask.
This week is the one-year anniversary of one of the lowest points in the history of modern American journalism. During the week of June 6, 2020, the New York Times forced out an opinion editor and apologized for publishing the editorial of Sen. Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) calling for the use of the troops to restore order in Washington after days of rioting around the White House. While Congress would “call in the troops” six months later to quell the rioting at the Capitol on January 6th, New York Times reporters and columnists called the column historically inaccurate and politically inciteful. Reporters insisted that Cotton was even endangering them by suggesting the use of troops and insisted that the newspaper cannot feature people who advocate political violence. One year later, the New York Times published a column by an academic who has previously declared that there is nothing wrong with murdering conservatives and Republicans.
So the NY Times rejected troops for actual BLM riots and violence, but approves of troops now that selfie-takers walked into the Capitol on Jan 6th.
Senator Ron Johnson’s Staff is Looking thru 14,000 Hours of Jan 6th Video Footage – 38% of 800 Protesters Were Waved in West Terrace Door by Capitol Police
Ashli Babbitt’s Husband Still Doesn’t Know Identity of Capitol Officer Who Shot Her
BY ZACHARY STIEBER June 15, 2021
The husband of a woman who was shot dead by a U.S. Capitol Police officer in the Capitol on Jan. 6 says he still does not know the identity of the officer.
M Aurelius5 hr ago
Because it was an agent of the Deep State attempting to lay blame on DJT and we Deplorables but they got caught with their own surveillance system and now can't hurt DJT, patriots,
or advance the false narrative of "Jan.6 Insurrection"
Same with BLM supporter and capitol police murderer Lt. Michael Leroy Byrd who they haven't named as Ashli Babbit's assassin.
Lt. Michael L. Byrd
Potentially Aided by Some Police
Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), who chairs the Appropriations Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch, told reporters at the time that the suspensions were related to officers “that potentially facilitated, on a big level or small level in any way” the breach of the Capitol building that took place during the joint session of Congress that saw lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence counting electoral votes.
Protesters were demanding transparency for audits of the elections after allegations of election fraud and concerns over Democrat-led alteration of voting rules amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Democratic lawmakers have pushed the narrative that the Jan. 6 breach was an “insurrection,” largely during the failed January impeachment effort against President Donald Trump. No one who participated in the breach has been charged with insurrection.
One of the officers suspended by USCP was caught on camera taking a selfie with a rioter. The second suspended officer was reportedly seen wearing a red “Make America Great Again” hat and was seen directing people around, Ryan said.
Other videos show police officers standing motionless as groups made their way into the Capitol building. Some of those who entered the building claimed that officers allowed them inside.
Gosh, maybe they got instructions to let people in.
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