Liste des Groupes |
super70s <super70s@super70s.invalid> wrote:Yeah, the Jan 6'ers tried making that argument too. They're in jail now.On 2024-03-20 00:01:05 +0000, BTR1701 said:If I'm driving around without a license plate light, then there's nothing
>In article <utd5p0$1371j$1@dont-email.me>,>
super70s <super70s@super70s.invalid> wrote:
>On 2024-03-19 22:01:11 +0000, BTR1701 said:>
>In article <utctt9$11hfm$1@dont-email.me>,>
super70s <super70s@super70s.invalid> wrote:
>On 2024-03-19 18:25:47 +0000, BTR1701 said:>
>On Mar 19, 2024 at 9:24:24 AM PDT, "Rhino">
<no_offline_contact@example.com>
wrote:
>On Tue, 19 Mar 2024 04:30:48 -0400>
Ubiquitous <weberm@polaris.net> wrote:
>NBC News presidential historian Michael Beschloss took the media
furor over former President Donald Trump’s "bloodbath" comments to
new heights during a Monday appearance on MSNBC's MORNING JOE.
>
During an Ohio campaign rally over the weekend, Trump predicted a
"bloodbath" if he does not win reelection in 2024, and media outlets
fell all over themselves trying to make it look as though he was
predicting politically motivated violence and a *literal* bloodbath.
And yet there's a Democrat state senator in Tennessee outright calling
for riots and political violence right now because she didn't get her
way in a vote and... yes, you guessed it, crickets from the legacy
media.
Maybe because she isn't powerful enough to inspire upwards of 80,000
followers to attempt a violent insurrection in Washington or even
Nashville.
So we have to wait until there's dead bodies in the street and downtown
Nashville is on fire before reporting on a state official calling for
riots and violence?
>
That's what you're going with?
I couldn't google the specific example of a "Democrat state senator in
Tennessee outright calling for riots and political violence right now
because she didn't get her way in a vote"
Just check out the thread posted right here in RAT today entitled,
"Civility Project Ends".
>but the Republican jerks in charge have passed some pretty outrageous>
laws in the past few weeks, like repealing an anti-"arrested for driving
while Black" law
Otherwise known as an "exempting black people from the traffic code
everyone else has to obey" law.
The law (or repealed law now) applies to everyone.
>
If your state has this policy maybe you'll appreciate getting pulled
over in your beaten up 40-year-old pickup without a license plate light
because some cop makes the subjective judgement that you look
suspicious.
subjective about it. I'm violating the law.>Ah, so it just repealed enforcement of the traffic code full stop becauseYou do realize that's a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the>
14th Amendment, right? Or do you just not care?
It had nothing to do with the 14th Amendment because it applied to
everyone and all races.
"muh racism!"?
But your apparent closet racism by assuming it applied to only BlacksIf I assumed anything it's that the Tennessee law was a carbon copy of a
is interesting.
recent California bill proposed by a black assemblyman from Compton, which
specifically exempts only blacks from being stopped for most traffic
infractions, including speeding for anything short of 25mph over the posted
limit.
This means if you have some lunatic blasting down a residential street at
50mph, the cops would just have to stand by and watch it happen if the
driver is black.
The bill would also render any evidence of other crimes discovered during a
traffic stop inadmissible. So if the speeder in the above hypothetical was
racing down the residential street at 60mph and could now be legally
stopped by police, and they discovered a dead murder victim in his back
seat, the body and any other evidence in the car would be inadmissible in
court at his murder trial.
Again, only for blacks.
So yeah, when these ridiculous laws and policy efforts spring up all around
the country at roughly the same time, they're usually carbon copies of each
other sent direct from BLM headquarters.
Mea culpa.
>No, it's a misdemeanor. 18 USC 1751, Restricted Buildings and Grounds. The>that was passed after Tyre Nichols was beaten to death by police in>
2023 after one of these kind of aggressive traffic stops
By black cops. But go on with your "But muh racism!" nonsense.
>and making unauthorized street protests a felony instead of a>
misdemeanor.
Obviously misdemeanors weren't working.
Making street protests felonies isn't going to work either, if the
perceived transgression is egregious enough.
>
It's a felony to enter the Capitol Building in an unauthorized manner
same statute I used to lock up White House fence jumpers.
and vandalize it and threaten members of Congress, did that work?What if the cops held the door open for them. Is that still unauthorized?
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.