Friday, July 30, 2021

NOT LOST in the Details: Slate Reporter Jim Newell Got An Expanation for That Slick Wind-Breaker

Oh the stories that can be told - if only they did get explained months later. Now we know:
Rep. Mo Brooks in a bright jacket at the Jan. 6 “Save America Rally.”.             AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin
Mo Brooks at a podium wearing a windbreaker.

Turns Out Mo Brooks Was Wearing Body Armor to Trump’s Very Peaceful Jan. 6 Rally

"Rep. Mo Brooks may be done with Jan. 6, but Jan. 6 isn’t done with him.

The Alabama representative, notorious for his speaking role at the Jan. 6 rally leading up to the invasion of the Capitol, did not watch Tuesday’s first hearing of the House select committee investigating said invasion.

“I was in the House Armed Services Committee, Science, Space, Technology Committee, and had at least one Zoom meeting, and all sorts of other things,” he told me Wednesday when I encountered him outside the House chamber. “Busy day.” Not that a clear schedule would have made a difference.

“The purpose of that committee is not to discern the truth,” he said. “The purpose is to create political propaganda that may be used in the elections in 2022 and perhaps 2024.”

But whether he’s able to continue to avoid the committee altogether may not be up to him.

> Back in December, Brooks was the first House Republican to say ahead of the congressional Electoral College certification that he would object to certain states’ electors.

> On the day of the certification, Jan. 6, he then gave a fiery speech at President Donald Trump’s rally at the Ellipse where he told the assembled crowd that “today is the day American patriots start taking down names and kicking ass!” Months later, he still argues that Trump would have won the election if only “lawful votes” were counted.

> Brooks’ support of Trump’s efforts to overturn the election successfully earned him the former president’s endorsement in the 2022 Alabama Senate race. But it’s also earned him legal issues.

> California Rep. Eric Swalwell sued Brooks and others earlier this year for fomenting the Jan. 6 riot. The Justice Department this week refused Brooks’ request to shield him from the lawsuit, in part because he’d basically admitted he was thinking about winning elections—not doing his job—when he started his rally chant. And though Brooks is claiming to dismiss the select committee hearings as a political stunt, the committee could seek to bring him in for questioning about what he knew, or didn’t know, ahead of the riot.

When I asked him whether he could be subpoenaed, he said, “I have no clue.”

> Brooks, like Republican leaders who tried to counterprogram the hearing with a press conference yesterday, thinks a proper investigation would look at why House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office wasn’t “doing a better job with respect to the Capitol Police and their level of preparation.”

> Then, to prove his point about preparation, he revealed a new detail to me: that because of a tip he’d received about potential violence, he’d been wearing body armor at the very same Ellipse speech in which he encouraged rally attendees to “start taking down names and kicking ass.”

“I was warned on Monday that there might be risks associated with the next few days,” he said. “And as a consequence of those warnings, I did not go to my condo. Instead, I slept on the floor of my office. And when I gave my speech at the Ellipse, I was wearing body armor.

“That’s why I was wearing that nice little windbreaker,” he told me with a grin. “To cover up the body armor.”

He didn’t say who warned him, or what the “risk” was that he’d been warned about . . .

There were probably a “half-dozen different motivations that affected people in varying degrees” to engage in insurrection. He named, for example, “financial losses suffered because of the government’s reaction to COVID-19,” “the belief that there was significant voter fraud and election theft activity,” or “a great love and respect for President Trump.”

“It might be,” too, he added, “that some of them were just militant anarchists and saw this as an opportunity to infiltrate an otherwise peaceful protest and turn it into a riot.”

In Brooks’ affidavit asking the Justice Department to shield him from liability, his lawyers emphasize the parts of his speech where he encouraged peaceful protest, not physical violence. “Once again, Brooks makes no call for a physical attack on the Capitol,” a typical footnote reads. “To the contrary, Brooks calls on Ellipse Speech attendees to do one thing: ‘utter words’!”

> The affidavit argues that the “taking down names and kicking ass!” remark was really about taking the names of Republicans who wouldn’t support Trump’s Electoral College objections, and punishing them in future elections.

But if he was so sure the mob would understand the peaceful intent of his words, why’d he need the Kevlar?

 

Thursday, July 29, 2021

BEING PRAGMATIC IN CENTRAL EURASIA: Chinese officials and Taliban meet, in sign of warming ties

Top Evangelical Leader On His Shocking Resignation From the Southern Baptist Convention | Amanpour & Company

Unruly Freedom Caucus House Repubs Set Up Staged Fish-Eye Photo Opp Over Reinstated Mask Mandate Due to Delta Variant

Looks like a Sophomoric if not moronic prank - they won't obey the House rules in a staged walk-out to the other Senate side of the Capitol building
Republican members of the House of Representatives gather in the Capitol Rotunda to protest masking rules, July 29, 2021 © Twitter/@RepAndyBiggsAZ
<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Republican members of the House of Representatives gather in the Capitol Rotunda to protest masking rules, July 29, 2021 ©&#160;Twitter/@RepAndyBiggsAZ

‘Don’t arrest me Pelosi’: House Republicans protest mask rules by walking to Senate side of Capitol

Biden warns cyber attacks could cause 'real shooting war'

SUMMER SCORCH 2021: Soaring Temperatures Under The Heat Dome

June 2021 was the hottest month in over a century; not just by one or two degrees - 4 degrees!
Here's a thermal mapping by Weatherbell from a report by Andrew Freedman 14 hours ago earlier today in Axios
Weather map with dark red colors showing the hottest temperatures across the U.S.
 
 
Forecast maximum temperatures (darker red shading represents the hottest temperatures, in the upper 90s to low 100s, Fahrenheit). July 29. Image: WeatherBell

Heat dome sends temperatures soaring from Oregon to Louisiana

AMAZING: DARPA IS WORKING ON NUCLEAR-POWERED ARMED ATTACK SPACECRAFT || ...

CLASSIC ART MEMES Zara Zentira