Storming the Capitol

Turdferguson

Just a turd
We've had more than enough martyrs most of whom you disrespect when you kneel
Actually you disrespect them by linking their sacrifice to a protest in which the people who were participating in the protest stated that their protest was not meant to diminishes or disrespect the people who made the ultimate sacrifice for this country, but to score political points .
 

Box Ox

Well-Known Member
bow down below the sagging tits of Nancy pelosi your God and saviour.
You've been thinking about Nancy Pelosi's tits? Oh baby. LOL

But yeah, not a fan of Nancy Pelosi. Certainly wouldn't join a seditious attack on the US Capitol Building during a joint session of Congress for her.
 

Old Man Jingles

Rat out of a cage
She broke through police barricades outside the capital
She broke through the capital entrance with a mob and was trespassing
A second barricade to a door inside the building she was already trespassing was breached with a gunman standing behind it pointing at them as they continued to break down that door. That was their warning.
After an opening was created by the mob she jumped up and attempted to enter that opening where she was shot.
She was a terrorists and treated as such.

I am all for peoples right to protest to get their word out but when you are breaking the law and put the fear of harm into others you have crossed the line. This is America and in the end its a sad sad day.
I am for all that but it has nothing to do with what I posted.
Have a good day!
 

Old Man Jingles

Rat out of a cage
Actually you disrespect them by linking their sacrifice to a protest in which the people who were participating in the protest stated that their protest was not meant to diminishes or disrespect the people who made the ultimate sacrifice for this country, but to score political points .
Vocabulary is vast ... Grammar and sentence structure is weak.

I guess you were a little excited when you posted this ... I have no idea what your point was.
 

newfie

Well-Known Member
Actually you disrespect them by linking their sacrifice to a protest in which the people who were participating in the protest stated that their protest was not meant to diminishes or disrespect the people who made the ultimate sacrifice for this country, but to score political points .
Seems to be this country was started protesting tyranny?
 

Box Ox

Well-Known Member
Vocabulary is vast ... Grammar and sentence structure is weak.

I guess you were a little excited when you posted this ... I have no idea what your point was.
You're on an internet forum for truck drivers. Criticisms of grammar and/or sentence structure are usually only introduced after one has realized their own substantive arguments are insufficient to maintain credibility regarding the topic at hand.
 

Old Man Jingles

Rat out of a cage
That wasn't about Vietnam. 68 was pretty much the year cities burned over race issues.
Cmon man ... this is me! I watched it on TV and discussed it in school and then I googled it before posting!
Look it up instead of ignorantly sticking with you erroneous belief!

Chicago Seven
The Chicago Seven were seven defendants—Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, David Dellinger, Tom Hayden, Rennie Davis, John Froines, and Lee Weiner—charged by the United States federal government with conspiracy, crossing state lines with intent to incite a riot, and other charges related to anti-Vietnam War and countercultural protests in Chicago, Illinois during the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam[edit]​

Further information: National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam
In the fall of 1967, members of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (often referred to as "MOBE"), which was directed by David Dellinger, proposed a massive anti-war demonstration to coincide with the 1968 Democratic National Convention. In early 1968, the National Mobilization Committee opened a Chicago office directed by Rennie Davis and Tom Hayden, who were leading political organizers at the time and former leaders of Students for a Democratic Society.[3]:1–2

MOBE was an umbrella organization that included groups who were opposed to American participation in the Vietnam War. MOBE was run by a small executive board that set up a general framework for mass demonstrations, sent out invitations to the over 500 groups on its mailing lists, and coordinated activities between the groups.[citation needed]

MOBE recognized and supported all tactics from marching to civil disobedience.[citation needed] MOBE's main aim was to get the largest turnouts at its functions. David Dellinger, MOBE chairman, believed that "The tendency to intensify militancy without organizing wide political support [was] self-defeating. But so [was] the tendency to draw way from militancy into milder and more conventional forms of protest."[4]

For Chicago, MOBE originally planned for two large-scale marches and an end of convention rally at Soldier Field. The goal was originally a massive show of force outside the International Amphitheatre. MOBE also planned to have workshops and movement centers distributed in 10 parks throughout the city, many in predominantly black areas, to allow demonstrators and participating groups to follow their particular focuses.[citation needed][5]

Youth International Party[edit]​

Further information: Youth International Party
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Yippie Workshop Speech

Yippie! button on display at the Chicago History Museum
The Youth International Party was one of the major groups in the organization of the protests. Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, and a few friends engaged in conversation at Hoffman's apartment on New Year's Eve, 1967. They discussed the events of the year, such as the Summer of Love and the Pentagon demonstration. The idea of having a free music festival in Chicago was suggested to defuse political tension.[who?] Over the next week, the Youth International Party (known as Yippie) took shape. Yippie politicized hippie ideology and used street theater and other tactics to critique the culture of the United States and induce change.[6]
 
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