Kern wrote:
BBC 2:
Four Hours at the CapitolVery harrowing documentary on the January 6th insurrection. Heavy use of footage from a variety of sources, all carefully cut together so at times you see the same incident from several different angles. The scene really did look like a war of attrition at times with two large masses pushing against each other.
It leaves the question open of how much was planned and how much was opportunism.
ZOMG Spoiler! Click here to view!
A standout moment for me was when a congressman said he was urging others to stay in the building's safe room rather than flee to buses that had started arriving, on the grounds that if it were a coup, a deserted Capitol would provide cover for any declaration of martial law. Scary to think he was even thinking it was a possible outcome.
We watched this tonight. It’s really harrowing, perhaps mostly in the imagining of what would face happened if they’d managed to interrupt the vote in the count, suspend the election and keep Trump in office. What changes in the world would there be today, even if they’d only managed to keep it held for a few weeks?
Anyway, I’m not versed enough on US law to know the ins and outs of what was (is) possible, but the whole thing made me tense.
There was one guy, thoigh, that just flat annoyed me. The one who was telling us of how he needed to spread the truth, that 800,000 US children are kidnapped, raped and murdered every year. I just had the impression he thought it was all just a bit of a lark.
I looked it up and there are about 70m children in the US. If 800k children disappeared each year, you’d have a 1/5 chance of being kidnapped and murdered by your 18th birthday.
I’m sure that there are many that believe that 800,000 children are killed by these apparent media and political elite secret societies each year, but I didn’t believe that guy was one of them, and that annoyed me more than if I thought he was just delusional.