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Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Trump
« on: March 19, 2025, 03:24:35 AM »It's not that simple. The capitol police were welcoming the protestors into the building. From this, the average person may believe that they are allowed to enter. There were grandmothers caught up in the arrests, who say that they were just following the crowd and touring the building under the apparent approval and oversight of the capitol police.
Uh huh. So these harmless tourists just happened to be in Washington. They just happened to be near the Capitol. They just happened to be devoted Trump fans, like everyone else who had entered the Capitol. This just happened to be on the day that Congress was set to certify Trump's loss to Biden, the same day that Trump himself had focused on and asked his supporters to be in Washington for. This just happened to be directly following a speech from Trump in which he urged his supporters to march on the Capitol to protest Congress certifying his loss. Our luckless heroes had the bad fortune to have never checked the news or apparently even spoken to anyone who had checked the news all day. And when they entered the Capitol, they simply didn't notice the obvious signs of damage and disarray surrounding them, the fact that they were accompanied by an angry mob of Trump fans screaming about how they wanted to kill anyone standing in Trump's way, or the fact that there were no staff on this supposed tour collecting tickets, checking IDs, or guiding people through the building.
You would have to be extremely gullible to buy this story. But for the sake of argument, fine, let's accept that some of these protesters were hapless bystanders. You're still arguing from the perspective of trying to prove exceptions to the rule, rather than trying to overturn the principal facts of what we all saw that day. I don't need to thoroughly demonize each and every protester. What people are correctly focusing on as the worst elements of that day are the protesters battering down doors and smashing windows, forcing their way into the building, and screaming to kill politicians, all in an attempt to overturn an election and keep the president they liked in office. That's not going away no matter how many "exceptions" you can find about this one particular cop looking the other way or this one protester not really doing anything bad. Trump fed his supporters lies about how he had been cheated and was illegally being forced out of office. They believed him. He encouraged them to protest at the Capitol on the day of the certification of his loss. They did so, things got violent, and Trump's complacent reaction strongly indicates that he hoped that would happen. That's all that happened here. The only person who tricked or manipulated the protesters into doing what they did was Trump himself.
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See: https://www.businessinsider.com/capitol-police-officers-suspended-after-pro-trump-riots-2021-1
This supports the idea that those cops who did look the other way or even helped the protesters out did so of their volition, not because of any conspiracy coming from the top to make Trump supporters look bad. If these cops had been following orders when they did what they did, do you think they'd be quietly accepting being made scapegoats like this? They'd go right to the media and blow the whistle on the whole thing. In fact, we'd definitely be seeing cops coming forward with the truth even if they weren't being blamed for what they did. If you were a cop and you realized that your higher-ups just used you as a prop in a dangerous, partisan political stunt and an elaborate hoax on the American people, wouldn't you want to blow the whistle? I certainly would.