JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
2020 AMERICAN ELECTION RESULTS BY STATE TRUMP VS LOSER LIBERAL SLEEPY (SLOPPY JOE) BIDEN.
ON D-70 OF THE TRUMP WIN OF THE PRESIDENCY. SUN JAN 10, 21.
Key dates for the Electoral College and what they mean-AEIdeas-DECEMBER 14,20
What are the key dates for the workings of the Electoral College?
November 3 — Election Day
Election
Day is November 3. We may or may not know the winner of the
presidential contest on election night, but we certainly will not have a
final tally and certified results until weeks later. States vary widely
in the time they allot for certifying their election results. Some may
give a final certification the week after Election Day. Others may take
over 30 days. And there is the possibility of recounts and judicial
contests of elections which could extend the time to determine an
official winner of a state.
Ballots are passed out to 16 Electors on
the Michigan Senate floor for them to cast their formal votes for the
president and vice president of the United States in Lansing, Michigan,
U.S., December 19, 2016. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
December 8 — Safe Harbor
December 14 — The meeting of the Electors
Two
key dates loom in December. On December 14, presidential electors must
have been selected by the states and will meet as a group in their
states to cast electoral votes for president and vice president. But
December 8 is also a significant date, the so-called “safe harbor” date.
The Electoral Count Act sets this date as an important date for states
to make their official selection of electors, as those electoral votes
will be given greater protection from challenge when Congress counts the
electoral votes in January. The Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore assigned
great significance to this date in Bush v. Gore.
January 3 — The convening of the new Congress
January 6 — Congress counts the votes
January 20 — Inauguration Day. The new presidential term begins at noon.
On
January 3rd, the new Congress will take office, and on January 6th it
will meet to count the electoral votes and declare a president- and vice
president-elect. On January 20th at noon, the current presidential term
will end and the next one will begin.This is excerpted from the new
fourth edition of After the People Vote, edited by John Fortier, senior
fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center and a member of AEI’s Election
Watch team.John C. Fortier-AEI Adjunct Scholar-SENOIRFELLOWKarlyn
Bowman-Senior Fellow
ITS
6.55AM-SUN JAN 10,21-WITH 10 DAYS + 4 YEARS LEFT IN TRUMPS TERM. TRUMP
IS GOING AFTER BIG TECH FOR BANNING HIM FROM TWITTER. AND NOW GOOGLE AND
AMAZON ARE BANNING AN FREE SPEECH APP CALLED PARLER. AND ALSO TOMORROW
THE DEMOLIBNUTS WANNA START IMPEACHING TRUMP FOR INCITING OF
INSERRECTION. SINCE TRUMP WILL NOT RESIGN. I CAN NOT BELIEVE PENCE MIGHT
USE THE 25TH AMENDMENT AGAINST TRUMP. TO MAKE HIM PRESIDENT FOR THE
REMAINDER OF THIS TRUMP TERM. UNTIL TRUMP SOME HOW WINS THE NEXT 4
YEARS. TRUMP HAS NOT TALKED TO PENCE SINCE LAST WEDNESDAYS PEACEFUL
PROTEST. BY THE MILLION TRUMP SUPPORTERS WHO KNOW TRUMP WAS CHEATED OF
MILLIONS OF VOTES IN DEMOLIBNUTS VOTER FRAUD. AND ALSO GIULIANI AND
DERSHOWITZ TRUMP IS CONSIDERING FOR HIS IMPEACMENT LAWYERS. 17
REPUBLICANS HAVE TO TURN THEIR PAID OFF SELVES IN ORDER FOR PILOSI TO
IMPEACH TRUMP. OR 2/3RDS OF THE HOUSE. WE WILL SEE TOMORROW. WHAT
HAPPENS. CNN HITLERS PROPAGANDA MOUTHPIECE JAKE TAPPER SAID EVERYTHING
UNDER THE SUN TO CALL THE PEACEFUL TRUMP PROTESTERS. INCLUDING
TERRORISTS, MOBSTERS AND TONS MORE. HITLERS CNN PROPAGANDIST TAPPER ALSO
WANTS REPUBLICANS IN THE SENATE AND THE HOUSE TO RESIGN. WELL WE KNOW
WHY CNN IS DOING THIS. SO THE REPUBLICANS CAN GET LIBERAL GOPS TO
REPLACE THEM. AND THEN THE DEMOLIBNUTCASE HITLERS COULD REALLY CONTROL
BOTH HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT. AS THE NEW ONES WOULD VOTE WITH THE DEMONUTS
ALL THE TIME. THAT WAS AN EASY ONE TO FIGURE OUT. BY HITLERS PROPAGANDA
PUPPETEERS CNN. AND THE LEFT LAME BRAIN- LAMESTREAM MEDIA.
Parler
squeezed as Trump seeks new online megaphone-Though stripped of his
Twitter megaphone, President Donald Trump does have alternative options
of much smaller reach-By FRANK BAJAK AP Technology Writer-10 January
2021, 13:51
BOSTON -- President Donald Trump has been kicked off
of most mainstream social media platforms following his supporters’
siege on the U.S. Capitol. But it remains to be seen how fast or where —
if anywhere — on the internet he will be able to reach his
followers.The far right-friendly Parler had been the leading candidate,
at least until Google and Apple removed it from their app stores and
Amazon decided to boot it off its web hosting service by midnight
Pacific time on Sunday.Parler’s CEO said that could knock it offline for
a week, though that might prove optimistic. And even if it finds a
friendlier web-hosting service, without a smartphone app, it's hard to
imagine Parler gaining mainstream success.The 2-year-old magnet for the
far right claims more than 12 million users, though mobile app analytics
firm Sensor Tower puts the number at 10 million worldwide, with 8
million in the U.S. That's a fraction of the 89 million followers Trump
had on Twitter.Still, Parler might be attractive to Trump since it's
where his sons Eric and Don Jr. are already active. Parler hit
headwinds, though, on Friday as Google yanked its smartphone app from
its app store for allowing postings that seek “to incite ongoing
violence in the U.S.” Apple followed suit on Saturday evening after
giving Parler 24 hours to address complaints it was being used to “plan
and facilitate yet further illegal and dangerous activities.” Public
safety issues will need to be resolved before it is restored, Apple
said.A message seeking comment from Parler was sent Sunday on whether
the company plans to change its policies and enforcement around these
issues.Amazon struck another blow Saturday, informing Parler it would
need to look for a new web-hosting service effective midnight Sunday. It
reminded Parler in a letter, first reported by Buzzfeed, that it had
informed it in the past few weeks of 98 examples of posts “that clearly
encourage and incite violence” and said the platform “poses a very real
risk to public safety.”Parler CEO John Matze decried the punishments as
“a coordinated attack by the tech giants to kill competition in the
marketplace. We were too successful too fast,” he said in a Saturday
night post, saying it was possible Parler would be unavailable for up to
a week “as we rebuild from scratch.”Earlier, Matze complained of being
scapegoated. “Standards not applied to Twitter, Facebook or even Apple
themselves, apply to Parler.” He said he “won’t cave to politically
motivated companies and those authoritarians who hate free
speech.”Losing access to the app stores of Google and Apple — whose
operating systems power hundreds of millions of smartphones — severely
limits Parler’s reach, though it will continue to be accessible via web
browser. Losing Amazon Web Services will mean Parler needs to scramble
to find another web host, in addition to the re-engineering.Trump may
also launch his own platform. But that won't happen overnight, and free
speech experts anticipate growing pressure on all social media platforms
to curb incendiary speech as Americans take stock of Wednesday’s
violent takeover of the U.S. Capitol by a Trump-incited mob.Twitter
ended Trump’s nearly 12-year run on Friday. In shuttering his account,
it cited a tweet to his 89 million followers that he planned to skip
President-elect Joe Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration, saying it gave rioters
license to converge on Washington once again.Facebook and Instagram
have suspended Trump at least until Inauguration Day. Twitch and
Snapchat also disabled Trump’s accounts, while Shopify took down online
stores affiliated with the president and Reddit removed a Trump
subgroup. Twitter also banned Trump loyalists including former national
security advisor Michael Flynn in a sweeping purge of accounts promoting
the QAnon conspiracy theory and the Capitol insurrection. Some had
hundreds of thousands of followers.In a statement Friday, Trump said:
"We have been negotiating with various other sites, and will have a big
announcement soon, while we also look at the possibilities of building
out our own platform in the near future.”Gab is another potential
landing spot for Trump. But it, too, has had troubles with internet
hosting. Google and Apple both booted it from their app stores in 2017
and it was left internet-homeless for a time the following year due to
anti-Semitic posts attributed to the man accused of killing 11 people at
a Pittsburgh synagogue. Microsoft also terminated a web-hosting
contract.Online speech experts expect social media companies led by
Facebook, Twitter and Google's YouTube to more vigorously police hate
speech and incitement in the wake of the Capitol rebellion, as Western
democracies led by Nazism-haunted Germany already do.David Kaye, a
University of California-Irvine law professor and former U.N. special
rapporteur on free speech believes the Parlers of the world will also
face pressure from the public and law enforcement as will little-known
sites where further pre-inauguration disruption is now apparently being
organized. They include MeWe, Wimkin, TheDonald.win and Stormfront,
according to a report released Saturday by The Alethea Group, which
tracks disinformation.Kaye rejects arguments by U.S. conservatives
including the president’s former U.N. ambassador, Nikki Haley, that the
Trump ban savaged the First Amendment, which prohibits the government
from restricting free expression. “Silencing people, not to mention the
President of the US, is what happens in China not our country,” Haley
tweeted.“It’s not like the platforms’ rules are draconian. People don’t
get caught in violations unless they do something clearly against the
rules,” said Kaye. And not just individual citizens have free speech
rights. “The companies have their freedom of speech, too.”While
initially arguing their need to be neutral on speech, Twitter and
Facebook gradually yielded to public pressure drawing the line
especially when the so-called Plandemic video emerged early in the
coronavirus pandemic urging people not to wear masks, noted civic media
professor Ethan Zuckerman of the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst.Zuckerman expects the Trump de-platforming may
spur important online shifts. First, there may be an accelerated
splintering of the social media world along ideological lines."Trump
will pull a lot of audience wherever he goes,” he said. That could mean
more platforms with smaller, more ideologically isolated
audiences.———Associated Press writers Barbara Ortutay in Oakland,
California, and Amanda Seitz in Chicago contributed to this report.
Parler jumps to No. 1 on App Store after Facebook and Twitter ban Trump-Jonathan Shieber@jshieber / 1:45 PM EST•January 9, 2021
Users
are surging on small, conservative, social media platforms after
President Donald Trump’s ban from the world’s largest social networks,
even as those platforms are seeing access throttled by the app
marketplaces of tech’s biggest players.The social network, Parler, a
network that mimics Twitter, is now the number one app in Apple’s app
store and Gab, another conservative-backed service, claimed that it was
seeing an explosion in the number of signups to its web-based platform
as well.Parler saw approximately 210,000 installs globally on Friday
1/8, up 281% from approximately 55,000 on 1/7, according to data from
the analytics service Sensor Tower. “In the U.S., the app saw
approximately 182,000 first-time downloads on 1/8, up 355% from about
40,000 installs on 1/7. Since Wednesday, the app has seen approximately
268,000 installs from across U.S. app stores,” a press rep from Sensor
Tower wrote in an email.Parler’s ballooning user base comes at a
potentially perilous time for the company. It has already been removed
from Google’s Play store and Apple is considering suspending the social
media app as well if it does not add some content moderation
features.Both Parler and Gab have billed themselves as havens for free
speech, with what’s perhaps the most lax content moderation online. In
the past the two companies have left up content posted by an alleged
Russian disinformation campaign, and allow users to traffic in
conspiracy theories that other social media platforms have shut down.The
expectation with these services is that users on the platforms are in
charge of muting and blocking trolls or offensive content, but, by their
nature, those who join these platforms will generally find themselves
among like-minded users.Their user counts might be surging, but would-be
adopters may soon have a hard time finding the services.On Friday
night, Google said that it would be removing Parler from their Play
Store immediately — suspending the app until the developers committed to
a moderation and enforcement policy that could handle objectionable
content on the platform.In a statement to TechCrunch, a Google
spokesperson said:“In order to protect user safety on Google Play, our
longstanding policies require that apps displaying user-generated
content have moderation policies and enforcement that removes egregious
content like posts that incite violence. All developers agree to these
terms and we have reminded Parler of this clear policy in recent months.
We’re aware of continued posting in the Parler app that seeks to incite
ongoing violence in the US. We recognize that there can be reasonable
debate about content policies and that it can be difficult for apps to
immediately remove all violative content, but for us to distribute an
app through Google Play, we do require that apps implement robust
moderation for egregious content. In light of this ongoing and urgent
public safety threat, we are suspending the app’s listings from the Play
Store until it addresses these issues.“On Friday, Buzzfeed News
reported that Parler had received a letter from Apple informing them
that the app would be removed from the App Store within 24 hours unless
the company submitted an update with a moderation improvement plan.
Parler CEO John Matze confirmed the action from Apple in a post on his
Parler account where he posted a screenshot of the notification from
Apple.“We want to be clear that Parler is in fact responsible for all
the user generated content present on your service and for ensuring that
this content meets App Store requirements for the safety and protection
of our users,” text from the screenshot reads. “We won’t distribute
apps that present dangerous and harmful content.Parler is backed by the
conservative billionaire heiress Rebekah Mercer, according to a November
report in The Wall Street Journal. Founded in 2018, the service has
experienced spikes in user adoption with every clash between more social
media companies and the outgoing President Trump. In November, Parler
boasted some 10 million users, according to the Journal.Users like Fox
Business anchor Maria Bartiromo and the conservative talk show host Dan
Bongino, a wildly popular figure on Facebook who is also an investor in
Parler, have joined the platform. In the Journal article Bongino called
the company “a collective middle finger to the tech tyrants.”It’s worth
noting that Parler and Gab aren’t the only companies to see users
numbers soar after the Trump bans. MeWe Network, OANN, Newsmax and
Rumble have also seen adoption soar, according to data from the
analytics company Apptopia.The company noted that Parler was the #1 app
on the iOS app store for two days surging from 18th on Thursday and 592
on Wednesday. Overall, the app was the 10th most downloaded social media
app in 2020 with 8.1 million new installs.“It is an event driven app
though,” a company analyst noted. “After events like the election, BLM
protests, Twitter first applying labels to Trump’s Tweets, we see bursts
of downloads and usage but it will then drop off.”Sarah Perez and Lucas
Matney contributed additional reporting to this article.
NBC
News-As some Republicans distance themselves from Trump, Pompeo stays in
his corner-Lauren Egan and Abigail Williams-Sat, January 9, 2021, 5:39
PM EST
WASHINGTON — As some Republicans are distancing themselves
from President Donald Trump after a violent mob of his supporters
breached the U.S. Capitol, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo came to the
president's defense Saturday, criticizing Twitter's decision to ban his
account."Silencing speech is dangerous. It’s un-American. Sadly, this
isn’t a new tactic of the Left. They’ve worked to silence opposing
voices for years. We cannot let them silence 75M Americans. This isn’t
the CCP," Pompeo tweeted to his personal account.Pompeo's comments come
as some Republicans have called for Trump's removal from office and as a
handful of White House staff and administration officials have resigned
over Trump's role in inciting a mob to storm the Capitol and disrupt
the peaceful transition of power.The top arms control expert in the
State Department resigned Friday in protest of the riots. Assistant
Secretary Christopher Ford had already submitted his resignation letter
to Trump the previous week as is traditional for political appointees
during a change in administration with the intention to stay on until
the end of the administration."I cannot continue to serve in an
Administration at a time in which some are willing to condone, or even
to incite, violent insurrection against the country I hold dear and
whose Constitution I have taken a sacred oath to support and defend,"
Ford wrote in his resignation letter, which was first reported by The
Washington Post.Pompeo's comments also come as some extremist Trump
supporters are threatening to return to Washington to disrupt
President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration on Jan. 20.Pompeo, who is
responsible for representing American democracy around the world, has
struck a noticeably different tone of his official Twitter account,
where he condemned the "lawlessness and rioting" as unacceptable."Being
the greatest country on earth is not just about our incredible economy
& our strong military; it's about the values we project out into the
world. I believe in America, and American goodness," he tweeted Friday
on his official account.World leaders, many of whom are used to U.S.
lectures about orderly transitions of power, responded to the images of
the Trump mob swarming the Capitol on Wednesday with shock. British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the scenes in Washington
"disgraceful."Pompeo is widely thought to have political ambitions
beyond his position in the Trump administration. He considered running
for the U.S. Senate in 2020 from Kansas and, breaking with tradition for
secretaries of state, he played an active role in campaigning for Trump
in his re-election.Some Republicans with presidential ambitions,
including Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Ted Cruz of Texas, have
resisted condemning Trump's actions this week, as many in the party
continue to believe that they cannot win without support from the
president's loyal base.Twitter permanently suspended Trump’s account on
Friday, citing "the risk of further incitement of violence."The
president’s account, with 88 million followers, was initially banned for
12 hours on Wednesday due to "severe violations of our Civic Integrity
policy," after he used the platform to condemn Vice President Mike Pence
as his supporters stormed the Capitol."After close review of recent
Tweets from the @realDonaldTrump account and the context around them we
have permanently suspended the account due to the risk of further
incitement of violence," the company said in a tweet.Donald Trump Jr.
called Twitter's decision to ban the president's personal account a
"full frontal assault" of free speech."It's a sad day, when you're
literally talking about losing free speech," he continued in a 9-minute
video posted to his Facebook on Saturday.More than 200 members of
Congress are calling for President Donald Trump to be removed from
office.On Thursday Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., became the first
Republican to say the 25th Amendment should be invoked while Sen. Lisa
Murkowski, R-Alaska, told the Anchorage Daily News on Friday that she
wanted Trump to resign.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a
statement on Friday that the House is prepared to move forward with
articles of impeachment against Trump if he does not resign. The vote
could come as early as the middle of next week, just days before the
president's term expires."I don’t know what they are going to send
over," said Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Penn. speaking to Fox News. "And one of
the things that I’m concerned about frankly is whether the House would
completely politicize something."I do think the president committed
impeachable offenses," said Toomey. "But I don’t know what is going to
land on the Senate floor, if anything."
‘There was no violence,’
claims Israeli Trump supporter who raided US Capitol-Brushing off
suggestion of wrongdoing, Pinchas Gerby says the FBI could find him in
‘seconds’ if it pleased-By TOI staff-jan 10,21-Today, 7:49 pm
An
Israeli supporter of US President Donald Trump was among those who
participated in the breach of the US Capitol last week.Pinchas Gerby
told Channel 12 on Sunday that he was inside the Capitol building for
some 30 minutes and insisted there was no violence. Gerby claimed he was
shoved into the building by the huge crowds behind him who broke
through the police barricade, and shrugged off suggestions that US
authorities could be on his tail.In an interview with the same network
on Thursday, however, he offered a slightly different account, saying
that he was hit with rubber bullets in the ribs and teargassed outside
the US Capitol, during clashes that broke out between rioters and
police. At the rally outside, “some of the guys started going wild, the
police responded with force, they tear-gassed us, they shot rubber
bullets at us,” he said. In that interview, he also said he was shoved
into the building, where he remained for 45 minutes to an
hour.Wednesday’s violent incursion at the US Capitol saw a largely white
mob of Trump supporters overpower police, break through security lines
and rampage through the Capitol, forcing lawmakers to scatter as they
were putting the final, formal touches on Joe Biden’s victory over Trump
in the Electoral College.The crowd surged to the domed symbol of
American democracy following a rally near the White House, where Trump
repeated his bogus claims that the election was stolen from him and
urged his supporters to march in force toward the Capitol.Five people,
including a Capitol police officer, died as a result of the
siege.According to Gerby, at the end of the pro-Trump rally outside the
legislature, a row of police prevented demonstrators from entering the
building. But then, “a mass of people pushed us forward and breached the
line of police officers. There was no violence. I wasn’t dangerous. I
didn’t go wild.”He said he and others calmly walked through the
corridors and rooms of the Capitol. “When someone shattered the window,
we saw that guns were being pointed at us,” he said.However, the
situation remained so calm that at one point Gerby even asked for
directions to the nearest bathroom.“I then saw that policemen were going
room by room to empty them,” he said, adding that he was then escorted
outside the compound.“You may call me naïve, but I was protesting the
fact that the courts didn’t look at the evidence” for widescale voter
fraud, he said. No such evidence has been reported by credible sources
or accepted by any official overseeing the election, whether Republican
or Democrat.Gerby said he did not do anything wrong, since he was not
arrested. However, friends later warned him that the FBI sent out
notices asking for the public’s help in identifying and locating members
of the mob that breached the Capitol.“You really think that with
today’s technology, the FBI needs help from the public to find me? They
can find me in two and a half seconds, which is two seconds too many,”
Gerby said.Agencies contributed to this report.
Second Republican
senator now urges Trump to resign over Capitol riot-Pat Toomey joins
Lisa Murkowski in calling for US president to step down, as Democratic
House Speaker Pelosi notifies colleagues to prepare for impeachment move
this week-By DARLENE SUPERVILLE, Alan Fram and MARY CLARE JALONICK-jan
10,2`1-Today, 6:44 pm 1
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two Republican senators
now say US President Donald Trump should resign as support for the
drive to impeach him a second time is gaining momentum in his final days
in office after the deadly riot at the Capitol by a violent mob of
Trump supporters.Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania on Sunday joined Alaska
Sen. Lisa Murkowski in calling for Trump to “resign and go away as soon
as possible.” Murkowski, who has long voiced her exasperation with
Trump’s conduct in office, told the Anchorage Daily News on Friday that
Trump simply “needs to get out.”Toomey said that even though he believes
Trump committed impeachable offenses in encouraging loyalists in the
Capitol siege on Wednesday, he did not think there was enough time for
the impeachment process to play out. Toomey said that resignation was
the “best path forward, the best way to get this person in the rearview
mirror for us.” He was not optimistic that Trump would step down before
his term ends on January 20.The White House had no immediate comment
Sunday.The House appears determined to act despite the short
timeline.Late Saturday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat of
California, sent a letter to her colleagues reiterating that Trump must
be held accountable. She told her caucus, now scattered across the
country on a two-week recess, to “be prepared to return to Washington
this week.”“It is absolutely essential that those who perpetrated the
assault on our democracy be held accountable,” Pelosi wrote. “There must
be a recognition that this desecration was instigated by the
President.”Rep. Jim Clyburn, the third-ranking House Democrat, said “it
may be Tuesday, Wednesday before the action is taken, but I think it
will be taken this week.” Clyburn, Democrat-South Carolina, said he was
concerned that a Senate trial could distract from the process of
confirming President-elect Joe Biden’s nominees.Clyburn said one option
could be giving Biden the “100 days he needs to get his agenda off and
running and maybe we’ll send the articles sometime after that” to the
Senate for a trial.He said lawmakers “will take the vote that we should
take in the House” and that Pelosi “will make the determination as when
is the best time” to send them to the Senate.Kentucky Sen. Mitch
McConnell, the Republican leader, has said an impeachment trial could
begin as early as Inauguration Day, January 20.The new Democratic effort
to stamp Trump’s presidential record — for the second time and days
before his term ends — with the indelible mark of impeachment is gaining
supporters. Rep. David Cicilline, Democrat Rhode Island, a leader of
the House effort to draft impeachment articles — or charges — accusing
Trump of inciting insurrection, said Saturday that his group had grown
to include 185 co-sponsors.Lawmakers planned to formally introduce the
proposal on Monday in the House, where articles of impeachment must
originate.The articles, if passed by the House, could then be
transmitted to the Senate for a trial, with senators acting as jurors
who would ultimately vote on whether to acquit or convict Trump. If
convicted, Trump would be removed from office and succeeded by the vice
president.Potentially complicating that decision about impeachment is
what it means for Biden and the beginning of his presidency. While
reiterating that he has long viewed Trump as unfit for office, Biden on
Friday sidestepped a question about impeachment, saying what Congress
does “is for them to decide.”A violent and largely white mob of Trump
supporters overpowered police, broke through security lines and rampaged
through the Capitol on Wednesday, forcing lawmakers to scatter as they
were putting the final, formal touches on Biden’s victory over Trump in
the Electoral College.The crowd surged to the domed symbol of American
democracy following a rally near the White House, where Trump repeated
his bogus claims that the election was stolen from him and urged his
supporters to march in force toward the Capitol.Five people, including a
Capitol police officer, died as a result of the siege.Outrage over the
attack and Trump’s role in egging it on capped a divisive, chaotic
presidency like few others in the nation’s history. There is less than
two weeks until Trump is out of office but Democrats have made clear
they don’t want to wait that long.Trump has few fellow Republicans
speaking out in his defense. He’s become increasingly isolated, holed up
in the White House as he has been abandoned in the aftermath of the
riot by many aides, leading Republicans, and, so far, two Cabinet
members — both women.Toomey appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” and
NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Clyburn was on “Fox News Sunday” and CNN.
Short
on alternatives, Trump fans trash Twitter ban — on Twitter-Conservative
platforms popular among Trump’s fiercest supporters, like Parler and
Gab, known for its far-right and neo-Nazi user base, have drawn a
growing number of users-By Juliette MICHEL-JAN 10,21-Today, 2:50 pm
NEW
YORK (AFP) — Friends, family and advisers to Donald Trump have been
bitterly complaining that Twitter’s ban of the president after his
supporters stormed the US Capitol amounts to an assault on free speech
by radical leftists.Ironically, given the enormous influence of the
platform, they have aired their grievances first of all on… Twitter — a
choice underscoring the platform’s huge readership and the relative
paucity of alternatives.“Free speech is dead & controlled by leftist
overlords,” tweeted Donald Trump Jr., the president’s older son.Asked
Rudy Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, “Who will be silenced
next?” And Mike Pompeo — posting not as secretary of state but on his
personal account — tweeted: “Sadly, this isn’t a new tactic of the Left.
They’ve worked to silence opposing voices for years.”For influential
Republican senator Ted Cruz, the decisions by Twitter and some other
social media were “absurd & profoundly dangerous.”“Why,” he went on,
“should a handful of Silicon Valley billionaires have a monopoly on
political speech?”Every one of the above messages was posted on Twitter,
the social network that for years has been Trump’s preferred means of
communicating with the public — and sometimes even with other world
leaders.But on Friday, amid widespread fury after he encouraged the
supporters who forced their way into the US Capitol in a bloody and
chaotic melee, Twitter banned him permanently.It was taking the rare
measure, it said, “due to the risk of further incitement of
violence.”Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitch joined in suspending
the president’s accounts.Reddit, a news and discussion website that is
normally fairly permissive, on Friday closed a forum popular with Trump
fans, saying it was inciting hate.The question now is where Trump and
his supporters will turn next.Donald Trump Jr., himself fearing
exclusion from Twitter, has asked his followers to send him their email
contacts — hardly the most reactive form of communications — so he can
keep them abreast of news.A new platform? In a quickly deleted tweet,
the president himself on Friday spoke of creating his own platform “in
the near future,” without providing any detail.Conservative platforms
popular among Trump’s fiercest supporters, like Parler and Gab, have
drawn growing numbers of users.Gab saw “record traffic” on Friday night
and Saturday, according to its creator Andrew Torba, and had to add
computer servers to handle it.He reported 12 million visits in 12 hours,
adding, “Exploding growth right now.”Launched in 2016, Gab positions
itself as a platform promoting “freedom of expression” but has become
known above all for its far-right — even neo-Nazi — user base.In 2018,
when an assault on a Pittsburgh synagogue claimed 11 lives,
investigators discovered earlier anti-Semitic posts by the shooter on
Gab.Several companies have banned Gab, including PayPal, Visa and the
Apple and Google app stores.Parler faced more severe consequences: after
it, too, was banned first by Google and Apple in their app stores,
Amazon confirmed it was suspending the social network from its cloud
computing services, effectively pushing it offline.All three tech giants
said Parler, which briefly became the top free app in the Apple store
Saturday before it was removed, had failed to tackle violent content on
its platform.Given the riot at the Capitol this week, there was a
“serious risk that this type of content will further incite violence,”
Amazon said in a letter to Parler first reported by Buzzfeed.Once the
preferred platform of the far-right fringe, Parler — launched in 2018 —
now draws more traditional conservative voices, like those of Fox News
star and close Trump ally Sean Hannity, as well as the Republican
governor of South Dakota, Kristi Noem.Another Parler regular,
influential political commentator Mark Levin, said Friday he had
“suspended” his own Twitter account “in protest against Twitter’s
fascism.”Levin also mentioned his account on Rumble, a site which, like
YouTube, broadcasts videos but promises its users they will “never be
censored for political or scientific content.”Yet, all these alternative
platforms are so closely identified with the right — even the extreme
right — that, especially as tech companies move against them, they seem
unlikely ever to draw followings like Trump’s 88 million Twitter
followers.
Trump said considering Dershowitz, Giuliani for
defense in possible impeachment-Harvard law scholar says it would be his
‘honor and privilege’ to defend the US president against claims he
incited the storming of the Capitol-By TOI staff and Agencies-JAN
10,21-Today, 11:47 am
US President Donald Trump is reportedly
considering appointing Rudy Giuliani and Alan Dershowitz as his defense
lawyers if he faces an impeachment trial over his role last week’s
deadly riot at the US Capitol by a violent mob of Trump
supporters.According to CNN, Trump’s personal attorney Giuliani, who
called for the 2020 presidential election to be settled as a “trial by
combat” while speaking at the rally before storming of the Capitol, is
set to be on the team, while legal scholar Dershowitz, who has
frequently backed Trump, is also being considered.“It would be my honor
and privilege to defend the Constitution of the United States and the
First Amendment against partisan efforts to weaponize the Constitution,”
Dershowitz told CNN.Giuliani declined to comment on the
report.Democrats’ momentum for a fresh drive to quickly impeach Trump
gained support Saturday with a top Republican saying the president’s
role in the deadly riot was worthy of rebuke.Pennsylvania Sen. Pat
Toomey said he believed Trump had committed “impeachable offenses.” But
he stopped short of saying whether he would vote to remove the president
from office at the conclusion of a Senate trial if the House sent over
articles of impeachment.“I don’t know what they are going to send over
and one of the things that I’m concerned about, frankly, is whether the
House would completely politicize something,” Toomey said Saturday on
Fox News Channel, speaking of the Democratic-controlled House.“I do
think the president committed impeachable offenses, but I don’t know
what is going to land on the Senate floor, if anything,” Toomey
said.With Toomey, Rep. David Cicilline, a leader of the House effort to
draft impeachment articles — or charges — accusing Trump of inciting
insurrection, said his group had grown to include 185
co-sponsors.Lawmakers plan to formally introduce the proposal on Monday
in the House, where articles of impeachment must originate. A vote could
be possible by Wednesday — exactly one week before Democrat Joe Biden
becomes president at noon on Jan. 20.The articles, if passed by the
House, would then be transmitted to the Senate for a trial, with
senators acting as jurors who would ultimately vote on whether to acquit
or convict Trump. If convicted, Trump would be removed from office and
succeeded by the vice president.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, however,
shared no details about her party’s plans as she addressed her hometown
San Francisco constituents during an online video conference on
Saturday.“Justice will be done. Democracy will prevail. And America will
be healed,” she said. “But it is a decision that we have to make.A
violent mob of Trump supporters overpowered police, broke through
security lines and rampaged through the Capitol on Wednesday, forcing
lawmakers to scatter as they were putting the final, formal touches on
Biden’s victory over Trump in the Electoral College.The crowd surged to
the domed symbol of American democracy following a rally near the White
House, where Trump repeated his bogus claims that the election was
stolen from him and urged his supporters to march in force toward the
Capitol.Five people, including a Capitol police officer, died as a
result of the siege.Outrage over the attack and Trump’s role in egging
it on capped a divisive, chaotic presidency like few others in the
nation’s history. There is less than two weeks until Trump is out of
office but Democrats have made clear they don’t want to wait that
long.Trump, meanwhile, has few fellow Republicans speaking out in his
defense. He’s become increasingly isolated, holed up in the White House
as he has been abandoned in the aftermath of the riot by many aides,
leading Republicans and, so far, two Cabinet members — both women.Biden,
meanwhile, reiterated that he has long viewed Trump as unfit for
office. But on Friday he sidestepped a question about impeachment,
saying what Congress does “is for them to decide.”After spending many
weeks refusing to concede defeat in the November election, Trump
promised — after the Capitol riot — to oversee a smooth transfer of
power to Biden. He called for reconciliation and healing, but then
announced he will not attend the inauguration — the first such
presidential snub since just after the Civil War.
Seemingly
abandoning Trump, Pence said planning to attend Biden
inauguration-Reports say US vice president has decided to attend January
20 ceremony; incoming president says he’d be ‘honored to have him
there’By AFP-JAN 10,21-Today, 11:46 am
WASHINGTON — Mike Pence
will attend the upcoming inauguration of Joe Biden, multiple media
reports said Saturday, the vice president becoming the latest longtime
loyalist to abandon an increasingly isolated US President Donald
Trump.Relations between Trump and Pence — who was previously one of the
mercurial president’s staunchest defenders — have nosedived since
Wednesday, when the vice president formally announced Biden’s victory in
November’s election.A mob of far-right demonstrators stormed the US
Capitol the same day in a failed bid to stop Congress from certifying
Biden’s win, in a riot blamed on Trump that left five dead.Multiple
media reports on Saturday cited senior administration officials as
saying that Pence — who was forced to take shelter from the intruders
during the riot — had decided to attend Biden’s inauguration on January
20.Preparations take place for US President-elect Joe Biden’s
inauguration on the West Front of the US Capitol in Washington, Jan. 8,
2021, after supporters of US President Donald Trump stormed the
building. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)-The president-elect earlier in the
week said Pence would be welcome at his formal swearing-in, due to take
place in a scaled-down format due to the coronavirus.“I think it’s
important that as much as we can stick to what have been the historical
precedents of how an administration changes should be maintained,” Biden
told reporters.“We’d be honored to have him there, and to move forward
in the transition.”Trump said on Friday he would not attend the
inauguration.The outgoing president has been accused of provoking
Wednesday’s violence, and now faces an unprecedented second impeachment,
expected to begin on Monday.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi warned that
Democrats would launch the process unless Trump resigned or Pence
invoked the 25th Amendment, in which the cabinet removes the president
from office.While Pence has not spoken publicly on the subject, the New
York Times reported Thursday he was against invoking the mechanism,
never used before in US history.
Top Republican says Trump
committed ‘impeachable offenses’But Pat Toomey stops short of saying
whether he would vote to remove the US president from office if a Senate
impeachment trial goes ahead-By DARLENE SUPERVILLE and Alan Fram-JAN
10,21-Today, 3:32 am
WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats’ momentum for a
fresh drive to quickly impeach outgoing President Donald Trump gained
support Saturday, and a top Republican said the president’s role in the
deadly riot at the Capitol by a violent mob of Trump supporters was
worthy of rebuke.Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said he believed Trump had
committed “impeachable offenses.” But he stopped short of saying whether
he would vote to remove the president from office at the conclusion of a
Senate trial if the House sent over articles of impeachment.“I don’t
know what they are going to send over and one of the things that I’m
concerned about, frankly, is whether the House would completely
politicize something,” Toomey said Saturday on Fox News Channel,
speaking of the Democratic-controlled House.“I do think the president
committed impeachable offenses, but I don’t know what is going to land
on the Senate floor, if anything,” Toomey said.The new Democratic effort
to stamp Trump’s presidential record — for the second time and days
before his term ends — with the indelible mark of impeachment gained
momentum Saturday.Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I, a leader of the House
effort to draft impeachment articles — or charges — accusing Trump of
inciting insurrection, said his group had grown to include 185
co-sponsors.Lawmakers plan to formally introduce the proposal on Monday
in the House, where articles of impeachment must originate. A vote could
be possible by Wednesday — exactly one week before Democrat Joe Biden
becomes president at noon on Jan. 20.The articles, if passed by the
House, would then be transmitted to the Senate for a trial, with
senators acting as jurors who would ultimately vote on whether to acquit
or convict Trump. If convicted, Trump would be removed from office and
succeeded by the vice president.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, however,
shared no details about her party’s plans as she addressed her hometown
San Francisco constituents during an online video conference on
Saturday.“Justice will be done. Democracy will prevail. And America will
be healed,” she said. “But it is a decision that we have to make.”A
violent and largely white mob of Trump supporters overpowered police,
broke through security lines and rampaged through the Capitol on
Wednesday, forcing lawmakers to scatter as they were putting the final,
formal touches on Biden’s victory over Trump in the Electoral
College.The crowd surged to the domed symbol of American democracy
following a rally near the White House, where Trump repeated his bogus
claims that the election was stolen from him and urged his supporters to
march in force toward the Capitol.Five people, including a Capitol
police officer, died as a result of the siege.“It has been an epiphany
for the world to see that there are people in our country led by this
president, for the moment, who have chosen their whiteness over
democracy,” Pelosi said of the attack.She added: “This cannot be
exaggerated. The complicity, not only the complicity, the instigation of
the president of United States, must and will be addressed.”No. 4 House
Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York reiterated support for
moving against what he deemed “an act of sedition that was incited and
encouraged by Donald Trump.”Speaking of Trump, Jeffries said Saturday:
“He should be impeached, convicted and thrown out of 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue and forever banished to the dustbin of history.”Outrage over the
attack and Trump’s role in egging it on capped a divisive, chaotic
presidency like few others in the nation’s history. There are less than
two weeks until Trump is out of office but Democrats have made clear
they don’t want to wait that long.Trump, meanwhile, has few fellow
Republicans speaking out in his defense. He’s become increasingly
isolated, holed up in the White House as he has been abandoned in the
aftermath of the riot by many aides, leading Republicans and, so far,
two Cabinet members — both women.Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, who has
long voiced her exasperation with Trump’s conduct in office, told the
Anchorage Daily News on Friday that he simply “needs to get out.”Sen.
Ben Sasse, another Trump critic, said more important than what happens
to Trump “is what happens to the United States people and this union 12
days and beyond.”But the Nebraska Republican also told “CBS This
Morning” on Friday that he “will definitely consider” whatever articles
the House sends over because he believes Trump “has disregarded his oath
of office” to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution.Biden,
meanwhile, reiterated that he has long viewed Trump as unfit for office.
But on Friday he sidestepped a question about impeachment, saying what
Congress does “is for them to decide.”After spending many weeks refusing
to concede defeat in the November election, Trump promised — after the
Capitol riot — to oversee a smooth transfer of power to Biden. He called
for reconciliation and healing, but then announced he will not attend
the inauguration — the first such presidential snub since just after the
Civil War.
Banned from Twitter, Trump may find new megaphone on
far-right magnet Parler-Google removes platform from its store, Apple
threatens to follow, amid US curbs on online incitement-By Frank
Bajak-JAN 10,21-Today, 3:03 am
BOSTON (AP) — One Twitter wag
joked about lights flickering on and off at the White House being Donald
Trump signaling to his followers in Morse code after Twitter and
Facebook squelched the president for inciting rebellion.Though deprived
of his big online megaphones, Trump does have alternative options of
much smaller reach, led by the far right-friendly Parler — even if
Google removed it from its app store Friday and Apple threatened the
same.Trump may launch his own platform. But that won’t happen overnight,
and free speech experts anticipate growing pressure on all social media
platforms to curb incendiary speech as Americans take stock of
Wednesday’s violent takeover of the US Capitol by a Trump-incited
mob.Twitter ended Trump’s nearly 12-year run on Friday. In shuttering
his account it cited a tweet to his 89 million followers that he planned
to skip President-elect Joe Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration that it said
gave rioters license to converge on Washington once again.Facebook and
Instagram have suspended Trump at least until Inauguration Day. Twitch
and Snapchat also have disabled Trump’s accounts, while Shopify took
down online stores affiliated with the president and Reddit removed a
Trump subgroup. Twitter also banned Trump loyalists including former
national security advisor Michael Flynn in a sweeping purge of accounts
promoting the QAnon conspiracy theory and the Capitol insurrection. Some
had hundreds of thousands of followers.In a statement Friday, Trump
said: “We have been negotiating with various other sites, and will have a
big announcement soon, while we also look at the possibilities of
building out our own platform in the near future.”The “immense power
that the social media platforms have as gatekeepers of public discourse”
had been flexed as never before — a power that should be troubling even
for supporters of the Trump ban, tweeted Jameel Jaffer, director of the
Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University.Experts are
betting Trump pops up on Parler, a 2-year-old magnet for the far right
that claims more than 12 million users and where his sons Eric and Don
Jr. are already active. Parler hit headwinds, though, on Friday as
Google yanked its smartphone app from its app store for allowing
postings that seek “to incite ongoing violence in the US” and Apple
threatened to do the same, giving Parler a 24-hour ultimatum.Apple told
Parler executives in an email Friday it got complaints the app was being
used to “plan and facilitate yet further illegal and dangerous
activities.”Parler CEO John Matze complained on his site of being
scapegoated. “Standards not applied to Twitter, Facebook or even Apple
themselves, apply to Parler.” He said he “won’t cave to politically
motivated companies and those authoritarians who hate free
speech.”Losing access to the app stores of Google and Apple — whose
operating systems power hundreds of millions of smartphones — severely
limits Parler’s reach, though it will continue to be accessible via web
browser. Another potential landing spot for Trump is Gab — though both
Google and Apple booted it from their app stores in 2017.Online speech
experts expect social media companies led by Facebook, Twitter and
Google’s YouTube to more vigorously police hate speech and incitement in
the wake of the Capitol rebellion, as Western democracies led by
Nazism-haunted Germany already do.David Kaye, a University of
California-Irvine law professor and former UN special rapporteur on free
speech believes the Parlers of the world will also face pressure from
the public and law enforcement as will little-known sites where further
pre-inauguration disruption is now apparently being organized. They
include MeWe, Wimkin, TheDonald.win and Stormfront, according to a
report released Saturday by The Althea Group, which tracks
disinformation.Kaye rejects arguments by US conservatives including the
president’s former UN ambassador, Nikki Haley, that the Trump ban
savaged the First Amendment, which prohibits the government from
restricting free expression. “Silencing people, not to mention the
President of the US, is what happens in China not our country,” Haley
tweeted.“It’s not like the platforms’ rules are draconian. People don’t
get caught in violations unless they do something clearly against the
rules,” said Kaye. And not just individual citizens have free speech
rights. “The companies have their freedom of speech, too.”While
initially arguing their need to be neutral on speech, Twitter and
Facebook gradually yielded to public pressure drawing the line
especially when the so-called Plandemic video emerged early in the
COVID-19 pandemic urging people not to wear masks, noted civic media
professor Ethan Zuckerman of the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst.Zuckerman expects the Trump de-platforming may
spur important online shifts. First, there may be an accelerated
splintering of the social media world along ideological lines.“Trump
will pull a lot of audience wherever he goes,” he said. That could mean
more platforms with smaller, more ideologically isolated audiences.A
splintering could push people towards extremes — or make extremism less
infectious, he said: Maybe people looking for a video about welding on
YouTube will no longer find themselves being offered an unrelated QAnon
video. Alternative media systems that are less top-down managed and more
self-governing could also emerge.Zuckerman also expects major debate
about online speech regulation, including in Congress.“I suspect you
will see efforts from the right arguing that there shouldn’t be
regulations on acceptable speech,” he said. “I think you will see
arguments from the democratic side that speech is a public health
issue.”You’re serious. We appreciate that!
Pro-Trump rioter in
horned fur hat, man who grabbed Pelosi’s lecturn, charged-Jake Angeli
and Adam Johnson hit with violent entry and other charges; dozens more
held in deadly storming of US Capitol; officials say many more cases
being probed-By AP and TOI staff-9 January 2021, 11:58 pm
Dozens
of people have already been arrested and prosecutors across the US have
vowed to bring to justice those who stormed the US Capitol on Wednesday,
sending lawmakers into hiding as they began their work to affirm
President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.Two men in high-profile photos from
the events — one wearing a horned, fur hat and the other carrying House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s lectern — were charged Saturday, the latest
arrests in Wednesday’s mayhem that left five people dead.The arrests
come as more images emerge showing just how violent the riots were: a
bloodied officer crushed in a doorway screaming; another tumbling over a
railing into the crowd below after being body-slammed from behind;
members of the media being cursed, shoved and punched.Jacob Anthony
Chansley, an Arizona man seen in photos and video of the mob with a
painted face and wearing a costume that included the horned hat, was
taken into custody Saturday and charged with counts that include violent
entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.Chansley, more commonly
known as Jake Angeli, will remain in custody in Arizona pending a
detention hearing that will be scheduled during an initial court
appearance early in the coming week, Assistant US Attorney Esther Winne
told The Associated Press by email. Chansley did not immediately respond
to messages left via email and telephone.Chansley, who had become a
staple in his costume at pro-Trump protests across the country, is now
among dozens of people arrested in the wake of the Capitol invasion by a
large mob of Trump supporters enraged over his election loss.The
rioters took over the House and Senate chambers, smashed windows and
waved Trump, American and Confederate flags, forcing lawmakers to halt
their voting to affirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory and go into
hiding for hours.A Florida man accused of making off with Pelosi’s
lectern during the chaos was arrested Friday night on a federal warrant
and was being held Saturday without bail in Pinellas County, Florida.
Jail records do not show if Adam Johnson, 36, of Parrish, Florida, has
an attorney.Johnnson was charged Saturday with theft, violent entry and
disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.The married father of five who was
quickly identified on social media by local residents as the man in a
photo smiling as he walked through the Capitol rotunda carrying Pelosi’s
lectern, The Bradenton Herald reported.Before being deleted or taken
down, Johnson posted on social media that he was in Washington, DC,
during Wednesday’s riot and included disparaging comments about the
Black Lives Matter movement, according to The Bradenton Herald.By
Saturday, prosecutors had filed 17 cases in federal district court and
40 others in the District of Columbia Superior Court for a variety of
offenses ranging from assaulting police officers to entering restricted
areas of the US Capitol, stealing federal property and threatening
lawmakers.Prosecutors said additional cases remained under seal, dozens
of other people were being sought by federal agents and the US attorney
in Washington vowed Friday that “all options were on the table” for
charges, including possibly sedition.Other notable arrests in the
Capitol invasion include:— Doug Jensen, an Iowa man, was jailed early
Saturday on federal charges, including trespassing and disorderly
conduct counts, for his alleged role in the Capitol riot. Jensen, 41, of
Des Moines, was being held without bond at the Polk County Jail and
county sheriff’s Sgt. Ryan Evans said he didn’t know if Jensen had an
attorney. Video posted online during the storming of the Capitol showed a
man who appears to be Jensen, who is white, pursuing a Black officer up
an interior flight of stairs as a mob of people trails several steps
behind. At several points, the officer says “get back,” to no avail.This
is HORRIFIC to watch pic.twitter.com/AToUyANEY7— Janey Godley
(@JaneyGodley) January 6, 2021— Richard Barnett, an Arkansas man who was
shown in a widely seen photo sitting in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s
office with his boots on a desk after the storming of the Capitol, was
arrested Friday by the FBI. Barnett, 60, turned himself in to FBI agents
at the Benton County Sheriff’s Office in Bentonville, Arkansas.Richard
Barnett, a supporter of US President Donald Trump, holds a piece of mail
as he sits inside the office of US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
after protestors breached the US Capitol in the US Capitol in
Washington, DC, January 6, 2021. (SAUL LOEB / AFP)-He is jailed in the
Washington County Detention Center in nearby Fayetteville, Arkansas,
without bond pending an initial court appearance, FBI Little Rock
spokesman Connor Hagan said. No attorney is listed in online jail
records for the Gravette, Arkansas, man.From his feet on Nancy Pelosi's
desk to an Arkansas jail. Here's a mug shot of Richard Barnett, who was
arrested this morning and is now facing federal charges
pic.twitter.com/rpSJ3BvyAm — Reena Roy (@reenaroy) January 8, 2021—
Derrick Evans, a West Virginia state lawmaker who posted videos online
showing himself pushing his way inside the Capitol, was arrested Friday
by the FBI at his home and charged with entering restricted federal
property. Evans, who faced bipartisan calls for him to step down,
submitted a letter of resignation Saturday to West Virginia Gov. Jim
Justice and apologized for his actions. Evans faces charges that he
entered a restricted area of the US Capitol after he livestreamed
himself rushing into the building with a horde of rampaging Trump
supporters as Congress was in session to certify the Electoral College
vote. In the videos, Evans is seen fist bumping a police officer and
then milling around the rotunda as he shouted, “Our house!”WV Delegate
Derrick Evans, who live streamed himself breaking into the Capitol and
posted it on the internet, is among those being charged. This is him:
pic.twitter.com/CUzjQd6ZrI — Sara B. (@sara_bee) January 8, 2021-US
attorneys in several states, including Kentucky, Ohio and Oregon, said
people could face charges in their home states if they traveled to
Washington and took part in the riot. The FBI has released photos of
people inside the Capitol, urging the public to help identify
them.Capitol Police arrested just more than a dozen people the day of
the breach while DC police arrested around 70. Many people freely left
the Capitol, which means investigators now have to work to identify them
and track them down. Authorities have to distinguish between those who
traveled to Washington only to participate in the rally before the riot
versus those who were part of the insurrection at the Capitol. It can
take weeks for investigators to go through photos and video, identify
suspects, interview witnesses and write a complaint to secure an
arrest.Those who’ve been charged so far could also lead investigators to
others who joined in the violent siege on Capitol Hill.Michael Sherwin,
acting US attorney for the District of Columbia, said this week that
prosecutors are not keeping anything out of their “ arsenal for
potential charges.” As prosecutors gather more evidence, they can add
more charges against those they’ve already arrested.A member of a
pro-Trump mob bashes an entrance of the Capitol Building in an attempt
to gain access on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. A pro-Trump mob
stormed the Capitol, breaking windows and clashing with police officers.
Trump supporters gathered in the nation’s capital today to protest the
ratification of President-elect Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory
over President Trump in the 2020 election. (Jon Cherry/Getty
Images/AFP)Experts say federal prosecutors could bring rarely used
seditious conspiracy charges against some of the rioters. In the wake of
protests across the U.S. over police brutality this summer, then-Deputy
Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen told prosecutors in September that they
should consider using the sedition charge, which calls for up to 20
years in prison, against violent demonstrators.Rosen, who took over the
top Department of Justice job when Attorney General William Barr stepped
down last month, said the charge does not require proof of a plot to
overthrow the US government and gave the hypothetical example of a group
that “has conspired to take a federal courthouse or other federal
property by force.”Trump urged the crowd to march on the Capitol, even
promising to go with them, though he didn’t in the end. The president
told his supporters to “fight” to stop the “steal” of the election,
while his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, called for “trial by
combat.”But the legal bar for charging the president or any other
speakers at the rally with inciting violence is high. Experts say it
would be tough to prove that the president intended for violence to
happen on Capitol Hill. Trump’s speech likely would not be considered
illegally inciting violence because he didn’t specifically call for
people to storm the Capitol, experts say.But Trump faces an impeachment
effort that is gathering steam. Democrats plan to introduce articles of
impeachment against Trump in the House of Representatives on
Monday.Meanwhile outgoing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has
informed senators that a potential trial in the Senate following
impeachment in the House is unlikely to begin before Joe Biden’s
inauguration on January 20.Democrats will gain a razor-thin majority in
the Senate on January 22, but impeaching a president in the Senate
requires a two-thirds majority.
After Israel-Morocco deal, US
launches work on consulate in Western Sahara-US envoy attends event in
‘stunningly beautiful’ disputed region; Moroccan FM says country ‘feels
stronger in its legitimate fight for its territorial integrity’-By
AFP-JAN 10,21-Today, 8:04 pm
RABAT, Morocco — The United States
on Sunday started the “process of establishing” a consulate in contested
Western Sahara, after Washington recognized Morocco’s sovereignty there
in exchange for Rabat normalizing ties with Israel.US Ambassador David
Fischer visited the port of Dakhla, 1,440 kilometers (895 miles)
southwest of Rabat in the far south of Moroccan-controlled Western
Sahara, to mark the start of work on a diplomatic office.“It is such an
honor for me to visit this stunningly beautiful and critically important
region of Morocco, and to begin the process of establishing a US
diplomatic presence here,” Fischer said, according to the US
embassy.Western Sahara is a disputed and divided former Spanish colony,
mostly under Morocco’s control, where tensions with the pro-independence
Polisario Front have simmered since the 1970s.Last year, Morocco joined
the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Sudan in agreeing to normalize
ties with Israel under US-brokered deals.In return, US President Donald
Trump fulfilled a decades-old Moroccan goal by backing its contested
sovereignty over the barren but phosphate-rich region, which lies next
to key Atlantic fishing zones.Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita said
Sunday that “Morocco feels stronger in its legitimate fight for its
territorial integrity… with the support of its friends.”The
Algerian-backed Polisario Front fought a war for independence from 1975
to 1991, and controls about one-fifth of the desert territory.Some 20
countries, mostly African and Arab nations, have already opened
diplomatic offices in the Moroccan-held area, but the Polisario
considers such moves to be violations of international law.UN
peacekeepers in Western Sahara are mandated to organize a referendum on
self-determination for the region, and despite Washington’s move, the UN
insists its position is “unchanged.”In November, the Polisario
announced it regarded a 1991 ceasefire as null and void, after Morocco
sent troops into a UN-patrolled buffer zone to reopen a key road.Bourita
said Sunday that Morocco continues to “support the ceasefire, but will
react to any provocation,” adding that Rabat “will support the UN
process… to find a solution to this long-standing dispute.”Fischer, who
called the visit Sunday “another historic milestone in more than 200
years of friendship” between Morocco and the US, was accompanied by
Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, David
Schenker.The pair donned flowing white embroidered robes that are
traditionally worn in the territory over their suits.In December, the US
State Department opened a “virtual” diplomatic post in Western Sahara,
ahead of finding “an appropriate site” to build a consulate.The building
is expected to be ready in coming months, Fischer added.Last month,
Fischer said that a consulate would allow Washington “to take further
advantage of Morocco’s strategic positioning as a hub for trade in
Africa, Europe, and the Middle East.”The Morocco-Israel deal to
normalize ties is expected to involve significant investment from the US
International Development Finance Corporation, and Morocco hopes Dakhla
can become a major regional port.Last month, the DFC inked a memorandum
of understanding to invest $3 billion over the next four years into
Morocco or with Moroccan partners working in sub-Saharan Africa.It also
promised an initiative to “catalyze $1 billion of investments in
projects that advance women’s economic empowerment in the Middle East
and North Africa.”US President-elect Joe Biden, who will replace Trump
on January 20, has not publicly commented on Western Sahara.
Israeli
jets said to fly low over Beirut, scaring residents-Breaches of
Lebanese airspace by Israel reportedly becoming a daily occurrence-By
Agencies and TOI staff-JAN 10,21-Today, 6:44 pm
Israeli military
jets carried out several low-altitude flights over Beirut as
reconnaissance drones buzzed overhead Sunday in what has become a daily
occurrence, according to social media users in Lebanon.Israel has been
accused of regularly breaching Lebanese airspace, often to carry out
strikes in neighboring Syria or reconnaissance missions on Hezbollah’s
presence in the south of the country. The Iran-backed terror group,
sworn to Israel’s destruction, has thousands of missiles stored in
southern Lebanon aimed at the Jewish state.On Christmas Eve, Israeli
jets flew low late into the night, spooking Beirut residents. They were
followed by reported Israeli strikes in Syria.The reported frequency of
low-flying warplanes over the capital has intensified in the last two
weeks, making residents jittery as tensions run high in the region on
the final days of US President Donald Trump’s administration.“When the
drone leaves, the warplanes come. When the warplanes leave, the drones
return. They have seen us in our PJs, filmed us in our PJs and
surveilled us in our PJs. Now what,” quipped Twitter user Areej_AAH“Of
all types of panic I experienced in life in Beirut, the panic that
accompanies the Israeli warplanes flying this low in Beirut is very
special,” tweeted Rudeynah Baalbaky, who said it brought back memories
of the 2006 Second Lebanon War between Hezbollah and Israel.Israel
rarely comments on these reports.Many fear conflict may erupt in the
area before Trump leaves office in retaliation for the US killing of
Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani in Iraq last year, or to scuttle
efforts by the incoming administration of Joe Biden to negotiate with
Iran.On Friday, the Lebanese army said it recorded an Israeli flight
that lasted nearly six hours in the country’s south.A Twitter account
that tracks aircraft movement in the Middle East, Intel_Sky, has
recorded dozens of Israeli jets flying over Lebanon, since the start of
the year. Intel_Sky called Sunday’s flights “mock raids.”At one point
this summer, the Lebanese army said Israel violated its airspace nearly
30 times in two days, flying reconnaissance drones and jets into
Lebanese territory.The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon says
Israel enters Lebanese airspace on a daily basis in violation of UN
resolutions and the country’s sovereignty.Between June and October 2020,
UNIFIL recorded a daily average of 12.63 airspace violations, totaling
61 hours and 51 minutes in flight time, a significant increase from the
previous four months. Drones accounted for approximately 95 percent of
the violations, UNIFIL said.Israel and Lebanon are technically at
war.Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, in a year-end interview, said
Israel’s efforts to curb his group’s ability to acquire precision-guided
missiles have failed. He boasted that Hezbollah now has twice as many
such missiles as it had last year.Israel has in recent months expressed
concern that Hezbollah is trying to establish production facilities to
make precision-guided missiles.
'I’m frankly somewhere between
addicted and intoxicated'Elated outgoing US envoy says ‘there’s no going
back’ on Trump’s Israel policies-After overseeing shift on Jerusalem,
Golan, settlements, along with Israel-Gulf normalization, David Friedman
suggests traditional peacemaking tactics are a thing of the past-By TOI
staff-JAN 10,21-Today, 6:44 pm
Donald Trump’s outgoing US
Ambassador to Israel David Friedman has expressed confidence that the
major shifts in Washington’s policy vis-a-vis Israel and the
Palestinians cannot be reversed by the Biden administration.“I’m frankly
somewhere between addicted and intoxicated with what I’ve been able to
do, and how much joy it gives me,” he told The New York Times in a
parting interview reviewing his time in Israel. The Trump
administration, said Friedman, has “changed the narrative
dramatically.”“There’s no going back on what we’ve been able to do,”
said Friedman.(The interview was published Sunday, but carried out last
Monday, two days before pro-Trump supporters invaded the US Capitol;
Friedman commented on those events on Friday.)-Under Trump’s leadership,
the US administration recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and
moved its embassy there from Tel Aviv, and recognized Israel’s
sovereignty over the Golan Heights. It withdrew millions in aid to the
Palestinians and shuttered the PLO office in Washington. The Trump peace
plan unveiled last January — forcefully opposed by the Palestinians —
did not call for the evacuation of Israeli settlements and would have
allowed Israel to annex large swaths of the West Bank under its
framework.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and US Ambassador
David Friedman at the Western Wall on December 10, 2020, the first night
of Hanukkah. Netanyahu hailed the “light” of US President Donald
Trump’s announcement that Morocco and Israel are to establish full
relations, issued hours earlier. (Kobi Gideon/GPO)-But Israel’s plans to
unilaterally annex parts of the area were put on ice when the US
clinched a normalization deal between Jerusalem and the United Arab
Emirates in August. That agreement was followed in succession by deals
establishing diplomatic ties between Israel and Bahrain, Sudan, and
Morocco, all of which were brokered by the Trump administration. The
UAE, Sudan and Morocco received significant rewards from the US for
opening ties with Israel.In addition, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
became the first top American diplomat to visit a Jewish settlement in
the West Bank last year. In November 2018, his State Department said the
US would no longer see settlements as contrary to international law.
During his last visit to Israel, Pompeo also announced that Washington
would designate as “anti-Semitic” the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions
campaign, which seeks to isolate Israel over its treatment of the
Palestinians.US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, with US Ambassador
to Israel David Friedman as he prepares to board a plane at Ben Gurion
Airport on November 20, 2020. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, Pool)-Freidman
said the Trump administration “injected a tremendously needed dose of
realism into the Palestinian psyche about what’s achievable and what’s
not.” He said the Trump peace plan was “a gift to the Palestinian
people” that would make their “quality of life far more bearable.”For
the US to press Israel on increased settlement building, “just to kind
of virtue-signal that we think the Palestinians should have something
more, made no sense to me,” he said.The ambassador also said Israel
could yet take unilateral steps to determine its borders, though he
conceded such a move would be less than ideal.He said Israel would
“continue a process that, hopefully, we’ve been helpful in starting, of
determining internally — forget about the rest of the world — what its
eastern border should be.”“They can act unilaterally,” he said,
referring to an Israeli annexation. “It’s suboptimal, but at some point,
it’s just sort of necessary just to move on.”Friedman acknowledged that
US President-elect Biden would return to a “more internationally
accepted view” of settlements as illegal. But he insisted the Trump
peace plan “has the advantage of being a realistic two-state solution
that is endorsed generally by the Israeli public. Why would you throw
that out?”He opined: “A flood of refugees into Israel? Never going to
happen. Dividing Jerusalem? It’s just never going to happen. Israel
giving up certain parts of its biblical heartland? Never going to
happen.”Friedman, who was seen as unusually close to Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, also said he didn’t interfere with Israeli
elections. “It may not look that way, but I respect Israel’s democracy,”
he said. He also signaled he would seek Israeli citizenship, but not
immediately.“I’m going to stay American-only for at least four years,”
he said. “I want to give myself every opportunity to return to
government.”
Body parts, debris found after Indonesia plane
crash-Boeing 737-500 with 62 people onboard crashed shortly after
takeoff from Jakarta, officials say-By Niniek Karmini and Edna
Tarigan-JAN 10,21-Today, 5:09 am
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) —
Indonesian rescuers pulled out body parts, pieces of clothing and scraps
of metal from the Java Sea early Sunday morning, a day after a Boeing
737-500 with 62 people onboard crashed shortly after takeoff from
Jakarta, officials said.Officials were hopeful they were honing in on
the wreckage of Sriwijaya Air Flight 182 after sonar equipment detected a
signal from the aircraft.Transportation Minister Budi Karya Sumadi told
reporters that authorities have launched massive search efforts after
identifying “the possible location of the crash site.”These pieces were
found by the SAR team between Lancang Island and Laki Island,” National
Search and Rescue Agency Bagus Puruhito in a statement.Indonesian
military chief Air Chief Marshal Hadi Tjahjanto said teams on the Rigel
navy ship equipped with a remote-operated vehicle had detected a signal
from the aircraft, which fit the coordinates from the last contact made
by the pilots before the plane went missing.“We have immediately
deployed our divers from navy’s elite unit to determine the finding to
evacuate the victims,” Tjahjanto said.An Indonesian Navy diver holds
debris from Sriwijaya Air flight SJY182 during a search and rescue
operation at sea near Lancang island on January 10, 2021, after the
Boeing 737-500 crashed shortly after taking off from Jakarta airport on
January 9. (ADEK BERRY / AFP)-More than 12 hours since the Boeing plane
operated by the Indonesian airline lost contact, little is known about
what caused the crash.Fishermen in the area around Thousand Islands, a
chain of islands north of Jakarta’s coast, reported hearing an explosion
around 2:30 p.m. Saturday.“We heard something explode, we thought it
was a bomb or a tsunami since after that we saw the big splash from the
water,” fisherman Solihin, who goes by one name, told The Associated
Press by phone.“It was raining heavily and the weather was so bad. So it
is difficult to see around clearly. But we can see the splash and a big
wave after the sounds. We were very shocked and directly saw the plane
debris and the fuel around our boat.”Sumadi said Flight SJ182 was
delayed for an hour before it took off at 2:36 p.m. It disappeared from
radar four minutes later, after the pilot contacted air traffic control
to ascend to an altitude of 29,000 feet (8,839 meters), he said.There
were 62 people on board, including seven children and three babies.“We
are aware of media reports from Jakarta regarding Sriwijaya Air flight
SJ-182,” Boeing said in a statement. “Our thoughts are with the crew,
passengers, and their families. We are in contact with our airline
customer and stand ready to support them during this difficult
time.”Authorities established two crisis centers, one at airport and one
at port. Families gathered to wait for news of loved ones.On social
media, people began circulating the flight manifesto with photos and
videos of those who were listed as passengers. One video shows a woman
with her children waving goodbye while walking through the
airport.Sriwijaya Air President Director Jefferson Irwin Jauwena said
the plane, which is 26 years old and previously used by airlines in the
United States, was airworthy. He told reporters Saturday that the plane
had previously flown to Pontianak and Pangkal Pinang city on the same
day.“Maintenance report said everything went well and airworthy,”
Jauwena told a news conference. He said the plane was delayed due to bad
weather, not because of any damage.Indonesia, the world’s largest
archipelago nation, with more than 260 million people, has been plagued
by transportation accidents on land, sea and air because of overcrowding
on ferries, aging infrastructure and poorly enforced safety
standards.In October 2018, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet operated by Lion Air
plunged into the Java Sea just minutes after taking off from Jakarta,
killing all 189 people on board. The plane involved in Saturday’s
incident did not have the automated flight-control system that played a
role in the Lion Air crash and another crash of a 737 MAX 8 jet in
Ethiopia five months later, leading to the grounding of the MAX 8 for 20
months.The Lion Air crash was Indonesia’s worst airline disaster since
1997, when 234 people were killed on a Garuda airlines flight near Medan
on Sumatra island. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from the
Indonesian city of Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing
162 people.Sriwijaya Air has only has several minor incidents in the
past, though a farmer was killed in 2008 when landing plane went off
runway due to a hydraulic issue.The United States banned Indonesian
carriers from operating in the country in 2007, but reversed the
decision in 2016, citing improvements in compliance with international
aviation standards. The European Union has previously had similar bans,
lifting them in June 2018.
North Korea threatens to expand its
nuclear arsenal, citing US ‘hostility’Kim Jong Un says he won’t use his
nuclear weapons first, suggests he’s open to dialogue, but also calls
Washington his ‘main enemy’By Hyung-Jin Kim-JAN 10,21-Today, 2:17 am
SEOUL,
South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un threatened to expand
his nuclear arsenal as he disclosed a list of high-tech weapons systems
under development, saying the fate of relations with the United States
depends on whether it abandons its hostile policy, state media reported
Saturday.Kim’s comments during a key meeting of the ruling party this
week were seen as applying pressure on the incoming administration of
President-elect Joe Biden, who has called Kim a “thug” and has
criticized his summits with President Donald Trump.The Korean Central
News Agency quoted Kim as saying the “key to establishing new relations
between (North Korea) and the United States is whether the United States
withdraws its hostile policy.”Kim said he won’t use his nuclear weapons
first unless threatened. He also suggested he is open to dialogue if
Washington is too, but stressed North Korea must further strengthen its
military and nuclear capability to cope with intensifying US
hostility.He again called the US his country’s “main enemy.” “Whoever
takes office in the US, its basic nature and hostile policy will never
change,” he said.Biden, who will take office on Jan. 20, is unlikely to
hold direct meetings with Kim unless the North Korean leader takes
significant denuclearization steps.Cheong Seong-Chang, a fellow at the
Wilson Center’s Asia Program, said Kim’s speech showed he has no
interests in denuclearization talks with Biden if he insists that
working-level negotiations must sort out contentious issues first.Kim
didn’t cite any specific provocative US actions. North Korea has
previously called regular US military drills with South Korea an
invasion rehearsal, though the allies have repeatedly denied that.The
North Korean leader listed sophisticated weapons systems that he said
were under development. They include a multi-warhead missile,
underwater-launched nuclear missiles, solid-fueled long-range missiles
and spy satellites. He said North Korea must also advance the precision
attack capability on targets in the 15,000 kilometer (9,320
mile)-striking range, an apparent reference to the US mainland, and
develop technology to manufacture smaller nuclear warheads to be mounted
on long-range missiles more easily.“The reality is that we can achieve
peace and prosperity on the Korean Peninsula when we constantly build up
our national defense and suppress US military threats,” Kim said.In
this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un, center, attends a ruling party congress in Pyongyang, North
Korea Thursday, Jan. 7, 2021. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News
Service via AP)-It’s unclear if North Korea is capable of developing
such systems. It’s one of the world’s most cloistered countries, and
estimates on the exact status of its nuclear and missile programs vary
widely. In 2018, the South Korean government said North Korea was
estimated to have up to 60 nuclear weapons.“What they want to tell the
US is we’re developing the new strategic weapons that you can see as the
most intimidating. Do you want to come to the negotiating table?” Choi
Kang, vice president of Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies,
said.KCNA said Kim’s comments were made during the ruling Workers’ Party
congress, the first in five years, from Tuesday to Thursday. He spoke
for nine hours, the agency said.The congress, the party’s top
decision-making body, is being held as Kim faces what appears to be the
toughest moment of his nine-year rule due to blows to his
already-fragile economy — pandemic-related border closings that have
sharply reduced the North’s external trade, a spate of natural disasters
last summer and US-led sanctions.This image made from video broadcasted
by North Korea’s KRT, shows a military parade with what appears to be
possible new intercontinental ballistic missile at the Kim Il Sung
Square in Pyongyang, Saturday, Oct. 10, 2020. (KRT via AP)-During his
opening-day speech, Kim called the difficulties the “worst-ever” and
admitted his previous economic plans had failed. In his other comments
reported Saturday, he called for building a stronger self-supporting
economy and reducing reliance on imports under a new five-year
development plan.Since taking power in late 2011, Kim, who turned 37 on
Friday, has pushed the so-called “byungjin” policy of simultaneously
seeking economic growth and the expansion of his nuclear deterrent.
After claiming to have achieved the ability to strike the US mainland
with nuclear weapons, Kim launched high-stakes summits Trump in 2018,
but their diplomacy later fell apart due to wrangling over the sanctions
the following year.During this week’s speeches, Kim said North Korea
will further boost ties with China, its biggest ally and economic
lifeline but slammed South Korea for continuing the drills with the US
and introducing modern weapons.South Korea’s Unification Ministry
responded that it hopes for the early resumption of North Korea-US
talks, saying the inauguration of a new president in Washington can
serve as a good chance to improve their ties.“Kim’s speech foreshows the
North Korean-US relations won’t be smooth in the next four years with
Biden in office,” said Nam Sung-wook, an expert on North Korea at Korea
University in South Korea. “We won’t likely see big events and
spectacles (like the Kim-Trump summits) for the time being.”
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