House Removes Kevin McCarthy as Speaker

30,899 Views | 359 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by Redbrickbear
FLBear5630
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muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Cobretti said:




Jordan is not getting SOH. 55! On GOP side. He is done. Get someone that can win. A Trumpite is not getting it.
Arent you always carrying on about compromise and such? These 55 need to compromise and ask Jordan to do them some favors. Mccarthy flipped MTG into a rino by promising her committee positions and she became his b*tch.


Jordan compromise? When has he Gaetz or any of the MAGA compromised? Now that he wants the gavel, the moderates are supposed to compromise? If they worked with McCarthy we wouldn't be here. Now Jordan is moderate? Have you guys any shame? You guys are worse ****s in Congress when power is close.
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Cobretti said:




Jordan is not getting SOH. 55! On GOP side. He is done. Get someone that can win. A Trumpite is not getting it.
Arent you always carrying on about compromise and such? These 55 need to compromise and ask Jordan to do them some favors. Mccarthy flipped MTG into a rino by promising her committee positions and she became his b*tch.


Jordan compromise? When has he Gaetz or any of the MAGA compromised? Now that he wants the gavel, the moderates are supposed to compromise? If they worked with McCarthy we wouldn't be here. Now Jordan is moderate? Have you guys any shame? You guys are worse ****s in Congress when power is close.
Are you aware moderate Mike Rogers is openly trying to organize enough Republicans to vote for Jeffries to be speaker?

It's just amazing that the moderates cannot see how radical and inflexible THEY become when they don't get their way within caucus. In their minds, it is the natural order of things for a moderate Republican to be speaker, so we get the pathology that hold McCarthy losing 8 votes from the right is outrageous, but moderates talking to Democrats to stop a conservative Speaker is noble.
Wrecks Quan Dough
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Cobretti said:




Jordan is not getting SOH. 55! On GOP side. He is done. Get someone that can win. A Trumpite is not getting it.
Arent you always carrying on about compromise and such? These 55 need to compromise and ask Jordan to do them some favors. Mccarthy flipped MTG into a rino by promising her committee positions and she became his b*tch.


Jordan compromise? When has he Gaetz or any of the MAGA compromised? Now that he wants the gavel, the moderates are supposed to compromise? If they worked with McCarthy we wouldn't be here. Now Jordan is moderate? Have you guys any shame? You guys are worse ****s in Congress when power is close.
Are you aware moderate Mike Rogers is openly trying to organize enough Republicans to vote for Jeffries to be speaker?

It's just amazing that the moderates cannot see how radical and inflexible THEY become when they don't get their way within caucus. In their minds, it is the natural order of things for a moderate Republican to be speaker, so we get the pathology that hold McCarthy losing 8 votes from the right is outrageous, but moderates talking to Democrats to stop a conservative Speaker is noble.



It almost makes you wonder whose side they're on.
Cobretti
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Osodecentx
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Cobretti said:




Jordan is not getting SOH. 55! On GOP side. He is done. Get someone that can win. A Trumpite is not getting it.
Arent you always carrying on about compromise and such? These 55 need to compromise and ask Jordan to do them some favors. Mccarthy flipped MTG into a rino by promising her committee positions and she became his b*tch.


Jordan compromise? When has he Gaetz or any of the MAGA compromised? Now that he wants the gavel, the moderates are supposed to compromise? If they worked with McCarthy we wouldn't be here. Now Jordan is moderate? Have you guys any shame? You guys are worse ****s in Congress when power is close.
Are you aware moderate Mike Rogers is openly trying to organize enough Republicans to vote for Jeffries to be speaker?

Do you have a credible link for this?

edit:
muddybrazos
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FLBear5630 said:

muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Cobretti said:




Jordan is not getting SOH. 55! On GOP side. He is done. Get someone that can win. A Trumpite is not getting it.
Arent you always carrying on about compromise and such? These 55 need to compromise and ask Jordan to do them some favors. Mccarthy flipped MTG into a rino by promising her committee positions and she became his b*tch.


Jordan compromise? When has he Gaetz or any of the MAGA compromised? Now that he wants the gavel, the moderates are supposed to compromise? If they worked with McCarthy we wouldn't be here. Now Jordan is moderate? Have you guys any shame? You guys are worse ****s in Congress when power is close.


well, well, well
Mothra
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Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.
Wrecks Quan Dough
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Matt Gaetz: GOP Kingmaker.
Redbrickbear
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Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.

People question the shooting because there were law enforcement officers like literally standing right behind her.

If she was such a threat why did they not arrest her or shoot her?

Not to mention she was unarmed.

And of course this did not happen in a vaccum....it took place after the BLM summer of riots where protestors/rioters were treated with kid gloves....yet a Air Force service member and woman is shot dead for standing up on a door frame?




She is so close to Capitol Hill police officers that its a miracle they did not get shot accidently....

FLBear5630
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Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Mitch Blood Green
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FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.


You know who else didn't get murdered that day? Me because my monkey ass was at home.
KaiBear
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Mitch Blood Green said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.


Me because my monkey ass was at home.


Is it racist if other individuals use the term 'monkey ass' ?
Redbrickbear
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FLBear5630
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KaiBear said:

Mitch Blood Green said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.


Me because my monkey ass was at home.


Is it racist if other individuals use the term 'monkey ass' ?


Is it bad to say that you look like monkeys ass when talking about yourself? Or is self-deprecating? Or are certain comments off limits? Would saying " cats ass" or "aardvarks ass" better? Do we need to rebrand Monkey Shoulder Scotch? When does it become that we are against monkeys in general? Maybe he should just say "his ass was home, ".
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.
FLBear5630
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.
She was breaking and entering in the middle of a riot! You are normalizing coming through a window like she was walking through a park. This was not 2 people in a hallway and the cop shot her. Very disingenuous to say that Capital Policeman murdered her under the fog of those circumstances.
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.
She was breaking and entering in the middle of a riot! You are normalizing coming through a window like she was walking through a park. This was not 2 people in a hallway and the cop shot her. Very disingenuous to say that Capital Policeman murdered her under the fog of those circumstances.
I didn't say the CAPO officer murdered her. I said she was breaking and entering, which is not normally considered a scenario justifying use of deadly force.

And yes, at the moment she was shot, the ONLY person in the hallway was the CAPO officer. You really need to look at the video. There were SWAT officers outside the door who had a small group of people there under control (i.e. not engaged in hand to hand combat as we saw outside). The group was arguing with the officers, who were barking orders. Babbitt sneaked by the SWAT officers and squeezed thru a slender window that most men could not have fit thru. While she was IN the window, the CAPO officer shot her from the side (i.e. Babbitt likely never saw him) and she fell back into the crowd (i.e. she never actually got THRU the window.)

The controversy is not whether she was breaking the law.
The controversy is whether or not deadly force was reasonable.

Some take your position = "Shoot 'em all, dammit!"
Others insist it was murder.

I am in the middle. It wasn't murder. It wasn't insurrection. Just a very questionable use of deadly force. An internal review cleared him. In most other circumstances, the officer's actions would have at least gone to a grand jury (unarmed victim posing no deadly threat to officer or others). And yes, sadly, race is a factor (not in the shooting itself, but in the controversy). The officer is black; the victim white. Critics of the officer see a double standard when compared to the events of the prior summer (Geo. Floyd scenarios). Personally, I doubt that had anything to do with it. But, again, given circumstances, we should not be surprised to see strong feelings on both sides.

Frank Galvin
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
muddybrazos
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Osodecentx
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Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
Capitol police are supposed to protect the lawmakers & they did. Babbitt was breaking into the Speaker's Lobby, just outside the House Camber.

From Wiki:
One officer guarding the doors told the others "They're ready to roll", and the three officers moved away from the barricaded doors leading to the Speaker's Lobby. No longer impeded by police, one rioter, Zachary Jordan Alam, smashed a glass window beside the doors. On the other side of those doors, many lawmakers and staff were being evacuated by Capitol Police,[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Ashli_Babbitt#cite_note-VideoShows-8][[/url] but some were trapped in the House balcony.
After "he's got a gun" was yelled several times when Lieutenant Michael Byrd aimed his weapon, Babbitt, hoisted by two men began to climb through the shattered window. She was then shot in the left shoulder[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Ashli_Babbitt#cite_note-:1-9][9][/url] by Lieutenant Byrd and fell back among the other protesters. Babbitt had been warned not to proceed through the window: one witness recalled that "A number of police and Secret Service were saying 'Get back! Get down! Get out of the way!'; [Babbitt] didn't heed the call."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Ashli_Babbitt
FLBear5630
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.
She was breaking and entering in the middle of a riot! You are normalizing coming through a window like she was walking through a park. This was not 2 people in a hallway and the cop shot her. Very disingenuous to say that Capital Policeman murdered her under the fog of those circumstances.
I didn't say the CAPO officer murdered her. I said she was breaking and entering, which is not normally considered a scenario justifying use of deadly force.

And yes, at the moment she was shot, the ONLY person in the hallway was the CAPO officer. You really need to look at the video. There were SWAT officers outside the door who had a small group of people there under control (i.e. not engaged in hand to hand combat as we saw outside). The group was arguing with the officers, who were barking orders. Babbitt sneaked by the SWAT officers and squeezed thru a slender window that most men could not have fit thru. While she was IN the window, the CAPO officer shot her from the side (i.e. Babbitt likely never saw him) and she fell back into the crowd (i.e. she never actually got THRU the window.)

The controversy is not whether she was breaking the law.
The controversy is whether or not deadly force was reasonable.

Some take your position = "Shoot 'em all, dammit!"
Others insist it was murder.

I am in the middle. It wasn't murder. It wasn't insurrection. Just a very questionable use of deadly force. An internal review cleared him. In most other circumstances, the officer's actions would have at least gone to a grand jury (unarmed victim posing no deadly threat to officer or others). And yes, sadly, race is a factor (not in the shooting itself, but in the controversy). The officer is black; the victim white. Critics of the officer see a double standard when compared to the events of the prior summer (Geo. Floyd scenarios). Personally, I doubt that had anything to do with it. But, again, given circumstances, we should not be surprised to see strong feelings on both sides.




It was in the middle of breach of the Capital. She was in a mob pushing into the Chamber. They rioters were trying to push through the doors to the Speakers Chamber. Deadly force was definitely a on site decision.
whiterock
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Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.

FLBear5630
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whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)
D. C. Bear
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FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)


That can all be true while the controversy is justified.
Wrecks Quan Dough
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...
J.R.
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FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Mitch Blood Green said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.


Me because my monkey ass was at home.


Is it racist if other individuals use the term 'monkey ass' ?


Is it bad to say that you look like monkeys ass when talking about yourself? Or is self-deprecating? Or are certain comments off limits? Would saying " cats ass" or "aardvarks ass" better? Do we need to rebrand Monkey Shoulder Scotch? When does it become that we are against monkeys in general? Maybe he should just say "his ass was home, ".
Snow Monkey's?
FLBear5630
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D. C. Bear said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)


That can all be true while the controversy is justified.
I agree. There should be a Congressional investigation into the dual use of the Justice System. FACTS, what really happened and what was the outcome. Not this gut-feeling, I read a National Review article... If it was a misuse, charges should be brought. No doubt, no argument.

But, I stand by my comment. It is irrelevant to the legality of individuals and whether they broke the law, including Trump. Because someone wasn't indicted in the past does not give people a pass now.
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)
Multiple points of disconnect going on there.

I'm a Republican, not a Maga-head. I defended Nikki Haley in another thread just this AM from an unfair attack.

Mostly, though, your response doesn't really address the points I made. I noted the specific details of the incident, and showed not that one side was right and the other was wrong, but that both sides had reasonable points and that it was completely understandable that there would be controversy about the shooting. I have not criticized the officer, but I do question the objectivity of determination that the use of deadly force was justified. A good right hook would have ended any threat she posed. Was it REALLY necessary, there and then, to shoot an unarmed woman crawling thru a window? On what planet would reasonable people not wonder if that was the right call?



D. C. Bear
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)
Multiple points of disconnect going on there.

I'm a Republican, not a Maga-head. I defended Nikki Haley in another thread just this AM from an unfair attack.

Mostly, though, your response doesn't really address the points I made. I noted the specific details of the incident, and showed not that one side was right and the other was wrong, but that both sides had reasonable points and that it was completely understandable that there would be controversy about the shooting. I have not criticized the officer, but I do question the objectivity of determination that the use of deadly force was justified. A good right hook would have ended any threat she posed. Was it REALLY necessary, there and then, to shoot an unarmed woman crawling thru a window? On what planet would reasonable people not wonder if that was the right call?






Unfortunately, this one.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.


You MAGA guys keep doing that. Changing the argument from the Babbit or Trump actions and their legality to the 202o rioters didn't get punished (that you know). The two are not connected! The Capitol Policeman didn't say well what did they do in Portland in 2020 during the middle of a Breach of the Capitol by 10,000 people. (Really about 1000, but we will use Trump-speak biggest ever, a multitude! Or for this it was 1 woman in a hall and the Police drew on her!)
Multiple points of disconnect going on there.

I'm a Republican, not a Maga-head. I defended Nikki Haley in another thread just this AM from an unfair attack.

Mostly, though, your response doesn't really address the points I made. I noted the specific details of the incident, and showed not that one side was right and the other was wrong, but that both sides had reasonable points and that it was completely understandable that there would be controversy about the shooting. I have not criticized the officer, but I do question the objectivity of determination that the use of deadly force was justified. A good right hook would have ended any threat she posed. Was it REALLY necessary, there and then, to shoot an unarmed woman crawling thru a window? On what planet would reasonable people not wonder if that was the right call?




Several things here. First, if you are a cop you are going out there to punch one of them?




Second, ALL SHOOTINGS are investigated. He was cleared, correct?? Or, is that not good enough? We don't believe the investigation? All of the three Agencies are not worthy of believing now? That is rational.

District of Columbia | Department of Justice Closes Investigation into the Death of Ashli Babbitt | United States Department of Justice

Cop Who Killed Ashli Babbitt Was Cleared of Criminal Wrongdoing Without Interview | RealClearInvestigations

I wasn't commenting on your Political affiliation. I was talking to the defense of Trump and MAGA that they can do no wrong. Not one thing that involves MAGA or Trump have you said they were wrong. Jim Jordan is the best for the Speaker???? Of the whole GOP that is who you would have picked 2 weeks ago? Seems to be a blind spot, we all have them. Yours seem to be MAGA and polls. : )

I do appreciate your posts they are always thought provoking.

Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.



Amen....great post

It was a bad choice to shoot.

She should not have been engaged in the actions she was...I admit that...and others should admit that he should NOT have shot her dead when he had pepper spray, tasers, and back up

I will defend that interpretation
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
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Mitch Blood Green said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.


You know who else didn't get murdered that day? Me because my monkey ass was at home.
I think dog ass is a much better fit for you, my friend.
"Stand with anyone when he is right; Stand with him while he is right and part with him when he goes wrong." - Abraham Lincoln
FLBear5630
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Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.



Amen....great post

It was a bad choice to shoot.

She should not have been engaged in the actions she was...I admit that...and others should admit that he should NOT have shot her dead when he had pepper spray, tasers, and back up

I will defend that interpretation
Sorry, I respect both of you as posters but I don't see a controversy here.

She was coming through the window after being told to disperse. It was one way in, one way out and members of Congress were there. Have any of you read the Officers account? Sorry, can't second guess the line officer making the decision in the heat of battle, especially watching the video.
muddybrazos
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FLBear5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.



Amen....great post

It was a bad choice to shoot.

She should not have been engaged in the actions she was...I admit that...and others should admit that he should NOT have shot her dead when he had pepper spray, tasers, and back up

I will defend that interpretation
Sorry, I respect both of you as posters but I don't see a controversy here.

She was coming through the window after being told to disperse. It was one way in, one way out and members of Congress were there. Have any of you read the Officers account? Sorry, can't second guess the line officer making the decision in the heat of battle, especially watching the video.
typical bootlicker repsonse that you think it was justified that a 275lb man was somehow afraid for his life of a 130lb woman that he needed to shoot her in the neck rather than just throw her to the ground.
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
muddybrazos said:

FLBear5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Frank Galvin said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Redbrickbear said:


I've always found the Ashli Babbit "murdered" logic a bit absurd. She was no more murdered then if I shot an intruder entering my home.


I agree, do not get the murder part. She was part of the crowd pushing into Congress coming in through a broken window. If she followed the Capitol Police orders, she would be alive.
Fact: Deadly force was used against an unarmed woman climbing thru a broken window that few protesters would have been able to fit thru. She posed no threat of harm to anyone at the moment she was shot.

That is the standard which would be used in a court of law for a shooting anywhere else, i.e. it would not likely have been ruled a justified shooting. Is it reasonable to apply a different one here? Reasonable people can look at the context and see aggravating circumstances. And also not. She was inches away from (possibly touching) a federal officer when she was shot. That officer was not alone (other officers with him) and was not being attacked.

The officer who shot Babbitt clearly made a determination that anyone who penetrated that barrier would be shot. Subsequent investigation effectively ratified that decision. Whether it was justified or not......? He did not HAVE to do it. He had less-than-lethal options. Had he chosen less-than-lethal (a choice made everywhere else), physical restraints, etc...he would have been successful. But was that the "last line of defense?" Had Babbitt penetrated the "safe room?" Answers to these questions are never clearly a yes or no. Always a maybe, probably, apparently, etc.... And none of that that wouldn't be terribly controversial had it not involved use of deadly force.

The controversy is justified.


The officer was aware the Babbitt was part of a mob. He wasn't concerned that Babbitt by herself would breach the perimeter they were trying to establish, he was concerned that she would be the first of thousands to do it.
she was perched in an approx. 24" wide by 36" high sidelight. She was unarmed. She posed no threat to him. He had options. She was not at the head of a mob. The crisis moment at the door had clearly passed, given the cracked glass, barricades at the doorway, the very small number of people at the doorway, and the officer calmly walking in the background.....circumstances do not suggest a life/death scenario for the officer. The officers outside on the capitol steps engaged in hand-to-hand combat were arguably at greater risk.

The video: https://nypost.com/2021/01/07/videos-show-shooting-of-ashli-babbitt-during-capitol-siege/

Not saying officer was a murderer. Circumstances clearly suggest he had determined to shoot anyone who came thru the window. Whether that was a policy, or an on the spot determination is not clear. Internal review cleared him. I can see the reasons why many would think he was justified. I can also see the reasons why many would think he is not.

The controversy is justified.
Particularly when compared to the circumstances of the previous summer.



Amen....great post

It was a bad choice to shoot.

She should not have been engaged in the actions she was...I admit that...and others should admit that he should NOT have shot her dead when he had pepper spray, tasers, and back up

I will defend that interpretation
Sorry, I respect both of you as posters but I don't see a controversy here.

She was coming through the window after being told to disperse. It was one way in, one way out and members of Congress were there. Have any of you read the Officers account? Sorry, can't second guess the line officer making the decision in the heat of battle, especially watching the video.
typical bootlicker repsonse that you think it was justified that a 275lb man was somehow afraid for his life of a 130lb woman that he needed to shoot her in the neck rather than just throw her to the ground.
"bootlicker"? That's something coming from you.

Yeah. Biden recommended that police shoot the runout of the bad guys' hands instead of aiming for center mass. And Israel should let in the "good' Palestinians". What do you think?

I don't think you've ever been on the front line.
 
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