https://t.co/eTL8lkD9V8 🚨 NEW ANGLE RELEASED 📷 Another camera captures shocking, Rodney King–style brutality on January 6th — police relentlessly beating a man in front of hundreds of thousands of election integrity protesters. They call it “protecting democracy.” We call it state-sanctioned violence. #January6th #PoliceBrutality #ElectionIntegrity #UnseenFootage
When people ask what happened NYC
How did we forget
I have two words for ya
five days
“We are five days away from fundamentally transforming the United States of America.”
-Barack Hussein Obama
https://t.co/CDwmzHu2vq One thing I've noticed whenever I post January 6 videos is the reaction from people who actually watch them.
Many say they had never seen the footage before.
Many ask why certain incidents were never shown by major media outlets.
Others simply express shock at the violence, chaos, and human suffering visible in the videos.
Whether someone agrees with me or not, I believe the public deserves access to the evidence and the opportunity to examine it for themselves.
History should be based on facts, footage, and firsthand testimony—not selective clips.
That's why I keep posting.
✦✦ @BenKaxton • Tommy Tatum News ✦✦
Real Question:
Has anyone seen these Pepperspray/OC "Super Soakers" (MK-46) used at Leftist riots?
I have never seen them used before or since J6.
Obviously, I haven't seen video/images of every Police response to every riot.
But, it's almost like they only used them on J6ers.
"We were literally attacked by the police and they’ve tried to say the entire time that we went there to overthrow our government and to kill everybody. Let me tell you something. I know this isn’t probably the popular way to say it, but if we were cannibals, we would’ve eaten every policeman there in two bites each and gone home hungry - but you know what, we’re not cannibals. We didn’t go for that. There would’ve been terrible death numbers if that had happened, but that was not our intention. Never was. If we wanted to take the building apart, brick by brick, there were enough people there to do that, but we didn’t. So let me ask you this: if there were not enough law-enforcement and police to control that crowd, which has been widely accepted by— there were not enough police to control the crowd — then who did? the crowd - because that was never our intention. We’re not BLM. we’re not antifa. We’re not paid agitators. We’re not there for having fun or tearin’ stuff up. We’re there because we love America. We love the government. We love the constitution we don’t wanna see it destroyed."
~David Sumrall from BloodyHill
https://t.co/IOXaNsXZE2
https://t.co/8BwBpk4yTa
"I want to play a game
Democrats ...
Can you name the soldier 🇺🇸
— Military Career
Basic overview
• Branch: U.S. Army National Guard
• Commissioned: 2003 (after graduating from Princeton and Army ROTC)
• Rank achieved: Major
• Service periods: roughly 2003–2006, 2010–2014, and 2019–2021
• Deployments: Guantánamo Bay, Iraq, Afghanistan
⸻
Early military service
• After graduating from Princeton University in 2003, was commissioned as a second lieutenant through the Army ROTC program.
• He joined the Minnesota Army National Guard as an infantry officer.
Guantánamo Bay (2004–2005)
• His first deployment was to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where he served about 11 months.
• He led a platoon guarding detainees at the detention facility.
⸻
Iraq War deployment
• later volunteered for deployment to Iraq.
• He served as an infantry platoon leader with the 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, part of the 101st Airborne Division.
• His unit operated in areas such as Baghdad and Samarra during the Iraq War.
Awards from Iraq service include:
• Bronze Star Medal
• Combat Infantryman Badge
⸻
Afghanistan deployment
• later deployed to Afghanistan, where he taught counterinsurgency tactics to Afghan security forces.
⸻
Rank, decorations, and end of service
Highest rank:
• Major in the Army National Guard.
Major awards and decorations include:
• Two Bronze Star Medals
• Joint Commendation Medal
• Two Army Commendation Medals
• Combat Infantryman Badge (CIB)
• Expert Infantryman Badge (EIB)
He left the National Guard in 2021.
⸻
✅ Summary:
served roughly two decades in the Army National Guard, including three overseas deployments. His combat experience was mainly as a junior infantry officer and trainer, and he rose to the field-grade rank of major before leaving the service in 2021.
@CarlHigbie 🇺🇸
Pete Hegseth — Military Career
Basic overview
•Branch: U.S. Army National Guard
•Commissioned: 2003 (after graduating from Princeton and Army ROTC)
•Rank achieved: Major
•Service periods: roughly 2003–2006, 2010–2014, and 2019–2021
•Deployments: Guantánamo Bay, Iraq, Afghanistan
⸻
Early military service
•After graduating from Princeton University in 2003, Hegseth was commissioned as a second lieutenant through the Army ROTC program.
•He joined the Minnesota Army National Guard as an infantry officer.
Guantánamo Bay (2004–2005)
•His first deployment was to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where he served about 11 months.
•He led a platoon guarding detainees at the detention facility.
⸻
Iraq War deployment
•Hegseth later volunteered for deployment to Iraq.
•He served as an infantry platoon leader with the 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, part of the 101st Airborne Division.
•His unit operated in areas such as Baghdad and Samarra during the Iraq War.
Awards from Iraq service include:
•Bronze Star Medal
•Combat Infantryman Badge
⸻
Afghanistan deployment
•Hegseth later deployed to Afghanistan, where he taught counterinsurgency tactics to Afghan security forces.
⸻
Rank, decorations, and end of service
Highest rank:
•Major in the Army National Guard.
Major awards and decorations include:
•Two Bronze Star Medals
•Joint Commendation Medal
•Two Army Commendation Medals
•Combat Infantryman Badge (CIB)
•Expert Infantryman Badge (EIB)
He left the National Guard in 2021.
⸻
✅ Summary:
Pete Hegseth served roughly two decades in the Army National Guard, including three overseas deployments. His combat experience was mainly as a junior infantry officer and trainer, and he rose to the field-grade rank of major before leaving the service in 2021.
@ThePatriotOasis Someone should tell them Fauci is the one who lied stalling out at HIV undetectable just shy of a cure. How does one maintain an undetectable viral load by adhering to big Pharma for life literally follow the money
I love that the January 6 prosecutors are now coming out in public, making political statements and running for office as democrats. This proves what we knew all along.
The January 6 prosecutions were a political weaponization of government against the American people!
@DavidJo70430257 J Sixer, I spoke with last night, said he had been advised by his attorney to turn that money down anyway, because it will interfere with their civil cases