Message from @retiredDep

Discord ID: 465564194373107723


2018-07-08 16:54:06 UTC  

China Threatened By "Vicious Circle Of Panic Selling" From Marketwide Margin Call | Zero Hedge https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-07-07/china-threatened-vicious-circle-panic-selling-marketwide-margin-call

2018-07-08 16:55:16 UTC  
2018-07-08 16:56:16 UTC  
2018-07-08 16:57:07 UTC  

"Freemasonry Secret Knowledge" https://youtu.be/CSPbZPw1AQw

2018-07-08 16:59:46 UTC  
2018-07-08 16:59:47 UTC  

AUSTIN, Texas (KWTX) - State lawmakers, over a series of public hearings this summer, are compiling data about confiscating firearms from Texans identified as having “Red Flag” issues in their backgrounds.

The most recent hearing held June 25 in Austin gathered testimony from both sides on the issue and that information will be added to testimonies collected at several other public hearings through mid-August.

The Texas House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee, chaired by state Rep. Joe Moody, R-78, of El Paso, was tasked by the governor to provide guidance in the state’s efforts to curb school campus violence.

It is today a commonplace refrain uttered by someone after each new mass shooting: “We should have seen this coming,” or “There were red flags.”

The issue under study, should some version become law, would allow authorities to identify a suspect as having red flags in his or her background, like family violence reports or truancy, juvenile or adult criminal history or other issues associated with mental illness, or violent behavior by attaching those red flag warnings to that person’s case history.


Then once identified, police would have broad authority to seize any weapons that suspect might own, even if they were owned lawfully, as a precaution.

Last year when 26 people died in a shooting at a rural church in Sutherland Springs, investigators quickly learned the suspected shooter had escaped from a mental health facility, previously had received a domestic violence conviction and had a record of a stand-off with police: those would have counted as red flags, police said.

Then when a student at Santa Fe High School in Southeast Texas shot and killed 10 students and teachers on that campus, Texas’ second high-profile mass shooting within six months, lawmakers and others began asking if Texas should have its own “Red Flag” rule.

2018-07-08 17:00:06 UTC  

In his School and Firearm Safety Action Plan, released on May 30, Texas Governor Greg Abbott charged House and Senate jurisprudence committees to “study a protective order law to keep guns out of the hands of those mentally unfit to bear arms, but only after legal due process is allowed to ensure Second Amendment rights are not violated.”

Waco attorney Stan Schwieger says without extreme caution in crafting such a statute, there is a conflict, potentially, between the U.S. Constitution’s 2nd Amendment and the state law, which is inferior to the state constitution.


Five states have statutes that allow for the “temporary” confiscation of firearms from a person “by a judge, if they believe individuals pose a threat to themselves or others,” the governor’s charge explained.

Abbott suggested the committee consider “adopting a red flag law allowing law enforcement, a family member, school employee, or a district attorney to file a petition seeking the removal of firearms from a potentially dangerous person only after legal due process is provided”.

As of March 2018, Texas State Rifle Association says, five states have laws that allow guns to be temporarily taken away and in each existing case lawmakers say a proper approach should focus on quickly identifying those who pose a risk without infringing on the rights of lawful gun owners by maintaining the highest standards of due process.

“Red Flag” or “extreme risk” protective orders create a mechanism to separate a potentially dangerous person from firearms for a period of time.

Texas law currently has a system where victims of family violence can seek a protective order that protects both them and the due process rights of those they seek them against.

2018-07-08 17:05:53 UTC  

Ted Malloch

2018-07-08 17:12:51 UTC  

@DeplorableAndProud I hope that the dog’s aggression doesn’t eliminate it from having a good retirement.

2018-07-08 17:13:33 UTC  

@WineMaker Dead woman running.

2018-07-08 17:17:11 UTC  

There have been so many hit pieces on Q lately...Daily Mail has done 2 in the past few weeks. Neither are very nice.

2018-07-08 17:21:23 UTC  

aloha all

2018-07-08 17:22:45 UTC  

American Church Groups are trapped in Haiti and cant get out ...