Message from @blueorbit

Discord ID: 791112962151809024


2020-12-18 04:03:12 UTC  

Yes, 3 people 2 fatally, one lost his hand, right?

2020-12-18 04:03:22 UTC  

ahh.... i see

2020-12-18 04:13:48 UTC  

Yes

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/771200849351147581/789344644152295444/image0.jpg

2020-12-18 04:33:12 UTC  

it was Kenosha

2020-12-18 04:47:32 UTC  

@Christian0214 He lost part of his bicep.

2020-12-18 04:49:38 UTC  

@Christian0214 he is out on bond.

2020-12-18 04:50:01 UTC  

It's about how Kyle is innocent due to self-defense.

2020-12-18 04:50:11 UTC  

And then we bicker until Kyle finally gets his charges dismissed.

2020-12-18 04:51:26 UTC  

@eclair088. Good someone that agrees.i have seen all of the videos and he would have been killed if he had not shot

2020-12-18 04:53:34 UTC  

The dude went with a med-kit and a rifle. But he was more concerned about using his med-kit whereas his rifle was just signalling "please don't" and someone did.

2020-12-18 04:57:26 UTC  

@eclair088 he was also clean outside tagged walls earlier.

2020-12-18 05:03:31 UTC  

Yup

2020-12-18 05:04:00 UTC  

However, the reason why Rob does Watching the Watchers is cuz, well, the government doesn't care if a person was right. They care if they were white.

2020-12-18 05:05:24 UTC  

@eclair088#1636 yes I know. But I am really hoping this kid gets off

2020-12-18 06:03:36 UTC  

Same here, mate.

2020-12-18 16:49:00 UTC  

It's all part of the false narrative to sway public opinion and get the 2nd amendment abolished. This is classic propaganda and manipulation tactics.

2020-12-18 17:22:10 UTC  

2021 will be wild

2020-12-18 17:24:32 UTC  

I'm ready! 😄

2020-12-23 00:55:43 UTC  

Hey is it true there dercertifying Georgia results for Biden

2020-12-23 01:19:33 UTC  

I think the Georgia Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on this (organized Nov 13th, I believe?) Is rumored to have a report recommending decertifying Georgia results, but it’s hard to find good info. I’m trying to figure out if this is actually Senator Ligons website, but the alleged report is here: http://www.senatorligon.com/THE_FINAL%20REPORT.PDF

2020-12-23 01:20:28 UTC  

Date of that report is Dec 17th thought

2020-12-23 01:24:59 UTC  

@blueorbit is Georgia state involved in the Rittenhouse case?

2020-12-23 01:29:11 UTC  

Oh I have no idea I was just responding.

2020-12-23 04:58:07 UTC  

saying prayers for the kid. hope he walks. He should have been acquitted by now.

2020-12-26 06:30:09 UTC  

The Rittenhouse case is from Kenosha Wisconsin, Kyle is a 17 year old from Antioch ILL who went to Kenosha to HELP those being effected by the riots.

2020-12-27 13:56:22 UTC  

Next court date is January 3rd, I think

2020-12-27 13:56:42 UTC  

Not sure how many pretrial hearings there are - I look forward to seeing the coverage once the trial begins.

2020-12-27 15:02:17 UTC  

I have problems understanding the object of a series of pretrial hearings. What are to be decided in these?

2020-12-27 15:02:47 UTC  

I understand the need for one....or two to suppliment the written process of deposition.

2020-12-27 19:37:02 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/771200849351147581/792838474306682940/unknown.png

2020-12-28 15:16:07 UTC  

oh

2020-12-28 15:16:11 UTC  

weird

2020-12-28 15:16:17 UTC  

i thought it was exactly one month our from the last one

2020-12-29 12:42:36 UTC  

the president can just pardon him right

2020-12-29 12:42:44 UTC  

or if he cant get the state gov to do it

2020-12-29 12:42:48 UTC  

as hes a republican

2020-12-29 17:12:04 UTC  

can't pardon someone who hasn't been convicted

2020-12-29 17:23:06 UTC  

"Show me the man, and I’ll show you the crime.”

- Lavrentiy Beria, head of Joseph Stalin’s secret police. @Neph (Nec) / Krystaps (War)#6654

2020-12-29 18:36:55 UTC  

This is not true. The crime only requires to have taken place.

2020-12-29 18:40:48 UTC  

```While pardons are typically given to people who have been prosecuted, they can cover conduct that has not resulted in legal proceedings.

A pardon cannot apply to conduct that has not yet occurred.

The U.S. Supreme Court clarified this in a 1866 case, saying the pardon power “extends to every offense known to the law, and may be exercised at any time after its commission, either before legal proceedings are taken or during their pendency, or after conviction and judgment.”

Most pardons are issued to people who have been prosecuted and sentenced. But in 1977, President Jimmy Carter pardoned hundreds of thousands of “draft dodgers” who avoided a government-imposed obligation to serve in the Vietnam War.```