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This is a leaked zoom call with BLM, AnTiFa and Feds conspiring before the Jan 6th frame up job at the Capital building.

https://youtu.be/xgTeU9aH5eY Download if you can and share the shit out of it.

This is a leaked zoom call with BLM, AnTiFa and Feds conspiring before the Jan 6th frame up job at the Capital building. https://youtu.be/xgTeU9aH5eY Download if you can and share the shit out of it.

(post is archived)

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Sarah Starrett (federalpay.org)

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Maria J. Stephan (en.wikipedia.org) This Bitch works or worked at the DOD AND NATO! What the FUCK? DOX Time!

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Yes, I heard that last week, go to 53:53s into this video and she backs up this claim. https://youtu.be/1bSllXV6H1c I

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Did you watch the video I replied to you with, I'm interested in your thoughts?

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Yep, been working with the videos to put a picture together of the fed on the Zoom call and the Fargo hat guy at the capitol siege. I got it, just need to upload.

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I just posted the picture of two Video snaps. One from the video of the seige in the capitol buildingwhere the "Fargo Hat Guy" is coming out from behind the capitol police and joining the crowd. The other pici is of what I believe is the same federal agent conspiring with members of Antifa and BLM to seige the capitol building prior to Jan 6th. I posted in /politics. You should be able to find it by clicking on new.

Your video didn't include this guy or any of the scenes in which I have been studying at the moment, but its a good video and it does explain a lot.

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Before working with the United States Institute of Peace, Stephan worked at the United States Department of State where she was the lead foreign affairs officer for the Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations,[2] and at NATO headquarters.[1]

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Lisa Fithian (organizingforpower.org)

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Who were the Feds on that call? I missed that part.

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A woman says we as Federal employees lose our status if we strike

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Okay thanks. I thought this might be the FBI....

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Think I recognise a guy in another video, still trying to get links together and finally found this again. LSS, another article, about the siege of Congress. An instigator came from behind cops to invite violence and was possibly responsible for Ashley Babbits death. (Fargo hat guy). I will try to follow up as soon as I can find the other piece.

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Ashley is responsible for knowingly going somewhere she knew she shouldn't

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With the help of an agent provocatuer, she's now dead.

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Patrick Young (pjyoung.info) *UPDATE* Hey there...I just got a "complimentary copy" of the Epoch Times in the mail today. I can not believe how bizarre the timing is...This ASSHOLE Patrick Young, yes the asshole who is part of shutdown dc...ALSO Proudly stated in an article in the E.T. that HE and other members of Shutdown DC were amongst the Fucking terrorists who decided to terrorize Senator Josh Hawley's wife (and newborn baby) because of Hawley's decision to contest the certification of the Electoral votes!!! I don't know who we need to forward this info to, as I do not trust the FBI nor DOJ at this point??? Any ideas????*In the meantime, perhaps we should hit up his website (link above) and send him some digital love?????***

Patrick Young

    May 31, 2019
    10 min read

Send Lawyers, Lockboxes, and Money

Shared social movement infrastructure in popular uprisings

Across the United States and around the world, the past decade has been marked by a series of dramatic episodes of social movement uprisings. Thousands of people have taken to the streets facing down chemical weapons and police violence, camped out for months at a time blocking the expansion fossil fuel infrastructure, and faced felony charges and decades of jail time for their alleged participation in militant direct action.

Images of protestors facing down tear gas, people locked to construction equipment, and burning limousines have appeared on the front pages of newspapers around the country and been plastered across social media. But every mobilization, every blockade, every march has depended on a complex network of movement infrastructure that will likely never make it to the front page of the papers. To make all of these things possible, hundreds of people prepared and served food, organized legal support, set up medical clinics, designed websites, facilitated trainings, organized transportation, secured meeting spaces, maintained databases, and took on dozens of logistical tasks that allowed movements to operate.

Many of the social movements that have emerged in recent years have moved beyond simply critiquing the systems they were struggling against, they also offered new models of how society could be organizing. Throughout these long and challenging mobilizations, thousands of people experimented with modeling and developing the practices of direct democracy, autonomy, and mutual aid that their movements aspired to create.

Much has been written on the manifestations of direct democracy in the political sphere that were on display at the mass assemblies of the Occupy Movement and other plaza mobilizations around the world.[1] Something less explored and certainly less celebrated are the practices of mutual aid and solidarity that have been baked into the economic and social, as well as the political spheres of these new social movements. In the plaza movements and the more recent episodes of contention in Ferguson, Standing Rock and J20 social movement infrastructures emerged to provide the food, medical care, legal support, internal communication, transportation and myriad other logistical needs of the movements. Developing all of these aspects of social movement infrastructure offered participants opportunities to create and practice models of direct democracy and mutual aid in allocating scarce resources, navigating social relationships, and providing the basic human necessities that participants needed to continue to engage in the movements.

While much of this social movement infrastructure emerges organically within distinct social movements or mobilizations, many of the networks, organizations, and institutions with the skills, resources, and experience in providing social movement infrastructure frequently mobilize across seemingly disparate social movements spaces at different times and in different places. From the outside, the episodes of contentious politics that played out in Ferguson, Standing Rock and J20 appear as distinct social movements with little overlap. But interestingly, many of the same organizations and networks providing food, legal support, and medical care participated in each of these uprisings. The people doing this important work each had unique backgrounds and movement histories but over a lifetimes of activism, their paths have continually crossed in the streets.

Shared Social Movement Infrastructure https://www.pjyoung.info/post/send-lawyers-lockboxes-and-money

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yeah this totally proves everything you fucking faggot.

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Don't hold back now, tell me how you really feel