Tag Archives: Antifa

A Spark in the Southwest

Channeling Buggs Bunny, at least one Antifa Blackshirt is probably now thinking, “Maybe we shouldn’t have taken that left turn in Albuquerque.”

Communist agitators and their Millennial pawns decided the time was right for them to pull down some statues of famous Spaniards. For whatever reason, members of “the New Mexico Civil Guard” also showed up.

In the video above, you can see a man in a blue shirt being assaulted by members of the mob. He retreats, but is pursued, caught, and attacked by multiple assailants. One of them bashes him with a skateboard just before the man produces a pistol and drops that attacker with several shots.

In the YouTube video (which has already been suppressed by their communist gatekeepers–big surprise), you could see the very end of the confrontation, then several minutes of the aftermath.  Unfortunately for the Thought Police, I archived part of that video, which is below:

Here are some observations to think about (some of which is based on what I saw in the longer video before it was censored):

  • As the man was trying to leave the statue-slaying orgy, the Antifa Blackshirts were bleating, “Get his license plate!” This tells you that even though they were the ones committing the crime, that they knew the corrupt officials in New Mexico’s government were on board with their agenda.  Out of one side of their mouth, they  want to abolish the police. Out the other side of their mouth, they expect the police to help dox their political targets.
  • There were apparently some NM Civil Guard members on site, but  it looks like they were all acting individually instead of as a team. The man in blue was separated from his allies with nobody to watch his back.  Not the smartest tactical decision.
  • Had the man not shot one of the attackers, the Blackshirts would have continued to dogpile on him. While he wrestled with two of them, the third piled on. This would have continued until the man was overwhelmed.
  • This orgy had gone on for quite a while and the police were nowhere to be seen. Had the mob successfully beaten the man to death, cops might not have arrived until hours after the fact. Only when Antifa’s mission was thwarted did the cops show, geared up like occupational troops. They arrested Antifa’s would-be victim.
  • A still photo of the action reveals that one of the communists was attacking the man with a knife.

  • The climax was a flurry of instinctive action. The communist who used the skateboard to assault the man saw the pistol and turned to flee, but the man’s trigger finger was already squeezing.
  • One of the “peaceful protesters” told police, “He shot him in the back!” This makes it sound like the man defending himself just gunned down some random person for no reason. None of the New Mexico Civil Guard on scene corrected him that I heard, or made any statements to the police.
  • Here’s what the Marxist governess of New Mexico said about the incident: “I am horrified and disgusted beyond words by the reports of violence at a protest Monday night in Albuquerque. The heavily armed individuals who flaunted themselves at the protest, calling themselves a “civil guard,” were there for one reason: To menace protesters, to present an unsanctioned show of unregulated force. To menace the people of New Mexico with weaponry – with an implicit threat of violence – is on its face unacceptable; that violence did indeed occur is unspeakable.” Is there any doubt whose side she is on and from what direction she will be exerting pressure on her lapdogs in the courts?
  • Make no mistake: had the mob beaten that man to death, she would not be “horrified and disgusted” by the violence. She would probably have not even mentioned it.
  • Self defense = “unregulated force.” This is not “liberal bias” or “ignorance.” This is her Leninist conditioning: Whatever a fellow traveler does is justified; whatever a counter-revolutionary does is an atrocity.
  • It is “unacceptable” that victims of violent gangs be allowed to defend themselves.
  • “To menace the people of New Mexico with weaponry.” There is more than one message embedded in this wording:
  1. The would-be victim was oppressing (“menacing”) the violent lynch mob.
  2. The “people of New Mexico” are all in agreement with her and the rioters. If you disagree or have a different ideology, you are not a person or a New Mexican and therefore should be chased down and beaten by a mob.
  3.  “Weaponry” is what thwarted Antifa’s mission; and it could thwart future communist objectives–therefore it “menaces people.” This is in line with Joy Behar’s televised ignorance that armed American citizens are “terrorists.” Like everything else, this will be promoted as yet another excuse to disarm law-abiding Americans.

This guy is probably going to be railroaded by the blue state’s Kangaroo Court. And we know he won’t get justice from the US Supreme Court, don’t we?

Here’s part of a comment I read on another site (in response to “conservatives’ blind faith in police, and armed peaceful protests, as in Virginia months ago). He sums up my own thoughts fairly well:

 “The security forces seem more enthusiastic about confronting the armed Right with force when the opportunity arrives (militarized cops detained armed counter protesters just yesterday in New Mexico after a shooting), and are completely intimidated in the face of Leftist violence to the point that they will allow arson, looting and the destruction of their own police stations. It is obvious that the security forces understand that the politicians are protecting left wing violence while at the same time expecting them to deal harshly with any Right wing demonstrations even if they are non violent. Given this, the security forces are nothing but a hindrance to our legitimate self defense , and despite apparently being arrayed against the Left, they are in effect the enemy. I believe that they will allow any level of violence against us that the Left is willing to take and that they will only intervene when the Right starts shooting back in self defense. I expect that at some point the Right will just shrug and put both BLM/Antifa and the Secfor in the same category once shots are fired. It just makes no sense to defend yourself from a homicidal mob and then surrender yourself to a justice system that will hand you over to that same mob anyway. I suppose that means that the best we can hope for is that the current enemy success in eroding the power of the Police State will eventually erode that same system’s ability to to suppress our self defense.”

DOD Openly Promoting Troops Engaging in ‘Black Pride’ Activism while in Uniform

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON JUNE 10 AT THE LOFTUS PARTY.

American law bans troops from engaging in political activism while in uniform. But that hasn’t stopped the Department of Defense from openly promoting troops who are advocating for “black pride” while in uniform. A June 9 press release from the 113th Wing of the Washington, D.C. Air National Guard praised Spc. Khaled Abdelghany for doing so.

“D.C. National Guardsman goes viral, uses his platform to enact change” is the headline on the press release. Here are some excerpts from the PR, starting with the opening paragraph.

A video of a D.C. National Guardsman went viral online when he was seen on video chanting “I’m black and I’m proud,” while supporting the civil unrest mission in Washington, D.C.

A few paragraphs later:

Armed with only a shield and protective gear, and with orders to hold the line, he stood face to face with his community members during a painful moment in our nation’s history. He stood there with his shield low and ready, so that protesters could speak to him and express their pain.

Abdelghany interacted with the protesters and let them know about the role of the D.C. National Guard, and that the Guard was there to keep the protesters safe, so they could peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights.

“As a black African American member of the community, and also as a black African American member of the military, D.C. Guard, it has been like hard, heavy, especially with what’s been going on with George Floyd’s death on camera,” said Abdelghany. “It’s been hard for all of us. It’s not just me, there’s a lot of other of my peers that feel heavy, feel hurt, feel aching pain and they also want change. It’s just really hard to find a way to kind of deal with both given the fact that you’ve signed a contract with the military.”

In times of conflict, he reminds himself to “follow what you believe in, follow your heart, and just try to do the right thing as much as possible.”

During one of his shifts, he was captured on video chanting along with protesters, “I’m black and I’m proud,” which was soon shared online and, at the time of publishing, had received more than 15 million views on Twitter.

“I felt that my heart was speaking out emotionally and it really just happened that way,” said Abdelghany about his reaction to seeing the video online. “It was in the moment, and I saw truth in everybody that was standing out there. And I understood exactly what they were going through.”

Not only is the DOD openly promoting servicemen advocating for “black pride” while in uniform, but it is celebrating them connecting with people in foreign nations and building race-based alliances in the process of this political activism:

During the civil unrest mission, Abdelghany had many interactions with protesters, all of them positive. After the video went viral, he has connected online with people from D.C., as well as Germany, Dubai, Australia and Egypt.

One protester who locked eyes with him on the protest line and gave Abdelghany a bottle of water. The protester later found him on Facebook, where they had a back-and-forth discussion on ways they can come together to help the black community in D.C.

They connected over their love of basketball and are in the beginning stages to plan a community event, once COVID-19 regulations allow them to safely do so, that features a basketball game, black vendors and getting black youth groups involved.

With his newfound platform, he wants to use his voice for positive change. “It’s overwhelming but we have to find strength. We have to find unity together to bring change. Immediate change,” said Abdelghany.

“I’m in this uniform, on this side, to make a real change for my black community. I hold myself responsible to do the right thing by protecting the people of D.C., along with securing my part for real progress within the city,” he said. “For my black and brown people, know that I love you and that I am very humbled and honored for the love and support that you have given me and continue to give me. I’m black and I’m proud. Peace and love. Black lives matter.”

Read the entire press release at DVIDS.

Top Photo: Spc. Khaled Abdelghany, 273rd Military Police Company, District of Columbia National Guard, stands in front of the D.C. Armory in Washington, D.C June 9, 2020. Photo by Staff Sgt. Anthony Small, 113th Wing D.C. Air National Guard.

Note: The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.