Laugh at lying leftists with Legion

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This is what "a terrorist attack on Congress" looks like:



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But leftists did it, so DEMOCRATS don't want you to know about it.



The Senate had planned to work late into the evening of Monday, November 7, 1983. Deliberations proceeded more smoothly than expected, however, so the body adjourned at 7:02 p.m. A crowded reception, held near the Senate Chamber, broke up two hours later. Consequently, at 10:58 p.m., when a thunderous explosion tore through the second floor of the Capitol’s north wing, the adjacent halls were virtually deserted. Many lives had been spared.

Minutes before the blast, a caller claiming to represent the “Armed Resistance Unit” had warned the Capitol switchboard that a bomb had been placed near the chamber in retaliation for recent U.S. military involvement in Grenada and Lebanon.

The force of the device, hidden under a bench at the eastern end of the corridor outside the chamber, blew off the door to the office of Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd. The blast also punched a potentially lethal hole in a wall partition sending a shower of pulverized brick, plaster, and glass into the Republican cloakroom. Although the explosion caused no structural damage to the Capitol, it shattered mirrors, chandeliers, and furniture. Officials calculated damages of $250,000.

A stately portrait of Daniel Webster, located across from the concealed bomb, received the explosion’s full force. The blast tore away Webster’s face and left it scattered across the Minton tiles in one-inch canvas shards. Quick thinking Senate curators rescued the fragments from debris-filled trash bins. Over the coming months, a capable conservator painstakingly restored the painting to a credible, if somewhat diminished, version of the original.

Following a five-year investigation, federal agents arrested six members of the so-called Resistance Conspiracy in May 1988 and charged them with bombings of the Capitol, Ft. McNair, and the Washington Navy Yard. In 1990, a federal judge sentenced Marilyn Buck, Laura Whitehorn, and Linda Evans to lengthy prison terms for conspiracy and malicious destruction of government property. The court dropped charges against three co-defendants, already serving extended prison sentences for related crimes.

The 1983 bombing marked the beginning of tightened security measures throughout the Capitol. The area outside the Senate Chamber, previously open to the public, was permanently closed. Congressional officials instituted a system of staff identification cards and added metal detectors to building entrances to supplement those placed at chamber gallery doors following a 1971 Capitol bombing.




https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/bomb_explodes_in_capitol.htm

Now, next time a leftist tells the forum that "the Capitol has not been attacked since the War of 1812", laugh at their lies.

Bonus fun fact: Bowing to a request from DEMOCRAT Jerry Nadler (yes, that Jerry Nadler) impeached perjurer B.J. Clinton* pardoned the convicted terrorist perpetrator.

That's how sincere DEMOCRATS are about "attacks on our democracy".

:rofl2:
 
lol bbbbbut "whataboutism", and "that doesnt count" "so long ago". blah blah blah. these people are clowns.

The point - which DEMOCRATS seem unable to grasp - is that they have no standing to complain that attacks on the Capitol are "unprecedented".

They also have no grounds to complain, since DEMOCRAT politicians PARDONED leftist terrorists who did far more damage.

Guess what?

Some leftist Puerto Rican revolutionaries smuggled guns into the US Capitol and shot up the House of Representatives.

What did DEMOCRAT Jimmy Carter do?

Why, he COMMUTED their sentences.
 
This is what "a terrorist attack on Congress" looks like:



iu

iu




But leftists did it, so DEMOCRATS don't want you to know about it.



The Senate had planned to work late into the evening of Monday, November 7, 1983. Deliberations proceeded more smoothly than expected, however, so the body adjourned at 7:02 p.m. A crowded reception, held near the Senate Chamber, broke up two hours later. Consequently, at 10:58 p.m., when a thunderous explosion tore through the second floor of the Capitol’s north wing, the adjacent halls were virtually deserted. Many lives had been spared.

Minutes before the blast, a caller claiming to represent the “Armed Resistance Unit” had warned the Capitol switchboard that a bomb had been placed near the chamber in retaliation for recent U.S. military involvement in Grenada and Lebanon.

The force of the device, hidden under a bench at the eastern end of the corridor outside the chamber, blew off the door to the office of Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd. The blast also punched a potentially lethal hole in a wall partition sending a shower of pulverized brick, plaster, and glass into the Republican cloakroom. Although the explosion caused no structural damage to the Capitol, it shattered mirrors, chandeliers, and furniture. Officials calculated damages of $250,000.

A stately portrait of Daniel Webster, located across from the concealed bomb, received the explosion’s full force. The blast tore away Webster’s face and left it scattered across the Minton tiles in one-inch canvas shards. Quick thinking Senate curators rescued the fragments from debris-filled trash bins. Over the coming months, a capable conservator painstakingly restored the painting to a credible, if somewhat diminished, version of the original.

Following a five-year investigation, federal agents arrested six members of the so-called Resistance Conspiracy in May 1988 and charged them with bombings of the Capitol, Ft. McNair, and the Washington Navy Yard. In 1990, a federal judge sentenced Marilyn Buck, Laura Whitehorn, and Linda Evans to lengthy prison terms for conspiracy and malicious destruction of government property. The court dropped charges against three co-defendants, already serving extended prison sentences for related crimes.

The 1983 bombing marked the beginning of tightened security measures throughout the Capitol. The area outside the Senate Chamber, previously open to the public, was permanently closed. Congressional officials instituted a system of staff identification cards and added metal detectors to building entrances to supplement those placed at chamber gallery doors following a 1971 Capitol bombing.




https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/bomb_explodes_in_capitol.htm

Now, next time a leftist tells the forum that "the Capitol has not been attacked since the War of 1812", laugh at their lies.

Bonus fun fact: Bowing to a request from DEMOCRAT Jerry Nadler (yes, that Jerry Nadler) impeached perjurer B.J. Clinton* pardoned the convicted terrorist perpetrator.

That's how sincere DEMOCRATS are about "attacks on our democracy".

:rofl2:

great post do you mind if I use it in some reply's
 
great post do you mind if I use it in some reply's

Of course not.

Add this if you wish:

One of the most famous incidents of congressional violence is the caning of Charles Sumner. In 1856, pro-slavery DEMOCRAT Representative Preston Brooks beat anti-slavery Republican Senator Charles Sumner nearly unconscious with a cane on the Senate floor.

The caning of Sumner was not an isolated incident. Historian Joanne B. Freeman identified more than 70 violent occurrences between congressmen while researching her book, The Field of Blood: Violence in Congress and the Road to the Civil War.

In 1858, a fistfight between about 30 congressmen broke out in the House of Representatives at 2:00 a.m. when a DEMOCRAT grabbed a Republican by the throat.

In 1860, DEMOCRAT congressmen threatened a GOP congressman with pistols and canes while he spoke against slavery on the House floor.

When Republican Abraham Lincoln won the presidency in 1860, DEMOCRAT-dominated states responded by seceding and waging a bloody insurrection against war the United States of America.

On July 2, 1915, a former professor at Harvard, Erich Muenter, planted a package containing three sticks of dynamite in the Capitol near the Senate Reception room. The explosive detonated around midnight and during a time when the Senate had been on recess. An on-duty Capitol Police officer was nearly knocked out of his chair during the blast, but fortunately no one was injured. The man later wrote a letter to a Washington, D.C. newspaper saying he had planted the explosives to protest U.S. wartime aid to Britain and said he hoped the detonation would "make enough noise to be heard above the voices that clamor for war.” He then traveled to the home of J.P. Morgan in Long Island, New York and shot the financier. Morgan’s wounds proved superficial and he survived. Muenter was soon captured and detained in jail where, several days later, he committed suicide.

Leftists shot up the House of Representatives in 1954, injuring five congressmen. Peanuts Carter commuted their sentences in 1978.

On March 1, 1971, a bomb exploded in the Capitol building. While the explosion did not injure anyone, it caused some $300,000 in damage. The leftist Weather Underground claimed to be behind the bombing and said it was in protest of the ongoing U.S.-supported bombing of Laos.

Leftists detonated a bomb in the Capitol in an attempt to murder GOP Senators in 1983. A group calling itself the Armed Resistance Unit claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was in retaliation for President Reagan's military actions in Grenada and Lebanon. Seven people were eventually arrested in connection with the attack.

Impeached perjurer B.J. Clinton* gave one of them a pardon on his last day of infesting the Oral Orifice. Now she's a fundraiser for BLM.


https://www.history.com/news/us-capitol-building-violence-fires
 
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