MAGA threats won't deter us

The Enemies List is probably being drafted up right now as we speak! Might have to build a few camps to hold 'em. But Trump already has the instruction manual. He keeps a copy by his bedside apparently.



You have a very active imagination.



And if your side loses? We know you won't run away (since having a passport is not common in your circles), so The Mega folks will probably just run down to DC to beat some more cops with American flags and fire extinguishers. Or maybe your side will get a few more people like the guy in Charlottesville who was happy to run his car into a crowd of Lefties. That would sure make up for a loss by Trump.
:chuckle: :magagrin:
 

‘Stop Counting Votes, or We’re Going to Murder Your Children’​


When Melissa Kono, the town clerk in Burnside, Wisconsin, began training election workers in 2015, their questions were relatively mundane. They asked about election rules, voter eligibility, and other basic procedures.

The job was gratifying and enjoyable; they helped their neighbors while sipping coffee.

But over the past few years, everything has changed.

She’s added an entire training section dedicated to identifying threats and how to report them. “I never in a million years imagined that that would be part of my curriculum,” she said.

Around the country, election officials have already received death threats and packages filled with white powder. Their dogs have been poisoned, their homes swatted, their family members targeted.

In Texas, one man called for a “a mass shooting of poll workers and election officials”.

“The point is coercion; the point is intimidation. It’s to get you to do or not do something,” Al Schmidt, the secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, said—to get you to “stop counting votes, or we’re going to murder your children, and they name your children,” a threat that Schmidt received in 2020.

“I had one election official who said they called her on her cellphone and said, ‘Looks like your mom made lasagna tonight; she’s wearing that pretty yellow dress that she likes to wear to church,” Tammy Patrick, the chief programs officer at the National Association of Election Officials reported. “It’s terrorism here in America.”

“Since the 2020 election, we have seen an unprecedented spike in threats against the public servants who do administer our elections,” including shootings and a bomb threat, Attorney General Merrick Garland said.

A survey conducted by the Brennan Center for Justice found that 38 percent of election officials reported being harassed, abused, or threatened—up from 30 percent a year earlier.

 
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