Trump Incitement Timeline Fully Debunked

‘From CNN via DCPatriot:

“Evidence uncovered so far, including weapons and tactics seen on surveillance video, suggests a level of planning that has led investigators to believe the attack on the US Capitol was not just a protest that spiraled out of control, a federal law enforcement official says.

Among the evidence the FBI is examining are indications that some participants at the Trump rally at the Ellipse, outside the White House, left the event early, perhaps to retrieve items to be used in the assault on the Capitol.”
This reference to the crowd at the Ellipse is interesting because it appears that it was pioneer alternative news provider Alex Jones who organized the crowd at the Ellipse.
The observation that the movement to the Capitol came from the crowd at the Ellipse is seconded in this piece at USA Today:
Many of the rioters came directly from President Donald Trump’s “Save America Rally” that began hours earlier on the Ellipse, a park near the White House. Trump spoke to them for more than an hour, insisting that the election had been stolen.
USA Today’s timeline has the rally at the Ellipse starting around 6 am with some supporters arriving the previous night. It has the Save America Rally beginning at 11 am with speeches by Eric Trump and Don Jr. and Rudy Guiliani, followed by Trump at around 11.50 am.
The speech goes on for about an hour and during the time Trump urges supporters to walk down with him to the Capitol and tell Congress to do the right thing.
USA Today claims the protestors at the rally started the walk at the end of the speech at around 1 pm.
But Raheem Kassam has debunked this “Trump incitement” time-line. The speech was not easy to hear, was mostly a laundry list of election fraud with nothing new in it, and began late, so people wandered off before it ended toward the Capitol.
Kassam points out that the first protestors arrived at around 12.40 pm at the Capitol, a half hour before Trump ended his speech at 1.11 pm and over 76 minutes before any supporter could have made the 45 minute walk from the Ellipse to the Capitol following the speech. The outer perimeter of the Capitol had been breached and police chief Sund was calling for the National Guard before the President had even finished his speech. In fact, to do what investigators found them to have done, those who breached the Capitol would have had to have left the Ellipse before Trump began speaking.
The SGT Report published an eye witness account of the Ellipse rally and the walk to the Capitol, which contradicts the mainstream reports on several points.
Apparently the rally at the Ellipse was to run from 9 to 11, followed by another gathering at the North lawn of the Capitol building at 1.  This was announced at the website wildprotest.com which now brings up a 404 error sign.
Other participants have also mentioned the confusion arising from two planned events and the first one running an hour late.
The SGT Report account mentions young men with scary masks but Revolutionary symbols on the backs of their clothes boarding trains running into DC. It also mentions the unusual smell of pot at the Ellipse, but, other than that, nothing unusual about the crowd of mostly white but some Asian and a few black supporters.
He does observe that the earliest people to get to the Capitol were on average younger than the group at the Ellipse and they were the ones scaling the walls and pushing through the metal barriers. He saw smoke, smelled tear gas and heard ceremonial cannon fire but he saw no violence from the protestors and knew nothing about the entry into the Capitol until he heard it from someone else. Then he saw what he thought was an Antifa infiltrator breaking glass to enter the building. Later he heard that a woman had been killed.
As mentioned earlier, Alex Jones paid half a million to book the Ellipse and he said he was asked by Trump to lead the march. The secret service was supposed to call him out earlier to do that but he found that people had already gone on ahead.
“Jones also said he paid close to $500,000 to book the Ellipse, the park where Trump’s supporters initially gathered, and other areas near the Capitol. He said 80% of the money came from an unnamed donor.”
The second interesting point is that investigators are using a counter-terrorism strategy of picking up people who might be of concern in the future on very minimal charges. The targets mentioned in the piece are both Proud Boys leaders who were taken in on fairly innocuous infractions, such as destroying a BLM banner and making ominous online postings. Proud Boys is supposedly a far- right outfit that has picked up a reputation for standing up to BLM and Antifa, which, of course, means that in the mainstream narrative they are violent murderous fascists. I say supposedly because several savvy observers think PB are agents provocateurs themselves.
The final point made in the piece is that investigators are looking for evidence of any kind of command and control behind the protestors, which suggests that they don’t think that the more violent aspects of the rally were set off spontaneously by what Trump said in his speech, which is the mainstream narrative. They think there was a coordinated plan in motion, well before Trump even got to the protest.

Credible Tax Protesting

For a tax-protest to be credible, the protester has to show evidence of good-faith.

Here are some points to consider:

  • It’s futile to argue the constitutionality of laws that the courts themselves have repeatedly ruled are constitutional. The enforceable law is whatever the courts say it is. The law of God, natural law, morality, your personal opinions, your rabid convictions won’t count when it comes to enforcement. Sorry.
  • There is a legitimate part of government – admittedly a small one – which goes toward services the citizenry receive.  A good-faith tax protest would pay up that amount.
  • A good-faith tax protest would not involve teaching tax-evasion methods (there’s a big difference between evading and avoiding taxes) to uninformed people that lands them in jail.
  • A good-faith tax protester would not receive any services from the government, or would pay for those he’s obliged to receive from need. He might even overpay to show good faith. He might put the some of the money he owed (say, money that would have gone to war or to the bail-out) to some civic use – not because he is obliged to, but to show that his unwillingness to pay taxes doesn’t stem from venality.  He might place it in a family foundation that would benefit his own family but at the same time be of use to the community. The purpose of his act is to change enough minds to change the law. Establishing his credibility is part of that.
  • A good-faith tax protest would be conducted from start to finish publicly because its purpose is public – to protest the tax. A protest is a public act.

If you want to engage in counter-economics, then you should know its activities are criminal and will be so regarded. Don’t expect sympathy from the rest of the public which does pay its taxes.

Notice that the media has made a distinction between the tax-resistance of the Vietnam war era and contemporary tax resisters – emphasizing the “white supremecist” elements and scams in the latter (and doubtless there are many).

Expect most people to believe (and, unfortunately, in some cases they will be right about it) that you are just another free-loader on the system.

Check out this factsheet to see how the government views tax protesters like Irwin Schiff.

And here’s a sympathetic view of Irwin Schiff from Libertarian Republican.

My view? I don’t know Schiff’s case in detail but I’m not persuaded by his methods, though sympathetic to his aims.

My suggestion, if you really don’t want to be subject to Uncle Sam, leave the country. Drop citizenship.

A large mass of people renouncing US citizenship is the smartest, least problematic way to defund the US government.