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Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Louisiana Congressman Shamelessly Threatens To Shoot BLM Protesters At Peaceful Event: 'I'd Drop Any 10 Of You'

Louisiana Republican Congressman Clay Higgins lashed out at Facebook after the social media site took down a post of him threatening to kill peaceful, unarmed Black protesters in the state. 

Higgins, the U.S. representative for Louisiana's 3rd congressional district, has a long history of making offensive, racist comments, according to BBC News. But on Tuesday he caused further outrage when he posted a lengthy Facebook message about a protest held by a local Black Lives Matter group.

The Acadiana Advocate reported that the event was peaceful and included a barbecue. Members of the Louisiana Cajun Militia eventually showed up heavily armed and wearing bulletproof vests.

The Black Lives Matter protesters, however, gave the heavily armed white men some food as they watched the peaceful event.

Despite video of the event, in his post, Higgins included an old photo of a Breonna Taylor demonstration in Louisville, Kentucky, from July, implying that he would shoot the protesters if they threatened his city. 

"If this shows up, we'll consider the armed presence a real threat. We being, We, the people of Louisiana, one way. ticket fellas. Have your affairs in order. Me? I wouldn't even spill my beer. I'd drop any 10 of you where you stand. Because some of We, like me..We are SWAT. Nothing personal. We just eliminate the threat. If you show up like this, if we recognize threat," Higgins wrote.

"You won't walk away. That's not a challenge, fellas, its a promise. We don't want to see your worthless ass nor do we want to make your mothers cry. You're the ones threatening. If you show yourselves, aggressively natured and armed in my presence, in my neighborhood, where I work, anywhere close enough to put my family or my fellow citizens in danger. That is where your journey will end. fast. How fast? 1,450 FPS fast," he added.

Facebook confirmed that the post violated its policy on “violence and incitement” and was taken down. 

Higgins confirmed that he didn't take the post down himself in his own Facebook post. 

None of the Black Lives Matter demonstrators at Tuesday's protest were armed, even though Louisiana is an open-carry state. Higgins himself has made an entire career out of being a pro-gun advocate and is well-known for carrying a gun, according to his official government site. 

People online noted the hypocrisy of Higgins' post, considering his stance on guns and his very public dispute with his ex-wife, who said he had abandoned his family and refused to pay child support. 

Black Lives Matter protests have been ongoing since police shot and killed Trayford Pellerin in Lafayette, Louisiana last month. 

The protests even made their way into the Lafayette Parish Council, where dozens of people chanted for justice, according to local news outlet KLFY.

“Say his name. Trayford Pellerin. Say his name. Trayford Pellerin. Say his name,” the protesters said.

Protester Morgan Prejean criticized a callous statement from Lafayette Mayor-President Josh Guillory that said officers did everything they could before killing Pellerin. Video of the incident has sparked outrage nationwide. 


“It should have been de-escalated. You mean to tell me all those cops between one person with a knife couldn’t disarm him? That’s embarrassing,” Prejean said.

Family members and Parish Council District 5 Representative AB Rubin criticized the local police for their actions before the shooting. Pellerin's cousin, Jai Pellerin called for Guillory to step down and said he did not understand how the community could be treated the way they are.

“Maybe I’m missing something because this isn’t what I signed up for. This isn’t what I signed up to protect this country for," Jai Pellerin, a veteran, told the city council meeting. 



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Barr: ‘I don’t think there are 2 justice systems’ for Black and white Americans


Attorney General William Barr on Wednesday rejected the notion that systemic racism exists in the criminal justice system, but acknowledged that “there are some situations where statistics would suggest” people of color are treated differently than white people.

“I think there are stereotypes. I think people operate very frequently according to stereotypes and I think it takes extra precaution on the part of law enforcement to make sure we don't reduce people to stereotypes, we treat them as individuals,” Barr told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.

In the at-times contentious interview, the attorney general defended law enforcement officers against accusations of excessive force, arguing that rather than being motivated by race, an officer may be “scared for his life and is in a situation where a half a second can mean the difference between his life and his death, and he's wrestling with somebody.”

“They sometimes may do things that appear in hindsight to be excessive,” Barr asserted, but he cautioned that “it doesn't necessarily mean that it's racism.”

The attorney general’s comments come amid a spate of high-profile killings by police and shootings of unarmed Black Americans this year that have sparked mass unrest around the country. Fury over the May death of George Floyd at the knee of a Minneapolis police officer and the March killing of Breonna Taylor by Louisville, Ky., officers drove protests around the world, and fueled bipartisan calls for police reform within Congress, though those efforts ultimately fell apart.

A new wave of demonstrations was triggered last week when Kenosha, Wis., police shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, in the back seven times as he leaned into his car with three young children inside.

But as some protests for police reform at times turned violent or destructive, the Trump administration has largely stood behind law enforcement, with President Donald Trump conflating violent demonstrators with peaceful ones, derisively referring to them broadly as “domestic terrorists,” “anarchists” and “thugs” while pledging to take a harder line on such activism to restore “law and order.”

Trump has been considerably more restrained when describing unofficial militias showing up in some cities to face off with protesters. After a violent night of protests in Wisconsin last week saw a 17-year-old police admirer and Trump supporter Kyle Rittenhouse shoot three protesters, killing two, Trump declined to condemn the shootings, which Rittenhouse's attorney has said were in self-defense.

Trump has also not denounced a pro-Trump caravan that clashed with protesters in Portland over the weekend, though he has said: "I’d like to see law enforcement take care of everything."

Trump, too, has rejected the idea that systemic racism exists within law enforcement.

On Wednesday, Barr decried “the demonization of the police and the idea that this is so widespread, an epidemic.”

He contrasted the number of unarmed African Americans shot by a white police officer with the number of Black men killed by other means each year, an argument often advanced by conservatives that has been dismissed by advocates as a red herring that ignores the disproportionate number of Black Americans versus white ones killed by police.

But though Barr asserted that “I don't think there are two justice systems,” for Black and white Americans — an accusation made by Blake's father when pointing to the treatment of his son versus that of Rittenhouse — he acknowledged what he said “appears to be a phenomenon in the country where African-Americans feel that they're treated when they're stopped by police frequently as suspects before they are treated as citizens.”

“I don't think that that necessarily reflects some deep-seated racism in police departments or in most police officers,” he added, wrongly implying that Black police officers are somehow incapable of racially profiling other African Americans.

“I think it takes extra precaution on the part of law enforcement to make sure we don't reduce people to stereotypes, we treat them as individuals,” he said.

Barr cautioned against “throwing the idea of racism around,” contending that while it certainly exists in the United States, it is not “as common as people suggest,” and insisted that there were sufficient safeguards to ensure than racial bias “doesn't really have an effect [on] someone's future.”

As far as police reform goes, while Barr explained that “there's more progress being made and more reform,” he appeared satisfied with where the institution is now, praising reforms made over the past six decades.

“To listen to the American left nowadays, you'd think we've gotten nowhere,” he said.



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U.S. stands with European Union to push for new election in Belarus


The United States will work closely with the EU to raise pressure on embattled Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko and bring about new elections in the country gripped by protests since a disputed vote last month, Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun said Wednesday.

"We are coordinating closely with our transatlantic partners, including reviewing significant new targeted sanctions to hold accountable anybody who is involved in human rights abuses and repression in Belarus," Biegun told reporters in a conference call.

Biegun, who visited Lithuania, Russia, Ukraine and Austria last week to discuss the upheaval in Belarus, noted that the U.S. already had sanctions in place against Lukashenko, the country's long-time strongman ruler, and other top officials. The EU lifted most sanctions against Lukashenko and his close allies in 2016, but is now working to reimpose punitive measures.

"We are working closely with the Europeans as they reimpose their sanctions so that we are marching in lockstep with our European and Canadian partners," Biegun said.

The EU sanctions were lifted in 2016 partly in response to Lukashenko's release of political prisoners including Nikolai Statkevich, a rival who ran against him for president in 2010.

But ahead of this year's election, Lukashenko resorted to the same tactics, suppressing the opposition and arresting several rival candidates including Sergei Tikhanovsky, who is still jailed and whose wife Svetlana Tikhanovskaya ultimately appeared on the ballot in his place.

Lukashenko's claim that he won 80 percent of the vote set off a wave of large protests, which his security forces have tried to squash with mass arrests and at times brutal violence.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a statement this week citing at least 450 documented cases of torture and calling on the Lukashenko government to end "forced disappearances" of demonstrators. At least six detained protesters remain unaccounted for, the U.N. said, although Tikhanovskaya and some other members of the opposition say the number is far higher.

In the conference call Wednesday, Biegun said the U.S. viewed the situation in Belarus as an internal conflict, not a confrontation between the West and Russia. He also demanded that Belarus release Vitaly Shklyarov, a U.S. citizen and political strategist, who had been working in the country.

"I want to emphatically state the Belarusian government needs to release Vitaly Shklyarov now and drop the charges," Biegun said. "He has been falsely accused, falsely charged and he is unjustly detained."

Biegun said it was clear Russia was seeking to exert influence in Belarus in support of Lukashenko but that after visiting Moscow, he believed the Kremlin too was tiring of the erratic Belarusian leader, who has appeared in public carrying a machine gun.

But Biegun said the U.S. would not seek to compete with Moscow for influence in Minsk, where Russian officials have reportedly been in talks about renegotiating huge amounts of debt owed by Belarus to prop up the regime.

"This is not a contest between the United States and Russia for the loyalties of Belarus," he said, adding: "Belarus, in fact, and the Belarusian people, have a long history and a deep inclination toward cooperative relations with the Russian Federation.

"The Russian government may or may not decide to renegotiate or forgive the substantial debt that has been accumulated by the mismanagement of Belarus under the current regime and that's their choice — that's their money and it's their money to give away and it's their money to waste," he said. "But I think in their heart of hearts, the Russian government knows exactly what we do: that this is not going to go one forever — that after 26 years the Belarusian people are clearly across the entire society, from labor unions to factory workers to students to intellectuals to medical workers to average citizens, parents and mothers, fathers, that they are demanding their rights in Belarus under their own constitution as well as under international charters.

"And no amount of debt relief, no amount of policing can overcome the cumulative courage of a population that's had enough," Biegun said. "The ruler of Belarus clearly still holds power but he has lost his people."



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