Published on Aug 6, 2019
Mob threatens Mitch McConnell outside his home as Joaquin Castro lands in hot water for targeting Trump donors on Twitter.
Mob threatens Mitch McConnell outside his home as Joaquin Castro lands in hot water for targeting Trump donors on Twitter.

By Adan Salazar
In a widely condemned tweet, Castro highlighted the names of several San Antonio area employers and retirees who evidently made maximum donations to President Trump in 2019.

“Their contributions are fueling a campaign of hate that labels Hispanic immigrants as ‘invaders,’” said Castro, who’s running the 2020 Democrat presidential campaign of his brother, Julian.
A representative for the Trump campaign responded that Castro should delete the tweet and offer an apology.
“How low have Dems sunk?” asked Director of Communications Tim Murtaugh. “Naming private citizens & their employers, targeting them for political views and exercising 1st Amendment rights.”
“Should delete & apologize. Castro campaign should disavow.”

Other Trump supporters, and even leftist journalists, also expressed outrage at Castro’s escalation, with many accusing him of inciting violence against the people he named.
“Democrat leaders hate @realDonaldTrump’s supporters so much they’re now doxxing them,” said GOP chair Ronna McDaniel. “Imagine the media outrage if Republicans did this.”

“This dangerous intimidation of @RealDonaldTrump supporters is another reason to allow political contributions to be kept confidential,” expressed Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton.

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) also weighed in saying Castro was wrong to target people “for their political views. Period.”
“This isn’t a game,” said Scalise. “It’s dangerous, and lives are at stake. I know this firsthand.”
HuffPo contributor Yashar Ali also criticized Castro for setting a “terrible and dangerous precedent.”

“In the wake of a horrific mass shooting, a member of Congress named the retirees in San Antonio who gave maximum political contributions to Trump,” said USA Today editor David Mastio, adding, “This seems like a dangerous escalation to me.”

Editor Steve Krakauer pointed out Castro was targeting San Antonio’s largest employers, as well as contributors to charity and an Asian American female pastor.

Castro has thus far refused to remove the tweet as writing, despite the backlash.

By Waldo Crane
Today in Patchogue, a city in New York, fliers were found plastered across signage declaring support for “Death Camps for Trump Supporters Now!!!”
A local theatre company captured the images:



Patch.com reports:
PATCHOGUE, NY — Multiple fliers have been posted on street posts and parking meters in Patchogue reading “Death Camps For Trump Supporters Now!!!”
Pictures taken over the weekend and obtained by Patch showed two fliers hanging across the street from Stanley’s Bedding Furniture on East Main Street, between Maple Avenue and North Ocean Avenue. Two more were also posted on a street sign and electrical box across the street from the nearby Family Dollar store.
The signs include a skeletal figure wearing a black jacket, white collared shirt and red tie. The words appear in red overlaying the photo.
This vile and violent message in just another in the long threats and actual violence from the left.
On his Twitter account, Dayton mass shooter Connor Betts praised the actions of a man named Willem Van Spronsen who attempted to firebomb an ICE facility while carrying an AR-15.
On Betts’ purported account, in which he identifies as “he/him / anime fan / metalhead / leftist / i’m going to hell and i’m not coming back“, he also described ICE detention facilities like the one Spronsen attacked as “concentration camps.”
Spronsen ultimately didn’t injure anyone in his martyr-style attack on the Tacoma, Washington immigration detention facility. He was shot by police after deploying a crude incendiary device against the building.
Betts, however, has proved far more lethal, carrying out a mass shooting Saturday night in which ten have died thus far. Betts, who was killed by law enforcement during the rampage, even killed his own sister.

By Jamie White
“Strzok is in the (HQ) building all the time,” one FBI insider told True Pundit on Monday. “He is taking meetings or part of meetings.”
Strzok, who said he’d “stop” Trump from getting elected during the FBI’s phony Russia investigation, reportedly has not been stripped of his security clearance after getting fired in 2018 for his anti-Trump text messages.
“He (Strzok) is getting in with a visitor’s badge and is involved in meetings,” one FBI insider said. “Maybe they are all trying to get their story straight before things go public.”
The insider is likely referring to the much-anticipated declassification of the FISA warrants used to spy on the Trump campaign and associates in 2016 ahead of the presidential election.
Coincidentally, Strzok is also suing the FBI and Department of Justice for “unlawfully terminating” him, demanding he be “reinstated” to his post at the bureau and awarded back pay.
“It’s indisputable that his termination was a result of Trump’s unrelenting retaliatory campaign of false information, attacks and direct appeals to top officials,” Aitan Goelman, Strzok’s lawyer, said in a statement on Tuesday.
“Today, Pete Strzok is fighting back, and sending a message that the Administration’s purposeful disregard for constitutional rights must not be tolerated.”
Additionally, Strzok even claimed his discussions with paramour Lisa Page to overturn the election of a duly-elected president constituted “protected political speech” and should not have been made public.
“Strzok asserted in the suit that his sentiments were ‘protected political speech,’ and that his termination violated the First Amendment,” the Washington Post reported.

By Shane Trejo

However, Human Events editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam pointed out that Collins himself was a favorite of the violent leftist assailant.
Mass shooter Connor Betts, who went by the handle “Flowers for Atomsk” on Twitter, re-tweeted the biased left-wing reporting of Collins several times.

Betts posted a tweet from Collins that attempted to stigmatize and demonizing skeptics about Big Pharma vaccines, perhaps showing how the authoritarian ideology of mandatory vaccination can be a springboard to violence.

Kassam posted other tweets from Betts which indicated that he may have been radicalized in the fake news ecosystem of hatred against President Trump and his patriotic supporters.




Collins was desperate to minimize Betts’ support of liberal political figures, and it is now more clear as to why. He likely did not want the public to understand that Betts was a huge supporter of he and his fellow cohorts who report the fake news.

By Paul Joseph Watson – AUGUST 6, 2019
“Far-left protesters are at Mitch McConnell’s Kentucky home,” tweeted Ryan Saavedra. One person says they hope someone uses a “voodoo doll” on McConnell. Another says they want someone to “just stab the mother f*cker in the heart”. These are the people who want to take your guns.”
Saavedra tracked down the person who allegedly made the threat’s Facebook page, where she was pictured alongside Elizabeth Warren.

The harassment campaign continued into the night off the back of a Twitter trend called #MassacreMoscowMitch. The protesters demanded that McConnell come outside.

“We’re at McConnell’s house. This b*tch think he about to get some rest … F*ck Mitch! … He’s in there nursing his little broken arm, he should have broken his little raggedy wrinkled ass neck,” said another protester.
“F*ck you, f*ck yo wife, f*ck everything you stand for,” screamed the agitator.
Protesters were holding signs saying #MassacreMitch.

“F*ck Elaine! F*ck Elaine! F*ck Elaine!” shouted the protester, targeting McConnell’s wife.
They even brought their kids.


“Keep in mind, McConnell, 77, is at home recovering from a broken shoulder he sustained after he fell because he has problems with his leg. He has problems with his leg because he had Polio,” tweeted Saavedra.
The scenes were similar to when far left Antifa extremists harassed Tucker Carlson’s family outside his home earlier this year.


By Richard Moorhead

The UC-Riverside professor’s chilling remarks are possibly the most vengeful and hateful response on the left to Saturday’s El Paso massacre, carried out by a purported white nationalist who wanted to kill Hispanics.
Aslan went on to repeat his threat to White House policy advisor Kellyanne Conway, expressly singling her out as the “evil” that needed to be eradicated.

Seeing as Kellyanne Conway isn’t even slightly comparable to a hate-fueled white nationalist, it seems apparent that Aslan’s explicit threat applies broadly to any and all Trump supporters.
This isn’t the first time the utterly deranged and wrathful progressive has demanded violence against Trump supporters in a conniption of visceral rage.
The “religious scholar” claimed Covington hate hoax victim Nicholas Sandmann had the “world’s most punchable face” in a tweet dating back to the incident in January.

It would seem calling for a 16-year old boy would be a clear violation of Twitter’s rules, but the fired CNN host escaped scot-free without any consequences after for a call to violence directed at a child.
Observers concerned with Aslan’s repeated violent and quasi-genocidal rhetoric have reported his latest round of death threats to Twitter’s Safety team. But it’s unlikely the deranged leftist will face any consequences, leaving him free to escalate in his repeated pattern of dehumanization and violent threats towards Trump supporters and American patriots.
Published on Aug 6, 2019

By Tyler Durden
And while the media was eager to quickly expose the El Paso shooter as a right-wing extremist with the implication that he is merely following Trump’s belligerent rhetoric, only few details had emerged about the Dayton, Ohio shooter although we certainly understand why the mainstream media may not have rushed to make these alleged details public – because according to Heavy.com, the Dayton shooter was an Elizabeth Warren (and Bernie Sanders) supporter who advocated for socialism, communism and supported Antifa.

The shooter, Connor Betts, was 24 and from Bellbrook, Ohio. His alleged social media biography started to emerge late on Sunday night, with his Twitter page stating that he described himself as:
“he/him / anime fan / metalhead / leftist / i’m going to hell and i’m not coming back.”
On his alleged Twitter account, he promoted Antifa and the Democratic Socialists of America:

He also appeared to be critical of President Trump’s immigration policy, using the “concentration camp” rhetoric made popular by AOC:

The account called an Antifa terrorist who attacked an ICE facility a “martyr”:

…and also retweeted pro communist Tweets:

The account wrote that he would “happily vote for Democrat Elizabeth Warren, praised Satan, was upset about the 2016 presidential election results, and added, ‘I want socialism, and i’ll not wait for the idiots to finally come round to understanding.'”
He also allegedly retweeted a post about “rounding up hostages” in a video game before “shoot[ing] them all in the head”:

Other posts alluded to violence with firearms:
“This is America: Guns on every corner, guns in every house, no freedom but that to kill,” he wrote in December 2018. And, “’Tis! The pistol is a Beretta 93R, called the REK7 in BO4. Do love me some guns!” He also wrote, “Hammer, brick, gun.” On Feb. 14, 2018, he tweeted this at Sen. Rob Portman: “@robportman hey rob. How much did they pay you to look the other way? 17 kids are dead. If not now, when?” That was the date of the mass shooting at a school in Parkland, Florida.

On Nov. 2, 2018, the account wrote: “Vote blue for gods sake.” On the date of Republican Sen. John McCain’s death, it said “F*ck John McCain.” After Trump’s 2016 election, he allegedly Tweeted “This is bad”.

According to his former high school classmates, he was “a bully who liked to scare women.”
Heavy.com claimed they had verified his Twitter handle “through multiple verification factors, including a matching tattoo on both a page selfie and prominent news outlets’ pictures of Connor Betts; several family linkages to the page; similar photos, including of him and the family dog, on the page and family members’ verified accounts; and references to college and growing up in Ohio and Dayton.”
By Monday morning, Twitter had suspended the account:
