Jack Del Rio Gets Slapped! Patriot Front Arrested! (Mon. 6-13-22)
Washington Redskins FINE Jack Del Rio $100,000 for telling the truth! Patriot Front men get arrested while "Pride" parades freely in Coeur d'Alene!
The Hake Report, Monday, June 13, 2022 AD: Hake's wearing "racist" Josh Donaldson's NY Yankees jersey! // "March Against Our Lives" forces Dems and RINOs to "do something" against the Second Amendment. // White CHRIS comments on Jack Del Rio's punishment for speaking "normie" truth! // Patriot Front young white men arrested for alleged "conspiracy to riot" in Idaho against the LGBTQ agenda! // SEVERAL CALLS including a counterprotestor from Coeur d'Alene "Pride" event! (SEE BELOW) //
MUSIC: "Breathe on It" - The Hidden Cameras - The Smell of Our Own (2003, Rough Trade) // "Don't Shoot" - Jeremy Korpas - YouTube Audio Library (Chris selection) //
CALLERS
Delfrickentree from Michigan
Jared from Missouri
William from California
DJ from North Carolina
Joe from Idaho
Maze from Dayton, OH
Keith from Illinois
Joe from Phoenix, AZ
TIME STAMPS
0:00:00 Mon, Jun 13, 2022
0:01:25 Hey, guys! Racist NY Yankee
0:03:32 'Do Something' against 2A
0:11:35 Jack Del Rio rehash: "Dust-up"
0:16:10 CHRIS on Jack del Rio
0:30:16 DELFRICKENTREE, MI: Anti-Christians
0:38:31 JARED, MO: Supposed Bible passage
0:46:51 Supers: BasedAmericaFirst on NZ interview
0:53:48 WILLIAM, CA: Goes off on various topics
0:59:58 "Breathe on It" - The Hidden Cameras
1:03:16 Reading chat
1:05:32 Patriot Front arrest, Coeur d'Alene Pride
1:25:22 DJ, NC: the South loves you!
1:30:26 JOE, IDAHO: Coeur d'Alene protest review
1:38:36 MAZE, OH: Rebel Flags and whiskey in TN
1:44:17 KEITH, IL: Various topics, good points
1:49:48 JOE, PHOENIX: Botswana, Schizophrenia
1:55:20 Thanks, all!
1:57:14 "Don't Shoot" - Jeremy Korpas
Also see Hake News from JLP.
HAKE LINKS
VIDEO: YouTube* | Facebook | Twitter | LIVE Odysee | DLive | Twitch* | ARCHIVE Odysee | BitChute | Rumble
PODCAST: Apple | Spotify* | Podplayer | Castbox | TuneIn | Stitcher | Google | iHeart | Amazon | PodBean
SUPER CHAT: Streamlabs | Odysee | EXCLUSIVE SUPPORT: SubscribeStar | Teespring
CALL-IN: 888-775-3773, LIVE M-F 9-11 AM PT (Los Angeles) thehakereport.com/show
*NOTE: Liberal platforms commonly censor Hake's content.
BLOG POST
SHOW NOTES
Monday!
GUN CONTROL IS EVIL
(TheSkimm) Some senators are agreeing to do something about gun violence.
Actually?
Yes. Yesterday, a group of 20 senators — 10 Democrats and 10 Republicans — said they’d agreed on a framework to reduce the “threat of violence across our country.” As a reminder: that violence includes more than 45,000 gun deaths in 2020. And mass shootings in Buffalo, Laguna Woods, and Uvalde, among more than 250 others this year.
What did lawmakers agree on?
Supporting legislation on mental health, school safety, and some gun restrictions. Here’s the fine print:
Gun restrictions: First up, red flag laws. Senators agreed to give states money if they allow courts to temporarily remove guns from people seen as dangerous. They also agreed to address the “boyfriend loophole.” That refers to unmarried domestic violence offenders…who are still able to keep their guns. Senators are also working to strengthen background checks for people under 21 buying guns. Oh, and they may crack down on some unlicensed gun dealers.
Mental health and school safety: Senators would invest billions of dollars on expanding health care in the US, among other programs. They’ll also invest in safety measures and training in schools, plus other “school violence prevention efforts.”
How are people reacting?
President Biden said that if it passes in Congress, yesterday’s bipartisan approach would be “the most significant gun safety legislation” in decades. Gun safety orgs including March for Our Lives endorsed the deal. The NRA did not, rejecting any effort to infringe on Americans’ “fundamental right to protect themselves and their loved ones.”
theSkimm
This framework still has to be translated into legislation, which then has to be passed. But yesterday’s announcement meant lawmakers are witnessing the bloodshed across the US. And some may be prepared to take action.
IS THIS TRUE? $100 GRAND FOR TRUE SPEECH?
CLIP 10 replay from Friday: Jack del Rio defended his tweet — here he calls it a “dust-up” at the Capitol, compared with the destruction of Obama’s BLM insurrection (to use JLP’s words) … 1:14
So under pressure he took it back…
FROM FRI: WASH. REDSKINS ("COMMANDERS") COACH JACK DEL RIO ON BLM VS J6
Dumb lib tweeted: (NormEisen, legal analyst for CNN, blue check) As the 1/6 Committee hearings draw near, we must understand the whole story of January 6th. In our new @BrookingsGov report, we offer a guide, including potential federal and state criminal charges for Trump and his allies. BLOG POST: Trump on Trial: A Guide to the January 6 Hearings and the Question of Criminality
TWEET: Jack Del Rio on Twitter, Jun 6: "@NormEisen @BrookingsGov Would love to understand “the whole story “ about why the summer of riots, looting, burning and the destruction of personal property is never discussed but this is ??? #CommonSense" / Twitter
Dumb blue-check guy responded: (realStanVG) Black Lives Matter protesters saw a police officer kneel on a Black man’s neck for 9 minutes while three other officers looked on. The Capitol rioters saw their hero lose a free and fair election. (CRINGE TAKE)
CLIP [10]: (DarrenMHaynes) Commanders DC Jack Del Rio on tweet comparing George Floyd protest to the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan 6th "Businesses are being burned down, no problem and then we have a dust-up at the Capitol, nothing burned down and we're gonna make that a major deal." … 1:13
QUOTE-TWEETED BY Jeremy McPike ☮️ 🇺🇦 on Twitter, Jun 8: "Yup. Just sealed the deal to cast my vote as a NO. I think what's burning down today is the stadium bill. #Commanders" / Twitter
HEADLINES: (WUSA9) Commanders defensive coordinator calls Capitol riots a 'dust-up,' Virginia State senator calls comments 'highly inflammatory' — In a statement later released on Twitter, Jack Del Rio apologized for calling it a "dust-up" saying that was "irresponsible and negligent" on his part.
(NBC12 / AP) Commanders coach sorry after calling Capitol insurrection a 'dust-up'
(NPR) Washington Commanders defensive coordinator calls Jan. 6 riot a 'dust-up' : NPR
(Foreign Guardian) Washington Commanders coach sorry after calling Capitol attack a 'dust-up'
TWEET APOLOGY: (coachdelrio, Jun 8) Tweet of a screenshot of a statement. HE DELETED HIS TWITTER!
NBC: Jack Del Rio fined $100,000 for January 6th insurrection comments | NBC Sports
ESPN: Washington Commanders' Jack Del Rio deletes Twitter account after controversy over remarks
PATRIOT FRONT
(TheSkimm) Patriot Front. On Saturday, 31 members of a white nationalist group were arrested near a Pride event in Idaho. After receiving a tip, police found the men in a U-Haul truck with riot gear (think: a smoke grenade, shin guards, and shields) and paperwork detailing plans to riot. The arrests come as state legislatures across the country have reportedly intro’d more than 300 anti-LGBTQ+ bills this year alone. The men — charged with conspiracy to riot — are expected to appear in court today.
CLIP 11 (CNN) The 31 people arrested in Idaho have ties to a White nationalist group and planned to riot at a Pride event, police say. Here's what we know … CORRECTION: Rousseau’s 23, not 31.
From end of CNN article: Coeur d’Alene residents and businesses have long made it clear the city is “too great to hate,” going back to the early aughts, when the Southern Poverty Law Center helped the city shut down an Aryan Nations group with a compound north of the city, Hammond told CNN.
(Wash. Compost) Men tied to hate group planned for riot, 'confrontation' at LGBTQ event, police say
The dozens of masked men from a dozen different states dressed in the visually singular identity of the white supremacist group Patriot Front, authorities said. Piled into the back of a U-Haul set up outside a hotel in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, on Saturday, they had one goal as they headed to a popular park that was hosting an LGBTQ Pride event, according to Coeur d’Alene Police Chief Lee White.
“These individuals were prepared to riot,” White told The Washington Post Sunday. The men, whom he described as all working together, had riot gear that included shin guards, shields, helmets, at least one smoke grenade and long metal poles like the ones used by some U.S. Capitol rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, White said.
“They even had an operations plan to detail their actions once they arrived at the Pride event,” he said, citing the plan as the main contributor for the eventual misdemeanor charges of conspiracy to riot. White said further charges could be added depending on what authorities find, like weapons, as they process the U-Haul and other vehicles.
31 tied to hate group charged with planning riot near LGBTQ event in Idaho
By Sunday afternoon, all of the men had posted bond and were free as they await arraignment later this week, according to a spokesperson with the Kootenai County Sheriff’s Office. The legal saga for the arrested men is only beginning, but the impact to the Patriot Front group — which rebranded after one of its members killed one woman and injured several others by plowing his car into people protesting a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville in 2017 — is unclear.
Those who study extremist groups or organize against their ideology say that after years of warnings that the ranks of far-right and militia-type groups were growing, the threat they pose to public safety and national security is impossible to ignore.
“We’ve been trying to sound this alarm since the Obama years that these groups are starting to organize, and they’re at the gates now,” said Kurt Braddock, a professor at American University who studies violent extremist groups and their messaging. “It’s a disservice to American security to ignore or minimize them any more.”
White, the police chief, said the group had planned for confrontation at Pride in the Park, an event advertised as a “family-friendly, community event celebrating diversity and building a stronger and more unified community for ALL.”
Eric Ward, executive director of the Western States Center, a community organizing group that advocates for inclusivity and democratic principles, said it’s a far cry from an isolated incident.
“People should be paying attention to these arrests far beyond Coeur d’Alene,” Ward said via email. “Idaho is a bellwether state for where the rest of the country may be headed in terms of how anti-democracy groups try to build power and how effectively they’re blunted.” He noted that in 2020, Idaho was among the first states to “turn anti-transgender attacks into law” by banning trans women and girls from school sports and that the local Republican Party has supported candidates for the library board who ran on pulling LGBTQ books from shelves.
Braddock said researchers have been predicting LGBTQ groups would be the next target of far-right extremists, who he said adhere to a hypermasculine worldview and the belief that other, often marginalized groups are making gains at their direct expense.
“They see it as a zero-sum game when it really isn’t,” Braddock said.
The North Idaho Pride Alliance, which organized Saturday’s event, did not respond to request for comment Sunday.
White, the police chief, said the suspects were arrested with planning documents that outlined their intended course of action had they made it to the park.
“They talked about entering the park and immediately confronting people; as soon as they met some level of resistance, they were going to release smoke grenades,” White said.
The men, most of whom were in their early 20s and who reside in states as far as Michigan and Arkansas, appeared prepared for arrest, White said.
When police stopped the U-Haul and began to make arrests, White described the men as “quiet and stoic.”
“They had either been coached or trained on how to respond if a law enforcement encounter took place,” he said.
White credited a local tipster who saw the suspects loading into the U-Haul and called the police.
“Were it not for one extremely observant citizen who reported what he saw — rather than tweet about it or put it on video and get his 15 minutes of fame — there would have been a riot,” he said.
Since the arrests, white supremacist and Patriot Front sympathizers have flooded the police tip line with harassment, White said. The chief was also quick to dispel misinformation that had already begun to circulate.
“There is a whole lot of online chatter people thinking this was antifa in disguise, or a false flag by the FBI,” he said. “That is absolutely false. This was Patriot Front.”
Authorities had been aware of online threats leading up to the weekend, White said, so police had increased their presence in the city’s downtown. Two SWAT teams and officers from the city, county and state assisted in the arrests.
In the weeks leading up to the Pride event, a local motorcycle club dubbed the Panhandle Patriots had planned a “Gun d’Alene” event on the same day as Pride in the Park to “go head to head with these people,” an organizer said in April during an appearance with state Rep. Heather Scott (R).
Braddock, the extremism researcher, said just as police must contend with the growth of extremist groups, the public must pay attention to the elected officials and personalities in the mainstream who ignite the talking points that ultimately animate far-right groups.
When they see a mainstream politician pick up on something they agree with, they see that as validation,” he said of false claims some Republican lawmakers have made about trans people being “groomers” and “pedophiles.” “Just like the ‘great replacement theory,’ it trickles down to the far-right elements and they run with it.”
Nick Parker and Annabelle Timsit contributed to this report.
By Kim Bellware
Kim Bellware covers national and breaking news for The Washington Post. She previously worked for City Bureau, The Huffington Post and as a nationally-focused freelance reporter. Twitter
Bryan Pietsch is a reporter covering breaking news for The Washington Post from its hub in Seoul. He previously covered breaking news for the New York Times in Colorado. Twitter
(Sky News) Patriot Front leader among 'little army' arrested while preparing riot gear near Idaho Pride event
Among those being held on misdemeanour charges of conspiracy to riot was Thomas Ryan Rousseau of Grapevine, Texas, who has been identified by the Southern Poverty Law Centre as the 23-year-old who founded the group after the deadly "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.
Also among those held was Mitchell F Wagner, 24, of Florissant, Missouri, who was previously charged with defacing a mural of famous black Americans on a college campus in St Louis last year.
…. The group came to riot around the small northern Idaho city wearing Patriot Front patches and logos on their hats and some T-shirts reading "Reclaim America", according to police and videos of the arrests posted on social media.
Those arrested came from at least 11 states, including Washington, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Colorado, South Dakota, Illinois, Wyoming, Virginia, and Arkansas.
The six-hour Pride event went on as scheduled, including booths, food, live music, a drag show and a march of more than 50 people, the Idaho Statesman reported.
Michael Kielty, Wagner's lawyer, said that he had not been provided information about the charges.
He said Patriot Front did not have a reputation for violence and that the case could be a First Amendment issue.
"Even if you don't like the speech, they have the right to make it," he said.
Patriot Front is a white supremacist neo-Nazi group whose members perceive black Americans, Jews and LGBTQ people as enemies, according to Jon Lewis, a George Washington University researcher who specialises in homegrown violent extremism.
Mr Lewis said the group's tactics involves identifying local grievances to exploit, organising on platforms like the messaging app Telegram and ultimately showing up to events marching in neat columns, in blue- or white-collared-shirt uniforms, in a display of strength.
Mr Lewis said anti-LGBTQ rhetoric has increasingly become a potent rallying cry in the far-right online ecosystem.
The arrests come amid a surge of charged rhetoric around LGBTQ issues and a wave of state legislation aimed at transgender youth, said John McCrostie, the first openly gay man elected to the Idaho legislature.
In Boise this week, dozens of Pride flags were stolen from city streets.
"Whenever we are confronted with attacks of hate, we must respond with the message from the community that we embrace all people with all of our differences," Mr McCrostie said in a text message.
Sunday also marked six years since the mass shooting that killed 49 people at the Orlando LGBTQ club Pulse, said Troy Williams of Equality Utah in Salt Lake City. (THAT WAS A MUSLIM SUS SON OF A HILLARY SUPPORTER…)
"Our nation is growing increasingly polarised, and the result has been tragic and deadly," he said.
(Spokesman-Review, Spokane, WA) Sheriff’s Office releases names of 31 Patriot Front members arrested in Saturday bust (Sat, Jun 12)
—