Jaybird

Jaybird is Birdmojo on Xbox Live and Jaybirdmojo on Playstation's network. He's been playing consoles since the Atari 2600 and it was Zork that taught him how to touch-type. If you've got a song for Wednesday, a commercial for Saturday, a recommendation for Tuesday, an essay for Monday, or, heck, just a handful a questions, fire off an email to AskJaybird-at-gmail.com

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165 Responses

  1. Kazzy
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    says:

    “Shot.”Report

  2. Jaybird
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    says:

    Republicans pounce.Report

  3. Jaybird
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    says:

    Secret Service Spokesperson:

    Report

  4. Jaybird
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    says:

    Rumors flying fast and furious.

    The shooter has been neutralized, I’ve seen reports that he’s been arrested and I’ve seen reports that he is dead.

    I’ve seen reports that the police department identified him but I haven’t seen the police department saying as such.Report

  5. North
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    says:

    Ugh, whoever that dumb fisher is can rot in hell. The absolutely worst thing to do.Report

  6. Jaybird
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    says:

    Report

  7. Jaybird
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    says:

    This guy claims to have seen the shooter before he fired.

    IF THIS IS TRUE… man, the secret service are going to have a bad day during the “lessons learned” meeting.

    Report

  8. Jaybird
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    says:

    Obama has given a statement:

    Report

  9. Slade the Leveller
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    says:

    To be honest, with the proliferation of guns in the country over the last few decades, I’m kind of amazed it took this long for something like this to happen.Report

  10. Jaybird
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    says:

    Biden has given one too:

    Report

  11. Jaybird
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    says:

    This picture from the rally is causing discussions.

    Some argue that it’s evidence that the whole thing was staged.
    Others argue that it’s evidence of Trump being a badass.

    Report

  12. Chip Daniels
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    says:

    Fortunately however, the gun was not damaged and is in stable condition, expected to make a full recovery and continue to water the tree of liberty for years to come.Report

  13. Chip Daniels
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    says:

    Trump, fcuking around:
    “I am going to be a dictator!”

    Trump, finding out what the 2nd Amendment was for.Report

    • North in reply to Chip Daniels
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      No. There has never been a point in history where violence doesn’t, ultimately, redound to the detriment of the marginalized and the minorities. It is the enemy of liberalism and the bane of the powerless and the comfort of the already comfortable who stroke their chins and dismiss the claims of the marginal because they supported violence. I hope it ultimately turns out that this was some right wing nutbag but if the shooter is in any way affiliated with anything related to the left the only response from us should be a blanket denunciation. That idiot. That indescribable idiot.Report

      • Chip Daniels in reply to North
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        says:

        I remember LeeEsq telling me that during the Ferguson riots and it made a deep impact on me.

        And I still agree with you and Lee’s sentiment.

        But I need to stress, that violence is only off the table when other means are still available.

        So as of July 13, 2024, other options are still available and I agree that violence is not necessary to save America.

        Check back with me later.Report

        • LeeEsq in reply to Chip Daniels
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          says:

          The worst outcome possible is if the shooter was from a marginalized community. I alreay had nightmares of people, using Fargo accents, worried about Project 2025 having a flippey they switchey moment and going “oh, that nice Mr. Trump, he was shot because he was about to spill the beans about Epstein and the elites.”Report

    • Wasil ibn Ata in reply to Chip Daniels
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      says:

      Haha, I don’t ever comment here, but I read the comments and my constant question for you is what are you willing to do to prevent the “fascist” from getting re-elected. You’re sticking to your principles, at least.Report

  14. Chip Daniels
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    says:

    Here’s an article from just yesterday on the “black pill” meme culture that is Trumpism.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2024/07/10/black-pill-elle-reeve-review/

    Once “the red pill metaphor took hold,” Reeve writes, “endless variations followed.” The most noxious of these is the “black pill,” “a dark but gleeful nihilism.” Those who succumb to the potent capsule believe that “the system is corrupt, and its collapse is inevitable. There is no hope.” The ideology of the black pill is that of the desperate and the disconsolate, such as mass shooters and “incels,” or involuntary celibates, who believe they are consigned to eternal loneliness by virtue of their intrinsic unlovability.

    We saw this in 2016, when the dark corners of the internet were awash in the most horrific sort of boundary pushing, such as pictures of Hillary being pushed into an oven, violent Na.zi imagery and all of it pushed with a gleeful plausible deniability of absurdity, like that Sartre quote come to life.

    This is what I mean by “fcuking around’, where Trumpism has gorged itself on a diet of iconoclasm, rule breaking and sneering at norms and conventions or civility, constantly pushing the envelope of violent rhetoric and cruelty.

    So now they have found out, that hey guess what, once unleashed, that sort of thing tends to metastize and maybe not in the direction you were hoping for.

    If they respond by sobering up and choosing to moderate the talk about dictatorship and concentration camps, well ok I will meet them halfway.

    But I suspect they won’t.Report

  15. LeeEsq
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    says:

    The Right is already jumping into conspiracy theories rather than doing the more intelligent play.Report

  16. LeeEsq
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    says:

    “Jews tried to assassinate Trump” is trending on Twitter. Is there anything that we Jews aren’t responsible for?Report

  17. Jaybird
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    says:

    Toxic masculinity.

    Report

  18. Jaybird
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    says:

    Here’s the r/politics megathread. I’ve taken the liberty of sorting by controversial.Report

  19. Jaybird
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    says:

    Well, it’s official:

    Any theories that the shooter was more interested in shooting the woman behind Trump can now be put to bed.Report

  20. Saul Degraw
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    says:

    The gunman was identified as 20 year Thomas Matthew Crooks, who apparently is a registered Republican and last voted in 2022.Report

    • DavidTC in reply to Saul Degraw
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      says:

      There’s a fun theory going around, that because Pennsylvania is a closed primary, that he must have registered Republican to screw up the primary vote.

      Although that ‘Dem who wants to vote in Republican primary’ theory doesn’t really work, he appears to have voted exactly once, in the 2022 general election immediately after he registered, and never again. He’s never voted in a primary, despite the fact there actually was a primary where he could have voted against Trump 3 months ago!

      Damn dude, you have no excuse, before you resort to political violence you need to at least vote against the guy, bare minimum.

      But don’t worry about the Republicans, they’ve located what they think is a $15 political donation to ActBlue when he was 16 or something, that proving he is a liberal despite him registering as a Republican two years later. Assuming that actually is him, and how someone thinks politically at 16 reflects how they think at 20. (Note, it actually is very unclear whether that really is him or not.)Report

      • Jaybird in reply to DavidTC
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        says:

        Current conspiracy theory flying around this morning is that it was a failed deep state assassination.Report

        • Slade the Leveller in reply to Jaybird
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          says:

          We’re living the famous Chinese curse and truly is one.Report

        • Pinky in reply to Jaybird
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          says:

          I’m sure there will be more liberals talking about conservatives’ conspiracy theories than conservatives talking about conspiracy theories. It’s an easy way to restore the narrative.Report

          • Jaybird in reply to Pinky
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            says:

            There will be conspiracies that have legs and conspiracies that don’t.

            My current favorite is “how was the shooter the *ONE* 20-year-old in the country that didn’t have any social media?!?”Report

            • Pinky in reply to Jaybird
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              says:

              I typically don’t follow news stories within the first 48 hours of a major event, and this has been a good reminder to me why.Report

            • KenB in reply to Jaybird
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              says:

              Here is a good explainer against one of the theories that has popped up (that I in my naïveté had not even considered).Report

              • Jaybird in reply to KenB
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                says:

                That’s a good essay.

                Someone did the math and tried to figure out the caliber of the bullet based on it.

                “.223/5.56 fits.”Report

              • KenB in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                Neat, will be interesting to see how accurate it is. Hopefully some creative high school math teachers are already adapting this for a fall quiz.Report

              • CJColucci in reply to KenB
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                says:

                They found the gun, and it was, indeed, a .223/5.56.Report

            • Jaybird in reply to Jaybird
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              says:

              Okay. Now *THIS* is my current favorite conspiracy theory.

              Report

            • Kazzy in reply to Jaybird
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              says:

              I’m confused… how is that a conspiracy theory…?Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Kazzy
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                says:

                If I told you that the Trump would-be assassin had Blackrock ties, would that sound crazy to you?Report

              • Kazzy in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                I’m referring to the social media thing. People pointing out that it’d odd a 20-year-old has zero social media presence isn’t a conspiracy theory. It’s a reasonable observation. It IS odd.

                I saw the report on Blackrock. Him being in the video is a total nothingburger. Them taking down the video doesn’t seem unreasonable to me. If you had he had ties to Blackrock and meant it in any more than the odd video coincedence, I’d laugh.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Kazzy
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                says:

                Oh, for the social media thing, here’s the conspiracy theory.

                “Of course he has social media. The government just cleaned it up.”

                There. If the counter-argument is something like “is there any evidence that social media cleans up the personal sites of shooters?”, we can point to stuff like Youtube or whomever taking down videos.

                Did he have social media and was it taken down?

                I don’t know.Report

              • Kazzy in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                I did not intend them as “scare quotes.” Every major headline I saw to that point avoided confirming it was a shooting/he was shot. CNN, NYTimes, Fox News… even the SS tweet linked here avoided it. The post here went right to naming it as such, which I thought was premature. And I explained as much in my follow up comment 33 minutes later.

                But if you want to think I’m evil and/or stupid because I called attention to the choice of language amidst lots of uncertainty, by all means, be my guest.Report

      • Saul Degraw in reply to DavidTC
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        says:

        The ActBlue donating Thomas Crook appears to be a 69 year old from PittsburghReport

  21. Jaybird
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    says:

    The guy who was killed at the rally has been named:

    Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Jaybird
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      says:

      Official gofundme for the shooting victims:

      Report

      • DensityDuck in reply to Jaybird
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        says:

        Apparently the social-media-comber crew is going for this guy instead of the shooter (because the shooter hasn’t got much) and hoo boy, they’re finding a ton of fun stuff. This dude was real fond of being a piece of shit online.

        I’m glad that in the moment he had the right instincts and the needed reflexes, but it just goes to show that physical courage and being a decent human being are not always related.Report

        • Jaybird in reply to DensityDuck
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          says:

          physical courage and being a decent human being are not always related

          Eh, I’m not sure that someone who says the right things online but fails to protect his family should get eulogized with something like “physical cowardice and being a decent human being are not always related”.

          There are a lot of ways to be a decent human. Lotta ways to fail at being one. Some are better than others.Report

          • DensityDuck in reply to Jaybird
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            says:

            “There are a lot of ways to be a decent human. ”

            Oh, there are! What I’m saying here is, let’s not go out of our way to make this guy over as some kind of secular saint. “We can all hope to react so well when it comes to such a moment,” and move on.Report

  22. joe
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    says:

    So when a Democrat is attacked, Republicans are to blame. Even when it turns out to be a random skel with schizoprhenia and there’s no evidence of politics being involved.

    And when a Republican is attacked, Republicans are also to blame.

    I know it’s a cliche to bring up Orwell, but he really did nail the Left to a tee.Report

  23. Jaybird
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    says:

    You know, after Ulvalde, stuff like this just hits different.

    Report

    • DavidTC in reply to Jaybird
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      says:

      Everything I read about this makes it very clear how badly all law enforcement completely screwed up.

      Like, I don’t want to get into the details here, but apparently some people there reported that there was someone on the roof with a rifle, and no one did anything,and the shooter climbed up a ladder that shouldn’t have been there, and, and, and….

      Honestly, it it feels somewhat amazing how close we got to one of the most conspiratorial events in American history. Like, just one inch to the side, Trump dies, yeah there’s immediate political repercussions, they probably would have been very bad. But on top of that, the events that I’m hearing about would probably replace the JFK assassination as conspiracy central, because holy crap, some of this just sounds absurd.

      You know, there are organizations that have an air of perfectionism, and suddenly things hit the fan and everything just makes it very clear that there isn’t any ‘there’ there, that it was all of invented mythos to start with. Most people have sort of noticed that about the IDF recently, and now we have pretty clear evidence of Secret Service really isn’t this amazingly competent organization either, and assassinations don’t happen mostly because people don’t try to do them, and when they do, they’re kind of stupid… Or, in this case, just missed.Report

    • DensityDuck in reply to Jaybird
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      says:

      oh hey, another one of those situations where a local cop thinks “maybe what the brave thin-blue-line hero ought to do here is put a couple walls between himself and that rifle”Report

      • CJColucci in reply to DensityDuck
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        What should the local cop have done that he didn’t? What did he do that he should not have done? Other than arranging back-up rather than acting solo, which probably would have delayed things to the point that any action would have been irrelevant. Once that decision was made, what were his reasonable options?Report

        • Glyph in reply to CJColucci
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          says:

          Yeah, I can think of few positions more disadvantaged than climbing a ladder, with your hands occupied by the ladder rungs, and your head just clearing the roofline where an active shooter is.

          I think criticizing multiple police who seemingly couldn’t find any way at all into a school is one thing; I think criticizing a single policeman in that specific situation for thinking, “getting my head immediately and pointlessly blown off with near-100% certainty helps no one” is another. If he took a look and ideally confirmed there was just one guy up there and maybe got a look at the weapons and relayed that info to others so that effective response could be taken, he did all I’d expect anyone in his position to do.Report

          • DensityDuck in reply to Glyph
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            A gunshot is a real good signal that someone with a gun and willingness to use it is nearby; and the Secret Service might have been interested to have that information before an ex-President got shot in the face.Report

            • Glyph in reply to DensityDuck
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              My understanding is that many PDs have policies against firing warning shots (which I assume is what we’re talking about here – a shot with no “target”, intended strictly to be used as a signal) due to the danger that an errant bullet still may injure SOMEONE whenever/wherever it lands.

              The idea being if you have a plausible shot at the suspect/perp you take it; but you don’t discharge your weapon willy-nilly otherwise. Ideally, a cop has to account for every bullet he fires.

              The cop was on a ladder, hands presumably occupied with that ladder, and was reportedly seen when he cleared the roofline. It doesn’t sound to me like he had a shot at the perp.

              So perhaps he should have been willing to stand there on the ladder and helplessly take a bullet to the face, and let THAT function as our “warning shot”, signaling the SS?

              However, I’d argue that the cop serves more purpose if he scrambles down the ladder, gets on his radio, and reports things like, “How many shooters”, “what is their exact location”, “how are they armed”, and “are there hostages up there too?” so that appropriate tactics can be applied. “Recon” is a valid tactic.

              I don’t think I’d expect a real person to do something that not even John McClane did. Even McClane knew when it was clearly time to retreat, provide valuable information to Al over the radio, and prepare the next attack.Report

        • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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          says:

          “Should”?

          That question has a different answer than “could be reasonably expected to do”.

          As Ulvalde taught us.Report

          • CJColucci in reply to Jaybird
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            says:

            Please proceed.Report

            • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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              says:

              He should have been willing to take a bullet to save a life.

              We can’t reasonably expect a police officer not to want to go home at the end of his shift. Wait for the gunman to run out of bullets and *THEN* arrest him.

              As Ulvalde taught us.Report

              • Chip Daniels in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                Wait, you’re not mocking the whole “Thin Blue Line” superhero cop nonsense, you’re angry because he didn’t conform to it.

                Man, you are going to be so disappointed when you meet a real member of the armed forces.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Chip Daniels
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                No, I’m 100% understanding why the cop did what he did.

                He wanted to go home at the end of his shift.

                Hey, as a systems administrator, I sympathize. I want to go home at the end of mine too.Report

              • Chip Daniels in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                I didn’t say otherwise.

                I was just quoting you, where you said you wanted him to be willing to take a bullet to save a life.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Chip Daniels
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                says:

                No, I made a distinction between “should” and “could be reasonably expected to do”.

                Should cops be willing to take a bullet to save a life (let’s assume a civilian and not a gang banger or something)?

                I’m pretty sure that most people would agree that they should be willing to do that, as part of their jobs.

                Is it reasonable to expect that.

                No. It is not reasonable to expect that.Report

              • Kazzy in reply to Jaybird
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                “I’m pretty sure that most people would agree that they should be willing to do that, as part of their jobs.

                Is it reasonable to expect that.

                No. It is not reasonable to expect that.”

                So it’s not reasonable to expect cops to do their jobs?

                Or people who agree that they should be willing to take a bullet to save a life as part of their jobs are wrong?Report

              • CJColucci in reply to Chip Daniels
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                says:

                The question was what he could have done, not what he might, or might not, in a given situation, been willing to do. The cop is holding onto a ladder and is poking his head up. Can he draw his weapon there and get off a shot? Maybe in the comic books, but not in real life. By the time he could scramble onto the roof and get his gun out, the shooter would have gotten the shot off. If he announced his presence, the shooter could either get off the shot, then turn and kill the cop, or turn and kill the cop and get the shot off two seconds later. Neither of these courses of action was likely to do a damn bit of good, and the cop would have been dead for nothing.
                Remember during the Iraq War all the bloggers who earned the nickname the 101st Fighting Keyboards? There’s a cop version of that, too, apparently.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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                says:

                The question was what he could have done, not what he might, or might not, in a given situation, been willing to do.

                You’re using different words than I used.

                Are you doing that deliberately or did you just not notice?Report

              • CJColucci in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                I’m using the words I used, or their close equivalents, since I asked the question. If you don’t want to answer the question and want to say something else, just say so.Report

              • DensityDuck in reply to CJColucci
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                rather amused to see someone whose whole job on this Earth is words claim that “could” and “should” are close enough to be considered identicalReport

              • CJColucci in reply to DensityDuck
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                As the philosophers will tell you, should implies can.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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                says:

                I already said what I said.

                Thanks for telling me that you’re using different words than I am deliberately.Report

              • CJColucci in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                And thanks for telling everyone you didn’t want to answer the question.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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                I’m pretty sure that I answered in my 12:42 comment.

                At the very least, I don’t understand how it is not an answer.Report

              • CJColucci in reply to Jaybird
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                says:

                No, you didn’t. Look at my 10:47 comment.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to CJColucci
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                Ah, “Once that decision was made, what were his reasonable options?”

                I see.

                “Assuming he did what he did, what else could he have done?”

                Fired a shot into the ground, I guess.

                But if I assume that the situation starts when you want it to start than when I assumed that it started, you’re absolutely right.Report

        • Marchmaine in reply to CJColucci
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          “What should the local cop have done that he didn’t”

          First thought was get out of the way and fire shots into the air.

          Then radio contact.

          I haven’t seen solid reporting yet on the time between the shooter allegedly pointing his gun at the cop, and then taking his shot at Trump. If it was as immediate as some reports suggest, then the cop wouldn’t have had time to fire… but then the cop probably disrupted the shot that was subsequently taken in haste. If he had time to scramble to safety and used his radio; well that was probably good training, but poor prudence.Report

          • CJColucci in reply to Marchmaine
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            He’s on a ladder.Report

            • Marchmaine in reply to CJColucci
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              So what? He retreats a bit to not challenge the gunman (I’m not even expecting heroics) … then he discharges his firearm to spoil the surprise and get the Secret Service moving.

              I covered several timing issues that we don’t know as to whether he was thinking of doing that but didn’t have time… so maybe he would have. Don’t know.

              But the idea — in an emergency — of at least ruining the ambush isn’t a bad use of your firearm.Report

              • CJColucci in reply to Marchmaine
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                Retreats to where? He’s on a ladder near the top of the building. Does he go half-way down, hold on with one hand, draw his gun with the other and fire? Does he drop to the ground and do it? Try either and see how long that takes.Report

          • Kazzy in reply to Marchmaine
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            says:

            “I haven’t seen solid reporting yet on the time between the shooter allegedly pointing his gun at the cop, and then taking his shot at Trump. If it was as immediate as some reports suggest, then the cop wouldn’t have had time to fire… but then the cop probably disrupted the shot that was subsequently taken in haste.”

            If the cop’s, er, intervention, went as he described and the shooter did indeed point his weapon at the cop, then the timing feels REALLY important. If it was immediate, then that means the shooter was able to reposition himself, under duress, and get off a shot that missed his target by centimeters. That would make him either one HELL of a shot or thisclose to being incredibly “lucky.” If he was almost lucky, well, thank goodness he wasn’t ACTUALLY lucky. If he was that good of a shot, I’d be curious to know how he gained such skill at such a young age.Report

            • CJColucci in reply to Kazzy
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              My skills are rusty now, but in my 20’s I could have made the shot, though I wouldn’t have used an AR-15. I’d have used something more suited to distance shooting and aimed lower, greatly improving the odds of a damaging hit.Report

            • Marchmaine in reply to Kazzy
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              I agree… I think the timing *is* important to the question of what happened and what might have happened.Report

        • John Puccio in reply to CJColucci
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          Secret Service says local police were responsible for securing the shelters outside the security perimeter.

          So, mistake #1 was not having those structures *inside* the primary security zone, leaving them to local police.

          Mistake #2 is the local police not already having someone on top of those structures, if only to monitor happenings below if not to ensure no one climbed up.

          It seems the horse was essentially out of the barn by the time the local cop climbed up somone else’s ladder to see what he saw.Report

          • Michael Cain in reply to John Puccio
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            Idle curiosity, and I haven’t seen it anywhere, which local police organization was responsible? Small town police department? Sheriff’s office? How many officers would they normally have available?Report

            • John Puccio in reply to Michael Cain
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              says:

              I have not either. Between state and county, no one in is in a rush to own it.

              Hopefully the police officer had a body camera w working audio on. At least we’d know the timing from when he dropped from the roof and shots being fired. That’s assuming the FBI releases it before we are all dead.Report

          • CJColucci in reply to John Puccio
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            Very likely true that the local cops screwed up as an organization. That left the individual cop on the ladder literally hanging with no good moves. Or at least none that work outside of comic books.Report

          • Pinky in reply to John Puccio
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            says:

            At a party in DC once, I saw the VP briefly in the street from a third-story window. Neat, but unsettling.Report

            • John Puccio in reply to Pinky
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              says:

              You can’t account for every elevated potential danger zone in a city.

              This, however, is such an abysmal, avoidable security failure, I can’t believe the level of incompetence. They were in the middle of a field! There was one building within close range of the stage!

              It’s hard to imagine a scenario that doesn’t end with the Secret Service leadership getting cleaned out. It was their show. They direct the local yokals. You don’t just leave it to them as if they were the NYPD and they have experience working these events.Report

        • DensityDuck in reply to CJColucci
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          says:

          “What should the local cop have done that he didn’t?”

          Get shot.

          Setting aside the exigent circumstances of “there’s a former President with nothing between him and this rooftop but a couple hundred yards of air”, the deal that we were told to accept was that we don’t carry our own guns and in return, the cops take a bullet if that’s what’s warranted. If you want to tell me that the cops are going to back off and look to their own safety before mine and that’s okay, then maybe that deal needs to be re-negotiated.Report

          • Chip Daniels in reply to DensityDuck
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            says:

            First- What makes you think the shooter couldn’t have shot the cop, then shot the President, making the cop’s sacrifice pointless?

            Second- Who told you that the government having a monopoly on legitimate violence was some sort of “deal”?Report

            • DensityDuck in reply to Chip Daniels
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              says:

              “What makes you think the shooter couldn’t have shot the cop, then shot the President, making the cop’s sacrifice pointless?”

              because the Secret Service is not gonna hear gunshots and think “eh, probably nothing”Report

              • Chip Daniels in reply to DensityDuck
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                says:

                They would have heard shots, taken a few seconds to determine where the shooter was, in which time the shooter gets off a couple rounds.

                Seriously, when a guy is in position with the rifle aimed and finger on the trigger, nothing short of a direct head shot is going to prevent that finger from curling. In fact, a sudden loud gunshot at close range might guarantee it.Report

              • Damon in reply to Chip Daniels
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                says:

                Based on what I saw when Reagan got shot, the SS would have reacted immediately, blocking line of sight for the shooter and covering Trump’s body while moving him away from the area. Other SS not near Trump would be scanning for the shooter/shooting at him.

                I don’t know if the shooter had a scope. I assume so, but it can be difficult if you shot at someone that’s behind you and then pivot around to reacquire you real target. I don’t that’s something easily done without a fair amount of training, depending upon how powerful the scope is.Report

              • DensityDuck in reply to Chip Daniels
                Ignored
                says:

                ” when a guy is in position with the rifle aimed and finger on the trigger, ”

                (if the rifle wasn’t pointed at the ladder then the cop wouldn’t have got shot climbing it)Report

            • CJColucci in reply to Chip Daniels
              Ignored
              says:

              “Get shot.”
              As General Patton said, the point is not to die for your country, it’s to make the other sonofabitch die for his country.Report

              • DensityDuck in reply to CJColucci
                Ignored
                says:

                “the point is not to die for your country, it’s to make the other sonofabitch die for his country.”

                Sounds great. I’ll be at the gun store tomorrow, making sure that when there’s trouble and a cop is standing outside the door thinking “well it’s not my job to die here” I have some options.Report

          • Kazzy in reply to DensityDuck
            Ignored
            says:

            Didn’t we learn this lesson in Uvalde?Report

            • Glyph in reply to Kazzy
              Ignored
              says:

              As I said elsewhere, this seems pretty different from Uvalde to me, based on what I believe to be the situation right now.

              The outrage in Uvalde is that dozens of cops with dozens of weapons and SWAT-type protective gear and dozens of points of possible ingress to the building, waited outside and did jack for over an hour. Surely there was SOME way SOMEONE could have gotten in there and tried SOMETHING, right?

              Here – and setting aside the larger massive obvious failure of not securing *the only roof in the vicinity* (!!!) – we appear to be talking about ONE cop, with a single point of ingress, likely unable to use his hands for his weapon (due to climbing a ladder) deciding that discretion is the better part of valor and living to fight another day.

              As long as he then did his best to immediately raise the alarm and communicate valuable intel about the shooter, it seems to me he probably did what he could best do.

              In Uvalde, I wouldn’t have a beef with ONE officer throwing open a school door or sticking their head into a window, getting a gun pointed at them, slamming the door/window again and yelling over the radio, “HE’S IN THERE!”. For all I know, some similar scenario DID happen, early on.

              The beef I have is with ALL of them apparently then just deciding to wait it out, despite presumably-overwhelming force on their side, while hearing more and more victims being shot. THAT’S where Uvalde becomes outrageous to me.Report

            • Glyph in reply to Kazzy
              Ignored
              says:

              I landed in moderation, probably due to originally using a mild no-no potty word that often follows the word “jack”. I took it out, can anyone clear me?

              (Hi Kaz!)Report

  24. Jaybird
    Ignored
    says:

    Semafor is reporting: Top Democratic strategist pushed reporters to consider ‘staged’ shooting

    In an email Saturday at 7:34 pm that appeared to be addressed to sympathetic journalists, and which was also sent to Semafor, Mehlhorn wrote that one “possibility — which feels horrific and alien and absurd in America, but is quite common globally — is that this ‘shooting’ was encouraged and maybe even staged so Trump could get the photos and benefit from the backlash. This is a classic Russian tactic, such as when Putin killed 300 civilians in 1999 and blamed it on terrorists to ride the backlash to winning power. Others who have embraced this tactic of committing raw evil and then benefitting from the backlash include Hamas on October 7. If any Trump officials encouraged or knew of this attack, that is morally horrific, and Republicans of decency must demand that Trump step down as unfit.”

    The other possibility, Mehlhorn wrote, “is that some crazy anti-Trumper in this chaotic moment decided to assassinate the former President.”

    Mehlhorn, who co-founded a fund called “Investing in US” with Hoffman, made clear his impulse was toward the false flag theory. “I know I am prone to bias on this, but this is a classic Putin play and given the facts seems more plausible. Look at the actual shot. Look at the staging. Look at how ready Trump is to rally; this pampered baby shit his pants when an eagle lunged at his food. Look at how quickly Trump protects himself at the expense of others, but showed few of those lifelong instincts in this moment. And consider how often Putin and his allies run this play.”

    He continued: “I know it feels yucky to discuss such a possibility. But in this case, the odds are so high, and the stakes so consequential, we must as[k] the question.”

    Mehlhorn wrote that he was disappointed that journalists were not already raising the possibility of a fake shooting. “Ask the question, people. If it proves wrong, we should respond appropriately to a non-staged act of political violence, as outlined above. But your credibility and our entire system of truth and justice depends on being certain of the answer.”

    He’s since apologized for sending it.Report

  25. Jaybird
    Ignored
    says:

    Other countries have memes too:

    Report

  26. Jaybird
    Ignored
    says:

    The Rhode Island State Police have issued an update:

    Report

  27. LeeEsq
    Ignored
    says:

    I haven’t heard anybody talk about the attempted murder of Trump in real life. Even if you can’t stand the man, and people on this blog should know I can’t, you would think that the attempted murder of a former President, and nominee for the Republicans to be President, would be a big event that people would talk about like 9/11. That I haven’t even heard as a sort of background thing, “did you hear that somebody attempted to kill Trump” is weird in a rather bad way.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to LeeEsq
      Ignored
      says:

      I got a text from a fairly non-political (though, granted, conservative) normie friend. He asked me if I thought that this just gave Trump another term.

      I gave him a short essay about it being an inside job because the Republicans wanted to change the narrative away from the Democrats talking about Project 2025 but then, halfway through, conceded that Trump got some really, really good pictures from the rally that are likely to show up in campaign commercials and they’re likely to be better pictures than any pictures of Biden that show up.

      Now that it’s a workday, see if anybody at work mentions it. Do they make jokes about how they’re sorry that the sniper missed or do they speculate that it was staged or do they lament that this might have been a news cycle that Trump might have won?

      I will report what I experience today from a vaguely conservative city, I promise.Report

      • Jaybird in reply to Jaybird
        Ignored
        says:

        My interactions were all of the professional nature. Meetings with no BS, doctor’s visit, Chipotle, and Pharmacist. No one mentioned anything but what we were there for.

        I did see my first Kennedy/Shanahan yard sign.

        (I checked. Sadly, she’s neither Mike Shanahan nor Kyle Shanahan.)Report

  28. DavidTC
    Ignored
    says:

    Okay, not to get all ‘it was a piece of debris and not a bullet’ truther here, but have we actually had any reports of where Trump went and what sort of medical treatment he got? I don’t think we have, and that feels very odd. I get not knowing that well he was still being treated, but that’s well over now.

    In fact, I’m not sure what sort of announcement was made, it really sort of seems like these events happened, we were assured he was fine, and then we saw him golfing? I admit I haven’t paid a whole lot of attention to this, so maybe I missed something, or is just the campaign being very incompetent?

    In actuality, it probably shouldn’t matter if he got hit by a bullet or if he got hit by debris thrown up by a bullet, the actual important thing is that someone tried to shoot him and got very close and probably entirely missed by bad aim. But I think that would not be true in reality, it would matter and I think everyone knows it.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to DavidTC
      Ignored
      says:

      I googled “where was trump treated?” and this was the top story.Report

      • DavidTC in reply to Jaybird
        Ignored
        says:

        Okay, I was being a little unclear there, my point was not that we don’t know where he went, because we do, it would be extremely weird if the media could not track down where a former president had gone.

        My point is neither the hospital nor the campaign (or, I guess, the Secret Service?) has made any official statements about this. We actually don’t even know how we know what hospital he went to, it seems entirely possible that the local TV station that reported on this just checked which local hospitals had seriously heightened security.

        I don’t think it’s actually too much to ask, after attempted assassination, that someone actually make statements about the treatment given and how close it was. Not during the situation, let me be clear, I don’t expect to be updated live, especially not when there are security concerns, but afterwards.

        And about the only reason I can think of no one actually saying that is they don’t want to say that he was ‘treated for shrapnel’ not ‘treated for being grazed by a bullet’. The only person who’s actually said it was a bullet who could possibly have knowledge (as opposed to people just guessing cause the blood appeared simultaneous with a gunshot) was Trump himself.Report

  29. DavidTC
    Ignored
    says:

    Oh, and people might know this by now, but considering I said it, it was wrong, and no one said the right thing on this page yet: he is apparently the person who made the donation, but the donation was not to ActBlue, the donation was to a democratic-leaning Get Out The Vote effort, which actually makes it a lot more understandable for a conservative to do..especially if they are trying to stop Trump.

    Which, to be clear, he was a conservative. The national media seems to not be covering it very much, but the local Philly media has talked to his classmates, and they all talk about how he was an conservative guy, to the point it was a noticeable part of his personality and friend group.

    It’s actually sounding to me, and I admit this is just a feeling, but it sounds to me like he was someone with actual conservative beliefs, a True Believer in conservatism (because he’s a dumb kid, and kids tend to do that in all political directions), who feels Trump betrayed him/conservativism somehow. That really is feeling like the thing that happened.Report

    • CJColucci in reply to DavidTC
      Ignored
      says:

      Most post-Kennedy assassination attempts seem to have been the work of whack jobs without a coherent political motivation, or at least not one on the standard spectrum. It’s too early to say whether that’s true here, but on the odds it’s the way to bet.Report

    • DensityDuck in reply to DavidTC
      Ignored
      says:

      I’m very amused that you made up a way in your head for someone shooting at Donald Trump to somehow be the Republicans’ fault.Report

    • Brandon Berg in reply to DavidTC
      Ignored
      says:

      It’s certainly possible. I would very much like to have Trump out of the picture, though ideally in a way that makes him a laughingstock rather than a martyr. It’s also possible that somewhere between high school and age 20, he had his mind warped by social media and took a sharp left turn. Many such cases.

      Though as CJ says, straight-up mental illness is always a pretty good bet. Remember how it turned out that that guy who shot Giffords had a beef with her because she wouldn’t answer the question “What is government if words have no meaning?”Report

      • Kazzy in reply to Brandon Berg
        Ignored
        says:

        If he was of sound mind, he would have known this was a suicide mission. That he undertook it anyway means he probably wasn’t of sound mind. If he wasn’t of sound mind, that is likely the first and strongest reason for his actions.

        If he didn’t know this was a suicide mission… if he thought he’d take a shot at a former President/current candidate for President from a few hundred feet away alive, he probably wasn’t of sound mind. If he wasn’t of sound mind, that is likely the first and strongest reason for his actions.

        It’s possible he fully knew and understood the stakes of his action and was so true to his convictions that he felt death was a reasonable cost in their pursuit. If this was the case, I’d be much more curious to learn about his convictions. I also think this is the least likely case of the three I’ve outlined here.Report

        • North in reply to Kazzy
          Ignored
          says:

          I would think that if he undertook a suicide attack out of some sort of conviction he’d have left behind a manifesto. So, I think the overwhelming likelihood is that he’s a nut with a gun.Report

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