From Breaking 911:
https://twitter.com/Breaking911/status/1361029052669321220
This is the statement realized by Biden’s handlers through Joe Biden before giving him his Jell-0 and Metamucil and putting him to bed:
Three years ago today, a lone gunman took the lives of 14 students and three educators at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. In seconds, the lives of dozens of families, and the life of an American community, were changed forever.
For three years now, the Parkland families have spent birthdays and holidays without their loved ones. They’ve missed out on the experience of sending their children off to college or seeing them on their first job after high school. Like far too many families, they’ve had to bury pieces of their soul deep within the Earth. Like far too many families — and, indeed, like our nation — they’ve been left to wonder whether things would ever be okay.
These families are not alone. In big cities and small towns. In schools and shopping malls. In churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples. In movie theaters and concert halls. On city street corners that will never get a mention on the evening news. All across our nation, parents, spouses, children, siblings, and friends have known the pain of losing a loved one to gun violence. And in this season of so much loss, last year’s historic increase in homicides across America, including the gun violence disproportionately devastating Black and Brown individuals in our cities, has added to the number of empty seats at our kitchen tables. Today, as we mourn with the Parkland community, we mourn for all who have lost loved ones to gun violence.
Over these three years, the Parkland families have taught all of us something profound. Time and again, they have showed us how we can turn our grief into purpose – to march, organize, and build a strong, inclusive, and durable movement for change.
The Parkland students and so many other young people across the country who have experienced gun violence are carrying forward the history of the American journey. It is a history written by young people in each generation who challenged prevailing dogma to demand a simple truth: we can do better. And we will.
This Administration will not wait for the next mass shooting to heed that call. We will take action to end our epidemic of gun violence and make our schools and communities safer. Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets. We owe it to all those we’ve lost and to all those left behind to grieve to make a change. The time to act is now.
That is unequivocally terrible.
Now it’s really starting to make sense why Biden’s Secretary of Defense is engaged in an ideological purge of the military and is having troops permanently deployed to guard Washington DC.
When ever you hear a democrat use the words “common sense” you know there aint any. Its the dems new buzzword… this will do nothing but piss more people , dems included, off.
Time to write my useless congrescritters, I suppose. Hopefully volume will get the point across even if content doesn’t.
It’s time to push very hard the observation “what is it that they want to do to us that they can’t do to us until we are all disarmed?”
Gun control:
The belief that I, a law abiding and responsible gun owner, should not be allowed to own and use a product I purchased in accordance with the law, and use responsibly, because someone I have never met might use a similar item in an unlawful and irresponsible manner.
Yeah, that’s common sense.
True. But this one I think drives the point home more strongly:
“Gun control is the idea that it’s better to see a woman dead in an alley, strangled with her own pantyhose, than to see her with a gun in her hand.”—T.D. Melrose