Feds Leveling Charges In Congressional Terror Attack On Federal Officers

I comment on threads. There is no barging involved. Simple text.

You're the offensive one with your topics. I point that out and you don't like that because you like being an asshole without obstruction.
Not everyone is here to make you happy.
 
Hurry....I need eye bleach...... it'll take at least a dozen sessions with my therapist to undo the damage this image has caused me🥺🤢🤢🤢🤢🤢🤮🤮
Tinta, for crying out loud....ya gotta provide a warning about these images 😲😲😲😲
You have to look at yourself in the mirror wearing a dress and makeup dude. You've seen much worse every day.
 

McIver set to be charged over Delaney Hall incident​

Habba could announce charges against Newark Democrat as early as today

By Joey Fox and David Wildstein, May 16 2025 10:11 am


The Justice Department plans to bring charges against Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-Newark) following a scuffle with federal immigration agents last week at Newark’s Delaney Hall detention center, three sources speaking on the condition of anonymity confirmed to the New Jersey Globe.

Much is still unknown about the case against the freshman congresswoman, but interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba could announce charges as early as today. McIver may turn herself in this afternoon, the New Jersey Globe learned; she’ll be represented by Paul Fishman, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey during the Obama administration.

On Friday, May 9, McIver and three other prominent New Jersey Democrats – Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-Ewing) and Rob Menendez (D-Jersey City) – visited Delaney Hall, a 1,000-bed facility in the East Ward of Newark that began housing immigrant detainees at the beginning of this month, for an oversight visit.

Partway through the visit, Baraka was arrested by federal authorities; they claimed he was trespassing, while he maintained that he had followed their directions and left when they instructed him to. Baraka’s arrest prompted a scuffle among the three representatives, ICE agents, and a group of protesters who had gathered at Delaney Hall’s gate; both sides have claimed that the other was the aggressor in the fight, which seems to have caused no reported injuries.

More here on House organized crime: https://newjerseyglobe.com/congress/mciver-set-to-be-charged-over-delaney-hall-incident/

It is alleged Rep. Rachet McIver repeatedly assaulted federal officers by wildly bulldozing them with her 300+lbs of gross belly fat, traumatizing several in the terror attack. o_O:eek:
Thought you believed women were incapable of defense or effective offense. Federal officers were traumatized in the terror attack? LMAO.

Talk about spinning yarns... bubba... you told a good one here.
 
There's a place in New Mexico called Cooke's Canyon. You should take a drive out there someday. You can still see the graves of some of the 400 people who were slaughtered along the trail in that canyon over the years by Apaches. It was the reason for the establishment of Fort Cummings in 1863. There are other places just like it in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Your lack of education is noted.

There's a place in New Mexico called Cooke's Canyon. You should take a drive out there someday. You can still see the graves of some of the 400 people who were slaughtered along the trail in that canyon over the years by Apaches. It was the reason for the establishment of Fort Cummings in 1863. There are other places just like it in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Your lack of education is noted.
Cookes Canyon is interesting. Following the end of the Mexico/US war in 1848 the US opted for a policy of oppression in New Mexico contrasting with the more lenient Mexican administration. When General James Carleton was appointed in 1862, He announced that "he would conduct a merciless war against all hostile tribes - to force them to their knees confine them to reservations, where they could be required to work in Agriculture and be christianised. He was successful, forcing the Apache from their ancestral lands into arid areas where thousands died." Triumph for the American settlers was cheap, and ironically, it was Carletons almost entirely black troops which had evicted and slaughtered the Apache by 1870.

Sources from the time indicate that between 100 and 300 white settlers travelling west were killed by the Apache. Clearly it was in the settlers interest to exaggerate those numbers and in the Apaches interests to kill many more.
 
Cookes Canyon is interesting. Following the end of the Mexico/US war in 1848 the US opted for a policy of oppression in New Mexico contrasting with the more lenient Mexican administration. When General James Carleton was appointed in 1862, He announced that "he would conduct a merciless war against all hostile tribes - to force them to their knees confine them to reservations, where they could be required to work in Agriculture and be christianised. He was successful, forcing the Apache from their ancestral lands into arid areas where thousands died." Triumph for the American settlers was cheap, and ironically, it was Carletons almost entirely black troops which had evicted and slaughtered the Apache by 1870.

Sources from the time indicate that between 100 and 300 white settlers travelling west were killed by the Apache. Clearly it was in the settlers interest to exaggerate those numbers and in the Apaches interests to kill many more.
And to the above facts we can add 500 to 600 settlers and ranchers in Arizona, and hundreds of Mexicans on the other side of the border killed by Cochise, Geronimo, and other Apache leaders. Geronimo's retaliatory raid on Janos, Mexico, comes to mind, where few survived. One can visit Fort Bowie in AZ, where the events of the Bascom Affair took place. There, you can walk the ground where Cochise's 12-year war against the white man began. You can visit his strongholds in the Dragoon Mountains and battlefields like Rocky Mesa in the Chiricahua Mountains across the Sulphur Springs Valley. I've walked and hiked them both.
 
Cookes Canyon is interesting. Following the end of the Mexico/US war in 1848 the US opted for a policy of oppression in New Mexico contrasting with the more lenient Mexican administration. When General James Carleton was appointed in 1862, He announced that "he would conduct a merciless war against all hostile tribes - to force them to their knees confine them to reservations, where they could be required to work in Agriculture and be christianised. He was successful, forcing the Apache from their ancestral lands into arid areas where thousands died." Triumph for the American settlers was cheap, and ironically, it was Carletons almost entirely black troops which had evicted and slaughtered the Apache by 1870.

Sources from the time indicate that between 100 and 300 white settlers travelling west were killed by the Apache. Clearly it was in the settlers interest to exaggerate those numbers and in the Apaches interests to kill many more.
So it didn't go like this?
 
We may be sure nothing will come of this. McIver will never be tried. The last thing this administration needs is to hand their opponents a Dreyfus-level cause celebre.
 
We may be sure nothing will come of this. McIver will never be tried. The last thing this administration needs is to hand their opponents a Dreyfus-level cause celebre.
Stop being a child. Nobody in Congress is exempt from the law. If it is determined that members of Congress broke the law and assaulted federal officers, they deserve to be prosecuted.
 
Stop being a child. Nobody in Congress is exempt from the law. If it is determined that members of Congress broke the law and assaulted federal officers, they deserve to be prosecuted.
If this goes to court, ICE, not McIver, will be on trial.
 
And to the above facts we can add 500 to 600 settlers and ranchers in Arizona, and hundreds of Mexicans on the other side of the border killed by Cochise, Geronimo, and other Apache leaders. Geronimo's retaliatory raid on Janos, Mexico, comes to mind, where few survived. One can visit Fort Bowie in AZ, where the events of the Bascom Affair took place. There, you can walk the ground where Cochise's 12-year war against the white man began. You can visit his strongholds in the Dragoon Mountains and battlefields like Rocky Mesa in the Chiricahua Mountains across the Sulphur Springs Valley. I've walked and hiked them both.
Considering the fact that the white settlers were trying to take the Native Americans land from them it seems that the response of the Apaches was entirely reasonable. The Apaches lost the land they had lived in for thousands of years because they did not kill anywhere near enough whites. Australia had the same experience, 90% of the aboriginal population was wiped out, mainly by imported diseases.
 
Considering the fact that the white settlers were trying to take the Native Americans land from them it seems that the response of the Apaches was entirely reasonable. The Apaches lost the land they had lived in for thousands of years because they did not kill anywhere near enough whites. Australia had the same experience, 90% of the aboriginal population was wiped out, mainly by imported diseases.

Native American society was 10,000 years out of date with the times. Had they embraced the society of the settlers and claimed their ancestral lands, farmed and raised cattle on those lands, and lived peacefully, they would have more than they do now even with the rampant bigotry against them because they could have used the white man's laws and courts to keep what was theirs.

Instead they fought and believed that they could defeat an invading enemy hoard which was limitless because that kind of belief system is what their society was made up of.
 
Native American society was 10,000 years out of date with the times. Had they embraced the society of the settlers and claimed their ancestral lands, farmed and raised cattle on those lands, and lived peacefully, they would have more than they do now even with the rampant bigotry against them because they could have used the white man's laws and courts to keep what was theirs.
The Cherokee tried becoming civilized on the white man's terms -- they took up farming and crafts, converted to Christianity, adopted a written language, set up a republican government, and kept black slaves. It didn't help -- as soon as the whites decided they wanted their land, the Cherokee had to walk from Georgia to Oklahoma.
 
It did in the movie. Though the Native Americans were ultimately defeated in the course of history, their story remains a vital and enduring part of our national heritage and cultural identity.
So is what McIver and the other Congresscritters were doing.
 
Native American society was 10,000 years out of date with the times. Had they embraced the society of the settlers and claimed their ancestral lands, farmed and raised cattle on those lands, and lived peacefully, they would have more than they do now even with the rampant bigotry against them because they could have used the white man's laws and courts to keep what was theirs.

Instead they fought and believed that they could defeat an invading enemy hoard which was limitless because that kind of belief system is what their society was made up of.
Claims that Native Americans lost their land because they refused to assimilate oversimplify centuries of complex history. In reality, many Indigenous nations adopted settler practices, used the courts, and negotiated treaties in good faith—only to face removal, violence, and legal betrayal.

Consider the following:​

  • Indigenous Adaptation Was Widespread: The Cherokee Nation adopted a written constitution, a newspaper, and European-style farming. Despite this, they were forcibly removed via the Trail of Tears (1838).
  • The Courts Did Not Protect Them: In Worcester v. Georgia (1832), the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed Cherokee sovereignty. President Andrew Jackson ignored the ruling.
  • Resistance Was Defensive: Apache, Lakota, and other nations resisted after repeated violations of agreements and encroachments on their lands—not from ignorance, but out of necessity and survival.
  • Settler Colonialism Was Systemic: Land dispossession, forced boarding schools, and cultural erasure were not accidental. They were tools of a settler system that never intended to include Native peoples as equals.

Recommended Readings

  1. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States – A clear, accessible overview of Native resistance and the structures of settler colonialism.
  2. Claudio Saunt, Unworthy Republic – A detailed history of the Indian Removal Act and how legal frameworks enabled mass displacement.
  3. Daniel K. Richter, Facing East from Indian Country – Re-centers the story of early America through Native perspectives.
  4. PBS: "We Shall Remain" Documentary Series – Offers visual, historical storytelling of Native resistance efforts.

Native Americans were not 10,000 years out of date​

Native Americans did not lose their land because they failed to assimilate. They lost it because even when they did assimilate, they were met with betrayal. Resistance—whether through diplomacy, legal action, or armed defense—was a rational response to colonization, not a failure of vision.
 

McIver set to be charged over Delaney Hall incident​

Habba could announce charges against Newark Democrat as early as today

By Joey Fox and David Wildstein, May 16 2025 10:11 am


The Justice Department plans to bring charges against Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-Newark) following a scuffle with federal immigration agents last week at Newark’s Delaney Hall detention center, three sources speaking on the condition of anonymity confirmed to the New Jersey Globe.

Much is still unknown about the case against the freshman congresswoman, but interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba could announce charges as early as today. McIver may turn herself in this afternoon, the New Jersey Globe learned; she’ll be represented by Paul Fishman, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey during the Obama administration.

On Friday, May 9, McIver and three other prominent New Jersey Democrats – Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-Ewing) and Rob Menendez (D-Jersey City) – visited Delaney Hall, a 1,000-bed facility in the East Ward of Newark that began housing immigrant detainees at the beginning of this month, for an oversight visit.

Partway through the visit, Baraka was arrested by federal authorities; they claimed he was trespassing, while he maintained that he had followed their directions and left when they instructed him to. Baraka’s arrest prompted a scuffle among the three representatives, ICE agents, and a group of protesters who had gathered at Delaney Hall’s gate; both sides have claimed that the other was the aggressor in the fight, which seems to have caused no reported injuries.

More here on House organized crime: https://newjerseyglobe.com/congress/mciver-set-to-be-charged-over-delaney-hall-incident/

It is alleged Rep. Rachet McIver repeatedly assaulted federal officers by wildly bulldozing them with her 300+lbs of gross belly fat, traumatizing several in the terror attack. o_O:eek:
More than alleged. Big Fat LaMonica.

What is it with these obese black people?
 

Politics

JUST IN: GOP Rep. Launches Resolution To Expel Progressive Democrat From Congress​


Published
18 hours ago
on
May 21, 2025
By
Cullen McCue

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) has introduced a resolution to expel Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-NJ) from Congress after she was indicted for allegedly assaulting federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents outside a facility in Newark last week.

“Members of Congress swear an oath to uphold the Constitution and the laws of this country—not to obstruct them,” Mace continued. “This isn’t a matter of partisan politics. It’s about whether we’re going to hold Members of Congress to the same legal standards as every other American.”

Mace’s resolution notes that the House has already set precedent for expelling members who have been charged of serious crimes, but have not yet been convicted, by pointing to the expulsion of former U.S. Rep. George Santos (R-NY)

“In a time when public trust in government is at a historic low, the House must act decisively,” said Mace. “The evidence is clear. The charges are serious. And the public deserves to know that criminal conduct in the halls of Congress has consequences.”

More here: https://trendingpoliticsnews.com/ju...expel-progressive-democrat-from-congress-cmc/

Rep. Lamonica "Diesel Dozer" McIver deserves to be expelled from Congress.
 
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