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Video: Looters Use Telescopic Forklift To Break Into Best Buy In Fairfield, California
Twitter ^

Posted on 06/02/2020 3:26:12 PM PDT by Bigtigermike

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To: Bigtigermike
"We’re almost into ‘The Purge’ range where no one is restricted and uninhibited in what they do"

Now that would pave the way for solving a whole lot of problems real quick.

21 posted on 06/02/2020 4:35:40 PM PDT by familyop
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To: saintgermaine

operetta by Strauss Jr?


22 posted on 06/02/2020 4:53:17 PM PDT by RitchieAprile (available monkeys looking for the change..)
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To: hellinahandcart

Ping!


23 posted on 06/02/2020 4:58:16 PM PDT by sauropod (Quarantine is when you restrict sick people, tyranny is when you restrict healthy people.)
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To: Sarah Barracuda

Newsom this weekend

https://abc7news.com/governor-newsom-briefing-today-live-is-speaking-coronavirus/6225002/

Especially paragraph 2

“So often we try to meet the moment with rhetoric. We feign resolve, we make a point to assert a new paradigm. And yet, over and over and over and over again we don’t meet that next moment,” Newsom said from a church in south Sacramento.

He went on to say, “We have to own up to some very difficult things. The black community is not responsible for what’s happening in this country right now, we are. We are, our institutions over and over again, we are responsible we are accountable to this moment.”

We, he is correct about “we are” - Democrats ARE responsible.


24 posted on 06/02/2020 5:04:15 PM PDT by Scrambler Bob (This is not /s. It is just as viable as any MSM 'information', maybe more so!)
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To: hadaclueonce

Maybe elements of the FIB are in on it. One thing Trump had done is show how much of government is dirty and rotten. Federal law enforcement, the Border Patrol and a few others excepting, are untrustworthy.


25 posted on 06/02/2020 5:27:23 PM PDT by attiladhun2
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To: RitchieAprile

I do believe you are right on target......It brings back many memories, some god and some bad as I grew up there, many, many, many years ago and moved over here, not because I had to but because what I believed America stood for and it saddens me to see, how ignorant if not outright dumb people as well as politicians try to dismantle it.


26 posted on 06/02/2020 8:00:19 PM PDT by saintgermaine (THE TIME TRAVELLER)
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To: Bigtigermike
Best buy responds to the violence... in the best French tradition of abject surrender.

We are, I believe, in one of the toughest times in our country's history, as we continue to battle a deadly pandemic and the resulting economic havoc while, once again, coming face-to-face with the long-term effects of racial injustice. Watching tens of thousands take to the streets to speak out against fear and inhumanity is, on one hand, inspiring for the commitment it represents and, on the other, heartbreaking for its profound need.

But what's next? What do we do to change the cycle in which black men or women, with tragic frequency, are harmed by those who are supposed to protect them? Or the gut-wrenching truth that to be a person of color in America is often to not feel fully safe, seen or heard?

For me, it starts with seeing the situation for what it is, acknowledging these experiences for what they are and, quite simply, apologizing for not doing enough. As important, it includes committing the company I lead down a path of systemic, permanent change in as many ways as we can find.

I don't have the answers, but I am no longer OK with not asking the question: If everything were on the table, what could Best Buy do? With that in mind, I am appointing a diverse group (by demography and level in the company) to challenge one another and, ultimately, our senior leadership team and Board of Directors, with substantive, enduring ways we can address the inequities and injustices to which all of us bear witness every day.

In many ways, we have engaged in these issues for years. We have long been focused on the opportunity gap and its companion, the digital divide. More than a decade ago we began building a national network of what we call Teen Tech Centers, places where teens from disinvested communities are exposed to and trained on a range of technology that, we now know, can make a critical difference in helping them find success in post-secondary education or the job market.

We are looking to create more than 100 of these centers, open year-round and typically hosting hundreds of young people who begin in middle school and leave when they graduate high school. We do not do this alone, of course, as our employees, vendor partners and dozens of nonprofits are actively engaged in bringing this mission to life.

Additionally, we have brought our resources to bear on the issue of remote learning. In our home state of Minnesota, we helped found a public-private effort to provide computers and internet access to hundreds of thousands of youth from disinvested communities who have neither. Without this technology, learning from home, should it be necessary this fall and winter, would be impossible, widening both the digital divide and opportunity gap.

This effort is reflective of our broader view that we must continue to be an important player in the communities we are a part of, especially those hardest hit. This includes continuing to serve the neighborhoods in which our stores were damaged.

As for those who rely on us the most — our employees — we continue to focus on their safety. Just as we did in response to the pandemic, we closed some stores around the country when we felt the risk was too high. Some remain closed, and any affected employee will be paid for their time. As always, no one is compelled to come back to work if they feel uncomfortable.

Neighborhoods across America have felt the heat of flames lit by those who would do only harm, and still others have felt the fear that comes from not knowing where that harm may go next. But those fires will be extinguished, and the damage will be repaired. What remains, however, are the indelible images of George Floyd and the many who came before him. It is in their name that we embrace the fight for equality and justice as a common cause, one we all fight — and solve — together.

Thank you,

Corie Barry
Chief Executive Officer, Best Buy

They tried to kill us with a forklift!

27 posted on 06/03/2020 7:57:29 AM PDT by Dr.Deth
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