A seminarian and associate pastor wearing a Black Lives Matter t-shirt was mistaken for an antifa flag-burner at Gettysburg National Park. Armed militia surrounded him. Federal agents escorted him out for his own safety as onlookers changed "USA!" "USA!" https://t.co/brt5XNgysA
— Shawn Boburg (@ShawnBoburg) July 5, 2020
A friend who works for a police department in Ohio said they received numerous calls today to investigate "Antifa dust" on the cars and driveways.
— Maggie Downs (@downsanddirty) June 23, 2020
It's pollen.
And now I can't stop laughing about people calling the police on trees.
Fact Checker: Who caused the violence at protests? It wasn’t antifa. https://t.co/owGf0qcaRy
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) June 22, 2020
This is important.
— The Hoarse Whisperer (@HoarseWisperer) June 19, 2020
The Trump Admin’s own analysis suggests violent extremists (like the Boogaloo Bois) – not Antifa – pose the greatest risk of violence
The Trump Campaign is increasingly using Nazi-esque rhetoric to instead blame “Antifa”
1/https://t.co/zS7Nu78qKj
SCOOP:
— Greg Sargent (@ThePlumLineGS) June 19, 2020
An internal Department of Homeland Security assessment of threats to law enforcement makes no mention of "Antifa."
It says "overall protest-related violence" has been "decreasing significantly."
Yet Trump's Antifa nonsense continues.
New piece:https://t.co/VL5fh6PHvb