Disaster House passes $1.9 billion Capitol security measure creating permanent National Guard force - No more peasant uprisings!

The House on Thursday narrowly passed a nearly $2 billion spending package to bolster security in the Capitol in the wake of the destructive and deadly Jan. 6 riot.

Most Republicans opposed the measure, which passed 213-212, with three Democratic members voting "present" and three opposing the bill. GOP lawmakers cited duplicative spending and objected to a provision that adds the National Guard to the Capitol security force.

It passed a day after Democrats and 35 Republicans voted to create a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 riot.

“This bill is a first step toward having more security for the building that lodges the legislative branch of government,” Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat, said.

The Capitol perimeter has been protected by an 8-foot fence since shortly after Jan. 6. That day, hundreds of angry protesters supporting then-President Donald Trump pushed their way into the building, smashing doors and windows and injuring overwhelmed police officers in a quest to track down lawmakers voting to certify Joe Biden the winner of the presidential election.

Since that day, thousands of National Guard troops have been stationed on the campus for additional protection.

The measure lawmakers passed on Friday aims to replace the permanent fence and the daily presence of the National Guard with improved security and infrastructure that would make the Capitol more resistant to a Jan. 6-style attack.

The House vote was delayed. Democrats control a bare majority, and several liberal lawmakers objected to parts of the bill. Democratic leaders needed the time to twist arms within their own caucus since it appeared Republicans would vote against the bill and leave passage in jeopardy.

The measure would dedicate $529 million to harden the Capitol with stronger doors and windows as well as new screening vestibules for police. It would fund retractable or "pop-up" fencing that could be deployed quickly in the event of another riot.

The measure also includes more than $10 million for police equipment, including body cameras and riot gear, which officers said was lacking on the day of the riots and left them underequipped to fend off the rioters.

A provision in the measure would provide all officers with body cameras but would exclude those on protective detail for lawmakers, including the leadership.

Republicans objected to multiple spending provisions in the bill, among them $200 million to establish a “quick reaction force” within the D.C. National Guard that could be deployed to augment the Capitol Police if the campus came under threat.

At one point, there were 25,000 National Guard troops saturating the Capitol complex after Jan. 6. Only about 2,300 remain, and they are scheduled to leave the campus on May 23.

The top Republicans on both the Senate and House Armed Services panels said they object to employing the D.C. National Guard as a permanent part of the Capitol Security force, even if only for emergency use.

“Security of the Capitol Complex must remain the responsibility of federal civilian law enforcement,” House Armed Services Committee ranking member Mike Rogers, of Alabama, and Senate Armed Services Committee ranking member James Inhofe, of Oklahoma, said in a statement. “Use of the uniformed military in D.C. and the Capitol Complex is subject to complex statutory restrictions, and for good reason. We cannot and should not militarize the security of the Capitol Complex.”

The objections could complicate passage in the Senate, where 10 Republican senators must vote with all Democrats to advance the measure.

The measure would include $21.5 million for lawmaker security, including providing security for travel and in their districts.

Rep. Rodney Davis, of Illinois, warned the money could be used for security upgrades at the homes of lawmakers and could duplicate protections that had already been added for many members who felt threatened after Jan. 6.

“I have a feeling some of our constituents wouldn't be happy with members of Congress being able to use tax dollars to make improvements that could increase the value of their homes in the name of security,” said Davis, the top Republican on the House Administration Committee.

The debate Friday included emotional testimony from lawmakers who feared for their lives that day. Lawmakers were in the chamber debating the certification of the election when the protesters stormed the building.

Members were told to “hit the floor” and don gas masks before police ushered them to a secure location.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the author of the bill and chairwoman of the House Appropriations Committee, delivered an emotional closing argument, recalling how the chamber doors were shattered by the rioters and held shut by furniture. She called her husband during the melee, fearing it would be a final goodbye.

“This bill is not about politics, it’s not about settling scores,” the Connecticut Democrat said. “It’s about ensuring that every person who comes onto the Capitol grounds is safe and is protected. The funding is not optional, and this vote is not a show vote. It’s about protecting the seat of Our Democracy and the men, women, and the young people who work here.”

 
The DC Guard and the Army already have forces for civil defense, including (I assume) quick deployment. How will this dedicated Capitol QRF work? Will it exist in addition to existing forces, or will it be taken out of them? Will it be housed in the Capitol, or will they build barracks for it? If the President doesn't deploy them, will it answer the beck and call of the legislature? We saw Pelosi reviewing the troops a few months ago, and there were rumors Congressional Democrats wanted a veto over nuclear command-and-control. I'm used to Democrats torturing the Constitution into saying whatever they want it to say, but these intrusions on the President's commander-in-chief power are very strange, since they theoretically belong to the same party. I guess they will never be satisfied until they have arrogated to themselves every power they are forbidden, just as they are endeavoring to take every right that is protected.
 
This move just shows how scared the left is of us. They fear us. They shit themselves when a few qanon losers invaded their house of holies.

Do these guys still have no ammo? If so, all of this is for show.
Biden literally just created his own praetorian guard and morons on Twitter think Drumpf is the fascist.
"you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you" - Nietzsche
 
Boomers kinda flop around the stairs and like five of them die from heart attacks : A BILLION DOLLARS ARE NEEDED TO FIGHT

Nonstop race riots cause countless deaths and burn down chucks of the city: Well, I don't live there so who gives a fuck lol
 
Without looking into it at all, I would assume that most of the funds are for generic security features and the people to maintain them. More cameras, maybe more physical barriers of some sort, stronger windows?
Either way, it's amazing how ruffled their feathers still are over Jan 6. They really are afraid of the masses which is a red flag on its own.

Friendly reminder for anyone who hasn't been: DC is a shithole rampant with crime.
 
I really want to go down there and check things out.

Does this mean everyone who a major power player is holed up in dc?

Thats a dumb move
 
I wonder
DC is a shithole rampant with crime
There have been more and more and more homeless people and encampments popping up over the last decade. Like most major cities, no one ever does anything about this. I would expect this in California, but it really says something rotten about the whole country if that is how our Capitol is. I can only figure that leaders want things this way. Why else would they let it keep getting worse.

The hot take argument always blames muh capitalism, but until you spend some time amongst those people, you see that they either want to live that way or they have little to zero capability of being productive in an advanced society.
 
I really want to go down there and check things out.

Does this mean everyone who a major power player is holed up in dc?

Thats a dumb move
There are different kinds of power, and they have multiple nuclei. The players in DC have the power to tax, the power to command the military, and the power to throw the Justice Department at their enemies. Their immediate subordinates spill out of DC into the greater DMV area; the DOD and the Intelligence Community are mostly outside the beltway.

The power of foreign relations, infrastructure, and monetary policy is divided between the government and the corporations, except when they coalesce at elite get-togethers. The corporations keep liaisons in and around DC, but their headquarters are usually elsewhere.

On the government side, as you get away from the head sheds into the people who actually do things, you find those scattered throughout the United States. But very few of the doers are actual power players. It's like the division between upper class and elite: The upper class is subject to their employers' expectations, the watchful eye of Johnny Law, etc., and they work hard to satisfy these masters; the elite are subject only to the approval of other elite, they pay others to create the illusion that they are productive, law-abiding persons.
 
There are different kinds of power, and they have multiple nuclei. The players in DC have the power to tax, the power to command the military, and the power to throw the Justice Department at their enemies. Their immediate subordinates spill out of DC into the greater DMV area; the DOD and the Intelligence Community are mostly outside the beltway.

The power of foreign relations, infrastructure, and monetary policy is divided between the government and the corporations, except when they coalesce at elite get-togethers. The corporations keep liaisons in and around DC, but their headquarters are usually elsewhere.

On the government side, as you get away from the head sheds into the people who actually do things, you find those scattered throughout the United States. But very few of the doers are actual power players. It's like the division between upper class and elite: The upper class is subject to their employers' expectations, the watchful eye of Johnny Law, etc., and they work hard to satisfy these masters; the elite are subject only to the approval of other elite, they pay others to create the illusion that they are productive, law-abiding persons.
No I am saying having many important people in one spot is dumb. All it would take is one nuke.
 
I wonder

There have been more and more and more homeless people and encampments popping up over the last decade. Like most major cities, no one ever does anything about this. I would expect this in California, but it really says something rotten about the whole country if that is how our Capitol is. I can only figure that leaders want things this way. Why else would they let it keep getting worse.

The hot take argument always blames muh capitalism, but until you spend some time amongst those people, you see that they either want to live that way or they have little to zero capability of being productive in an advanced society.
What I'm curious to see if the Dems are paranoid enough that you could convince them that "far-right insurrectionists" are actually disguising themselves as hobos in DC and have shopping carts full of Russian-supplied weapons designed to look like copper pipping or scrap metal. I give them 2-3 years before they believe this.
 
This move just shows how scared the left is of us. They fear us. They shit themselves when a few qanon losers invaded their house of holies.

Do these guys still have no ammo? If so, all of this is for show.

"you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you" - Nietzsche
Bullshit, they are armed. They just do not want us to be. War is now and we have to admit it.
 
What I'm curious to see if the Dems are paranoid enough that you could convince them that "far-right insurrectionists" are actually disguising themselves as hobos in DC and have shopping carts full of Russian-supplied weapons designed to look like copper pipping or scrap metal. I give them 2-3 years before they believe this.
i have no idea how to make this into a convincing viral meme. It would work and worth a shot
 
In another twist of the worst timeline: we get praetorian guards, but they're fat amerimutts. Really does seem like we've skipped all the cool stuff between the fall of the republic and the fall of the empire.
They're a bunch of lardos. If they had to run, they'd get heart attacks, so maybe they'll do. They better have the robo soldiers ready in time for Pres Kamala.
 

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The people in charge sat down in a room. "How can we use this event to EXTRACT VALUE?" they said. "We must loot before there's nothing left!" they whispered urgently to each other.
 
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