My high school economics teacher @ZehnerMr used to tell a story about one of his buddies who was an executive at a tech company that saw massive growth (50x increase in share price in a few months) during the dot-com bubble. The company will remain unnamed.
He says the day the bubble burst, a bunch of friends were all on a trip (Vegas, I think?) and they were making this guy pay for everything because he was a multi-millionaire (on paper). But as the day went on, and the stock cratered, the guy lost all the money he thought he had.
Every year, Mr. Zehner would tell this story and then being in his friend to talk about his career—and invariably get clowned by a bunch of high-schoolers about something that happened in Vegas 15 years prior, which I'm sure was part of the appeal for Mr. Zehner.
"What I did not realize was all of the national conversation about states like Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, was seen as casting doubt on the validity of votes coming out of predominantly Black communities like Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Detroit." tulsaworld.com/news/local/gov…
This was, of course, noted by many in the media and elsewhere in the wake of Trump's fraud claims, and earlier as well. Here's USA Today, Dec. 1:
Now this is a STATEMENT from Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks.
It starts off "I defend my honor and reputation against scurrilous, George Orwellian, 1984, Socialist Democrats Politics of Personal Destruction," and only gets better.
"In six days we have opened over 150 casefiles, and that's just the tip of the iceberg," says Steven D'Antuono, FBI Washington Field Office assistant director in charge.
"Even if you've left DC, agents from our local field offices will be knocking at your door, if you were involved in the activity at the Capitol."
"We are going to have, I believe, hundreds of criminal cases," says acting US Attorney for DC Michael Sherwin. "This is going to be a long-term investigation."
"The D.C. contingent was flabbergasted to hear a top Army official say that he could not recommend that his boss, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, approve the request." washingtonpost.com/politics/sund-…
The pipe bombs have been massively underemphasized so far, and I hope we get more answers about them soon, because they seem to have played a key role in the early stages of the sacking.
Apparently Irving and Stenger both declined to participate in this article, but Sund's account raises a lot of questions they both need to answer.
For that matter, Sund needs to answer a lot of questions too, not just in a Post exclusive but on camera in front of a press room.
The lack of preparation is astounding. This is how the FBI found out what was happening? Second-hand from a former DOJ lawyer who happened to have previously worked at the same law firm as a McConnell staffer?
Every few grafs there's a moment like this where, as bad as reality was, you can see how something much worse was barely avoided.
Seeing how the one officer responded to an attempted incursion into the Speaker's Lobby, it's not hard to imagine how this situation could have gone.