It doesn't change anything. I showed by virtue of the screenshot that the folks passing through Statuary Hall weren't a bunch of peaceful tourists simply, reverently visiting the Capitol. But then we've all known that all along. Some are just denying it.
I trust that I shan't need to do so with you again in the future.
Let's play back he tape.
:09 The two officers walk toward the Senate side exit of Statuary Hall. They appear to be on cell phones.
:45 Several people have tried interacting with the officers, but they appear to be ignoring them.
1:00 They briefly exit into the Senate side.
1:10 They return and head to the Rotunda side exit and off camera.
2:34 The feed cuts to outside.
I don't know where the supposed officers were that were making sure everyone stayed between the ropes. For one thing, gas mask guy and 5 other people are outside the ropes. While the police are standing by and not making them get within the ropes.
Your narrative just doesn't match reality.
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This is the typical, rhetorical dishonesty that I've come to expect from insurrectionist apologists. Not every insurrectionist who made their way to the Capitol grounds was violent (see Ray Epps). Not every insurrectionist who made their way into the Capitol was violent (see these folks). The violent ones were the ones beating, spraying, spearing, tazing and stomping police officers clearing a path for these insurrectionists to enter.
On Jan. 6, 2021, about 140 police officers were assaulted during the Capitol riot, and 326 participants -- more than 100 armed with weapons -- have been charged. But Fox News commentator Tucker Carlson has used recently released video from that day to misleadingly minimize the violence at the...
www.factcheck.org
One of the officers seen walking with Chansley, Capitol Police Officer Keith Robishaw, who has red hair and was wearing glasses and a light blue face mask, explained his thinking in the 2021 HBO documentary “
Four Hours at the Capitol.”
In one of his first encounters with a group of rowdy protesters, including Chansley, who was armed with a spear affixed with an American flag, Robishaw said he knew he and his fellow officers had to try to get them to leave peacefully.
“We were standing on that line, and there was the six of us. Meeting violence with violence at this time would not be safe for me and my fellow officers,” Robishaw said about 36 minutes into the film. “The sheer number of them compared to us, I knew in my head there was no way that we could all get physical with them, so I took it upon myself to try and talk to them.”
“No attacking, no assault, remain calm,” Robishaw told the men.
Later, when Chansley had made his way to the Senate floor, Robishaw saw him and followed him inside, by himself, and tried to get Chansley and others already in the chamber to leave.
“I walk in behind him, and that’s when I realized I was alone now. I was by myself,” Robishaw told the documentarians. “I was like, ‘I can’t do anything.’ You know? I can only do is, you know, shout orders, and if they listen, great, if they don’t, I can’t force them. I’m all by myself.”
In
video filmed by a New Yorker reporter, Robishaw is shown saying to the men: “Any chance I could get you guys to leave the Senate wing?” At one point, a protester says, “You should be stopping us.” Robishaw
responds that he is outnumbered.
According to court documents, Chansley and others did not exit the chamber
until additional law enforcement officers arrived to back up Robishaw.