After Los Angeles Airport Shooting, No Easy Answers on Security Strategies – New York Timesby wpjljron
Tuesday, November 5th, 2013.After Los Angeles Airport Shooting, No Easy Answers on Security Strategies – New York Times“It wasn’t our turn this time,” said Mr. Holl, who oversees security at Reagan National and Dulles International airports. “Our turn could be next or it could be never.” “We believe this could happen any time,” he later added. The shooting last week at a security checkpoint at Los Angeles International Airport that left one […]
“It wasn’t our turn this time,” said Mr. Holl, who oversees security at Reagan National and Dulles International airports. “Our turn could be next or it could be never.”
Extremists Face Condemnation After Capitol Attack
January 28, 2021
FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2021, Jake Angeli, a QAnon conspiracy supporter, is confronted by U.S. Capitol Police officers outside the Senate Chamber inside the Capitol in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)
Share
share
The URL has been copied to your clipboard
0:00
0:06:34
0:00
They include when right-wing extremists occupied a federal bird
sanctuary in Oregon in 2016. In 1992, there was a conflict between white separatists and federal agents in Ruby Ridge, Idaho. And in 1995, extremist Timothy McVeigh bombed a federal building in Oklahoma City and killed 168 people.
But the attack by rioters on the U.S. Capitol targeted the heart of American government. It also brought together large numbers of people who belong to extremist groups, giving them the chance to establish links to each other.
The takeover in 2016 by right-wing extremists of a federal bird sanctuary in Oregon. A standoff in 1992 between white separatists and federal agents in Ruby Ridge, Idaho. The 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people. Right-wing extremism has previously played out for the most part in isolated pockets of America and in its smaller cities. The deadly assault by rioters on the U.S. Capitol, in contrast, targeted the very heart of government. And it brought
Mary McCord, a former acting U.S. assistant attorney general for national security, said the climate for the insurrection had been building throughout the Trump presidency