one to each side of the building and one closest to the lobby, i jump up and i m starting to film now, i know something bad is going on. i see this police officer race up the steps, eight steps and approaching the lobby and gunfire just erupts, rifle fire, glass flying, he takes a shot to the chest that his bullet-proof vest obviously caught. he goes and takes cover behind a concrete pillar. a few other officers are with him and coming up from both sides and more gunfire going off. i didn t witness it, i saw later in my video, another officer had been injured very badly, it was horrible to witness an officer
community, they re filming it. they re making sure that there is propaganda value, so when they signal back to their communities online, in order to keep people engaged by the way, they re also getting cryptocurrency and other money in order to continue to do this type of harassment. extremism, antisemitism and bigotry today is frankly a form of entertainment, and they have ways to make sure that people are constantly engaged. that s why this is such a serious threat. that s why not only the jewish community, the lgbtq community and others feel vulnerable because accountability is far behind our ability to communicate. there is not a far leap from during antisemitic flyers to actually engaging in physical violence. what is the day of hate that chicago police are warning about? so a couple of weeks ago at atl, we identified extremists want to talk about choose this day tomorrow to do their flyering, their bantering, their protests to target the jewish community, in particular. i w
this idea that the flyers that we were talking about, the idea that younger people that groups of people are going around and during antisemitic flyers into people s front yards, at them, in cities across the country and then trying to grow their online followers do the imagery of these antisemitic acts of terror, what does that tell you about society and the way in which their seasons to be some sick enjoyment in terms of terrorism people? we re in a selfie culture. frankly, that culture also impacts and animates the way the extremists operate. when you talk about fires being put on lance of peoples homes our banners been chopped off of freeways or harassment of people like we saw a couple of days ago not too far from the studios here at a theater, showing a play about antisemitism, what they re doing is not just targeting a community, they re filming it.
about, that groups of people are going around and throwing anti-semitic flyers into peoples front yards, you know, at them in cities across this country and trying to grow their online followers through the imagery of these anti-semitic acts of terror really, what what does that tell you about society and the way in which there seems to be some sick enjoyment in terms of terrorizing people? we re in a selfie culture. when you talk about flyers being put on peoples homes or banners being dropped off freeways or harassment of people in the street like we saw not too far away a couple days ago at a theater a showing of a play about anti-semitism, what they re doing is not just targeting a community, they re filming it. they re making sure there s prop