Friday, October 23, 2020

A list. How are teenagers getting a cache of guns?

This is at least the second young man intent on killing people, including those in leadership in the country. They are recruited by White Supremacists online. There need to be changes in the USA to limit this type of recruitment regardless of where in our society, online or in school parking lots. The recruitment of young men into violent hate groups has to end. 

Dylann Roof was also a young man of 21 years old when he massacred church members while studying the Bible.

...White supremacists, (click here) particularly those in the organized portions of the white supremacist movement, engage in a wide variety of activities. These range from protests and demonstrations against things or people they dislike, to attempts to spread their messages and even recruit new adherents, to networking and social events. In addition, white supremacists from both the organized and unorganized sections of the white supremacist movement may engage in criminal activity that can range from minor hate crimes to major plots or acts of terrorism, as well as a wide range of non-ideological criminal activity as well....

It isn't the Boy Scouts. These young men are recruited with the understanding being a member is about hate and violence. There is no reason to afford them the First Amendment. The First Amendment rights in the USA is used to communicate, assemble and their Second Amendment rights are used to arm and plan violence against unwitting citizens and students. Why is this allowed? We are protecting nothing and providing a platform of hate and violence. There should be raids on members for the reason Alexander Treisman was allowed to plan the deaths of Americans.

October 23, 2020
By Tim Stelloh

A teenager who was arrested in North Carolina (click here) on child pornography charges this year had a van full of guns and drove within 4 miles of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's home with a checklist to "execute" him, authorities alleged.

The allegations against Alexander Treisman, 19, were documented in a detention order filed this month in U.S. District Court in Durham, North Carolina.

Treisman's white van was reported abandoned in the parking lot of a bank in Kannapolis, northeast of Charlotte, on May 28. Inside, responding officers found four rifles, including an AR-style Sig Sauer, a 9 mm handgun and $500,000 in cash that was believed to be his inheritance, the order states.

Two more handguns were later found hidden in Treisman's Honda, according to the documents.

Inside his van, police also found drawings of swastikas and planes crashing into buildings, as well as books about survival, bomb-making and Islam, the documents say....