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State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position."

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State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position." - Hallo friend WELCOME TO AMERICA, In the article you read this time with the title State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position.", we have prepared well for this article you read and download the information therein. hopefully fill posts Article AMERICA, Article CULTURAL, Article ECONOMIC, Article POLITICAL, Article SECURITY, Article SOCCER, Article SOCIAL, we write this you can understand. Well, happy reading.

Title : State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position."
link : State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position."

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State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position."

Said Jessa Nicholson Goetz, lawyer for the defendant Kerida O'Reilly, quoted in  "State senator who was battered during 2020 protest said he came Downtown to a 'hornet's nest'" (Wisconsin State Journal).
Carpenter testified he did not know that [the protesters had forbidden photography], but said he considers himself an ally of the Black Lives Matter movement. He paused to take a picture before walking from his car to his Capitol office, he said, not realizing his phone was set to shoot video. His 11-second video shows [defendant Kerida] O’Reilly and [former co-defendant Samatha] Hamer charging toward him before his phone is jostled away.... 

That's what happens when you attack someone who's shooting video: There's video of your attack. And what does it matter that they had their own anti-photography rule or that Carpenter would have followed their rule if he'd only known about it?  

The attack on Carpenter happened on June 24, 2020, the night protesters tore down the Capitol Square statues of "Forward" and Hans Christian Heg, that is, the night they tore down their own reputation. 

We're told that "as a crowd closed in on him during a midnight protest over police brutality last year, just before some in the group began to hit and kick him," Carpenter said he thought "Holy cannoli, what’s going to happen?" That's the sort of Wisconsin form of expression that people outside of Wisconsin find folksy and charming, but, as Carpenter went on to elaborate, what he thought was that he would be killed and he continues to suffer from "a lot of anxiety and depression."

There's also this enigmatic Carpenter quote: "It’s created a lot of political difficulties that weren’t appreciated." I'll just guess that means he really, really wanted the image of ally and now, here he is, witness for the prosecution.



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Said Jessa Nicholson Goetz, lawyer for the defendant Kerida O'Reilly, quoted in  "State senator who was battered during 2020 protest said he came Downtown to a 'hornet's nest'" (Wisconsin State Journal).
Carpenter testified he did not know that [the protesters had forbidden photography], but said he considers himself an ally of the Black Lives Matter movement. He paused to take a picture before walking from his car to his Capitol office, he said, not realizing his phone was set to shoot video. His 11-second video shows [defendant Kerida] O’Reilly and [former co-defendant Samatha] Hamer charging toward him before his phone is jostled away.... 

That's what happens when you attack someone who's shooting video: There's video of your attack. And what does it matter that they had their own anti-photography rule or that Carpenter would have followed their rule if he'd only known about it?  

The attack on Carpenter happened on June 24, 2020, the night protesters tore down the Capitol Square statues of "Forward" and Hans Christian Heg, that is, the night they tore down their own reputation. 

We're told that "as a crowd closed in on him during a midnight protest over police brutality last year, just before some in the group began to hit and kick him," Carpenter said he thought "Holy cannoli, what’s going to happen?" That's the sort of Wisconsin form of expression that people outside of Wisconsin find folksy and charming, but, as Carpenter went on to elaborate, what he thought was that he would be killed and he continues to suffer from "a lot of anxiety and depression."

There's also this enigmatic Carpenter quote: "It’s created a lot of political difficulties that weren’t appreciated." I'll just guess that means he really, really wanted the image of ally and now, here he is, witness for the prosecution.





Thus articles State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position."

that is all articles State Sen. Tim Carpenter "wasn’t acting like an ally. He was filming them and frightening" the protesters, and now "we’re talking about a white man who holds a powerful position." This time, hopefully can provide benefits to all of you. Okay, see you in another article posting.

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