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" ... Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund resigned from his post Thursday after lawmakers of both parties expressed fury with the agency’s handling of the pro-Trump riots that saw insurrectionists storm the Capitol Building. ... "
" ... His death quickly became one of many symbols that news outlets and prominent Democrats fixated on by why of (correctly) speaking out about how awful the insurrectionists’ actions were. Only ... the original narrative surrounding his death may not actually told the correct story of how Sicknick died. ... "
" ... National Guard members muster at the Capitol building, as heightened security measures are ... [+] implemented nearly a week after pro-Trump insurrectionists breached the security of the Capitol while Congress voted to certify the 2020 election. ... "
" ... Several of the Capitol police who were violently attacked by insurrectionists were white males. In fact, most of the individuals who have been identified as targets are also white males. This suggests that race, ethnicity, gender, nor partisanship played a significant role in those who were targeted. Granted, many of the groups involved in the riot have been linked to promoting white supremacist and xenophobic rhetoric, but these groups seem to be lashing out against anyone who stands in the way of their mission to protect whiteness and white supremacy in America. This is not and should not just be a minority issue. It is an America issues and can have devastating and even deadly consequences for all Americans. ... "
" ... There are many calls for healing and hopes for healing as a new administration begins. But as many people are also warning, the forces of hatred that have been unleashed won’t end so abruptly. Energy is neither created nor destroyed and a great deal of rage is now running through our society, inciting more rage from those outraged by the insurrectionists. We as leaders—meaning anyone committed to making a positive difference, a more perfect union, a better world—have work to do. The nature of that work in our own polarized communities and businesses is not to meet outrage with more outrage or punish people for believing differently than we do; those are the tools of the autocrat. Rather the work is to lead from a place of unity, interbeing—the other side of the human paradox—which gives leadership a quality that is, in a word, disarming. ... "