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Why resithst temptation? There will always be more.
Daffy Duck
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I Like to Watch | Blonde (2022)
by Don Hall
“Blonde” is based on the Joyce Carol Oates novel of the same name and loosely recreates the many heartbreaks and tragedies of Monroe’s life and career, from her abusive mother to various sexual assaults in Hollywood. While Ana de Armas’ performance has received universal acclaim, the film itself has ignited outrage for its non-stop harassment, exploitation and traumatization of Monroe.
“I had the extreme misfortune of watching ‘Blonde’ on Netflix last night and let me tell you that movie is so anti-abortion, so sexist, so exploitative,” added Steph Herold, an abortion researcher at the University of California, San Francisco. “Cannot recommend it LESS. Do not watch. The abortion scenes in particular are terrible, but so is the whole entire movie.”
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I remember, decades ago, hanging out at one of Kevin Colby's infamous improv parties on Lill St. in Chicago. He lived with roommates and the house was pretty huge with several rooms and a back porch. The parties were an opportunity for those in the earlier stages of learning improv comedy at Second City and ImprovOlympic to congregate, drink excessive amounts of alcohol, smoke weed, hook up, and generally bitch about the programs they were participating in. It was at one these parties that the idea of starting my own theater company was spawned.
At one of these soirees, I found myself cornered by a pretty and young woman who was looking for someone to commiserate with about her terrible life. She was one of those students who was marginally talented but awkwardly attractive and often found crying in a corner about something. I sat down, unaware of the pit of self pity and imagined pain I was about to endure. She began talking about her life—the bad father, the bad first boyfriend, the teachers who didn't understand her, the bosses she couldn't appease—it went on and on. This was one miserable girl and I found myself, out of basic respect and an adherence to simple manners, listening and nodding, drinking my beer, and wanting to chew my leg off rather than remained trapped in the litany of personal tragedies.
That's what watching Blonde felt like.
It's a strange piece of art that can boast a brilliant actress doing a dead on impersonation of an iconic celebrity, gorgeous cinematography, interesting and artistic camera choices, great performances by actors in peripheral roles, all based on a truly interesting and celebrated novel, and still be as dull as sitting next to a perpetually depressed inebriated misery junkie.
The film isn't sexist (any more than any film made about a woman living in 50's Hollywood). It isn't any more exploitative than any other fictionalized biopic fantasy. It certainly isn't anti-abortion despite the odd choice of having the fictionalized Marilyn having conversations with her fetus. Likewise, it really doesn't deserve the NC-17 demarcation as I've seen more graphic sex and tits in a teen slasher film. Lots of tits, no dicks, and two bizarre shots from inside her vagina but c'mon. What it is is a one-note yawn.
Writer/director Andrew Dominick read the Oates novel and gleaned from its 738 pages that Monroe/Baker had serious daddy issues, was trapped in a construct created by Hollywood moguls, was a pawn by rapists and fetishizers, and was really, really fucking sad all the time. She is thus flattened out into a two-dimensional caricature of misery. In Dominick's telling Monroe called every man in her life "Daddy," looked perpetually as if she was on the verge of an emotional breakdown, and clinically insane enough to hear voices in her head all the time. According to Blonde Marilyn Monroe was easily the most tragic figure of tragic figures and he wants you to know every moment of tragedy ad nauseam.
This creates two issues with the film. First, given how desperately uneducated we are today when it comes to any sort of history and the prevalence of inaccurate and semi-fictionalized versions of history we have shoved in our faces, the films that dabble in historical fiction are often seen as historical record, much like the aliens in Galaxy Quest believed that the fictional crew of a 60's television series were our real heroes. This gives rise to grown people, adults, buying into the fictionalized accounts of Braveheart, JFK, Malcolm X, Lincoln, Hamilton, The Favourite, J. Edgar, and most recently The Woman King.
NOTE: My mom and I caught a matinee of that last one with a brilliant performance by, well, fucking everyone involved. Despite the historical inaccuracies, it's a fantastic story with a fantastic script, fantastic direction, and Viola Davis is an absolute force to be reckoned with. Go see it and then look up the real history.
Our collective understanding and agreement over our history, whether it be the tales of wars and politicians, activists and achievers of progress, or the very mythologies of our popular culture is key to a sense of unity in society. Not to overstate it but our ability to fact find and comprehend the truth of such stories is the thread the binds us. Blonde is a creative, fictional portrait of Monroe. Many younger viewers, the viewers who do not either have the time or inclination to read about the facts in her life, will inevitably assume this fiction to be true. I've read Oates' novel. I've also read Legend: The Life and Death of Marilyn Monroe as well as Icon: The Life, Times, and Films of Marilyn Monroe Volume 1 1926 to 1956 and I'm not even close to being a Monroe super fan. Most of those catapulting Blonde to number one status on Netflix haven't even heard of these books let alone understand the film is based on a fictional account.
The second issue, no matter how damn good de Armas is in her extraordinary recreation of Monroe, limiting her character to merely the moments of deep distress and depression, a litany of Job-like scenarios, betrays her performance. The entire catalog of scenes she is required to perform squashes the possibility of showing anything but a victim. The effect would be the same if Baz Luhrmann's Elvis only walked through Presley's shittiest moments in his life, ended with him on the toilet, and never showed him perform.
The message Dominick communicates is clear: Monroe is cast as the eternal victim. No matter how hard anyone’s life may be, the acquiescence to perpetual victimhood is a drag to watch. We see her happy for only brief seconds before something shattering comes down and, instead of rage or curiosity or self reflection we receive a blank, sad, confused stare. There is a scene, in the middle of the film. Adrien Brody’s Arthur Miller has promised to never write about her. She is in his office, gazing at his notes and the effluvia of living with a legendary writer and suddenly she sees, on the typewriter, a four or five line transcipt of a conversation the two had earlier. The camera goes to her face. Nothing. No fury. No wonder. No moment of humanity. Just sad and vacant.
Blonde instead drags Norma Jean through her horrible childhood, her horrible rape at the hands of a studio executive, her sordid threesome with the sons of Charlie Chaplin and Edward G. Robinson, her abortion, her failed marriage to Joe DiMaggio, her failed marriage to Arthur Miller, her drug addiction, her tantrums on set, her miscarriage, her dismissive and brutal treatment by JFK, and her death. All while listening to her converse with her fetus and her non-existent father.
All very much like listening to a drunk improviser hold court about how awful her life has been for two and a half hours or attending a lesbian poetry slam and hearing poem after poem about break ups and terrible ex-girlfriends. I mean, Jesus Christ, we can't appreciate the horrors of existence if they all blend together like a banal and mundane black parade.
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Boulder, Colorado shooting: Suspect faces 10 counts of murder, police say Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, of Arvada, near Denver, is accused of opening fire Monday afternoon at the King Soopers store in the university city of Boulder, killing people ranging in age from 20 to 65, authorities said. Police took the suspect into custody at the store Monday afternoon, less than an hour after panicked 911 callers told dispatchers of the killings unfolding there. Alissa, who at some point was shot in the leg, was in stable condition at a hospital Tuesday, and will be jailed after his treatment is finished, authorities said. The motive in the Boulder killings — one of several mass shootings in the US over the last week — isn’t immediately known, and the investigation will take a long time, authorities said. “I promise that all of us here will work tirelessly … to make sure that the killer is held absolutely and fully accountable for what he did,” Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said Tuesday at a news conference in Boulder. Police on Tuesday also released the names of those killed: Denny Stong, 20; Neven Stanisic, 23; Rikki Olds, 25; Tralona Bartkowiak, 49; Suzanne Fountain, 59; Teri Leiker, 51; Boulder police Officer Eric Talley, 51; Kevin Mahoney, 61; Lynn Murray, 62; Jody Waters, 65. Officers had exchanged gunfire with Alissa at the store, but it wasn’t clear who shot him, Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold said. The suspect has “lived most of his life in the United States,” Dougherty said Tuesday, without elaborating. The shootings in Boulder, home to the University of Colorado’s main campus nestled by the Rocky Mountains northwest of Denver, came less than a week after shootings at three spas in the Atlanta area left eight people dead. In the last week alone, the United States has seen at least seven shootings in which at least four people were injured or killed. Witnesses describe terror and panic Witnesses have described scenes of terror and panic at the supermarket Monday. Police said they were called there about gunfire around 2:40 p.m. MT Monday; the suspect was taken into custody at 3:28 p.m., Herold has said. A shooter had gunned down at least one person in the parking lot before going inside, according to Anna Haynes, a college student who was looking from her apartment window across the street. Haynes heard what turned out to be gunshots, and then looked outside and “saw a body in the middle of the parking lot. “ “I also saw the gunman himself holding a semiautomatic rifle,” Haynes, editor-in-chief of the University of Colorado’s CU Independent. “On his way to the entrance, had turned around and was shooting rapid-fire at one particular target. … And then he turned around, he entered the building through the handicap entrance. “And a few seconds later, I saw people running out of the building, I heard screaming, I heard people leaving in their cars, and it just evolved into chaos within just a couple of minutes.” Ryan Borowski told CNN he was grabbing a bag of chips and a soda when he heard the first shot and saw a terrified woman running toward him. By the third shot, he was running with her toward the back of the store. They and others gathered with employees in the back. “I saw a lot of very wide eyes. … The employees in the back of the house didn’t know what was going on, so we told them that there was a shooter, and they told us where the exit was,” he told CNN Tuesday. CNN affiliate KMGH’s helicopter recorded police leading several people away from the store — including a shirtless man being taken from the supermarket. The man had what appeared to be blood on his arm and right leg and his hands appeared to be cuffed behind him as two officers escorted him away. The man was taken away in an ambulance. Police didn’t immediately say whether that person was involved in the shooting. Police officer and a store manager among those killed The slain officer, Talley, was one of the first to respond to the scene, according to Herold. Talley had joined the Boulder police force in 2010, she said. “He was, by all accounts, one of the outstanding officers of the Boulder Police Department, and his life was cut far too short,” Dougherty said. Olds, 25, of Lafayette, was a front-end manager at the store, her uncle, Bob Olds, told CNN. She was a “strong, independent young woman” who was raised by her grandparents, Bob Olds said. “She was so energetic and charismatic and she was a shining light in this dark world,” he told CNN. What authorities say happened Boulder police tweeted about 2:49 p.m. (4:49 p.m. ET) that there was an “Active Shooter at the King Soopers on Table Mesa. AVOID THE AREA.” In scanner traffic, officers radioed that they were in a gunfight. They continued to report that they were being fired at with multiple rounds through at least 3:21 p.m. local time. Ambulances and multiple law enforcement agencies arrived at the store, which is part of a large shopping center with a two-story strip mall next door. “He’s armed with a rifle, our officers shot back and returned fire — we do not know where he is in the store,” an officer said, according to a transcript of the audio. One senior law enforcement source told CNN the weapon used in the shooting was an AR-15-style rifle. Steven McHugh said his son-in-law and two granddaughters were there when a gunman attacked. His son-in-law, Paul, was third in line for a Covid-19 vaccine and his seventh- and eighth-grade granddaughters were on the phone with their grandmother. On the other end of the phone, their grandmother heard at least eight shots ring out. The woman at the front of the line was shot, McHugh told CNN’s Don Lemon. Paul grabbed the girls and hurried them upstairs to take cover in a coat closet above the pharmacy, he said. The girls said they were afraid because the coats weren’t long enough to hide their feet. “The intensity, the awfulness is going to last for the rest of their lives,” he said. At one point, police were seen moving on the roof. McHugh told CNN affiliate KCNC that his relatives were evacuated via the roof. “They hid, ran upstairs, were hiding in a coat closet for the last hour,” McHugh told KCNC. “Half a dozen cops came in through the roof and got them and then told them, you know, ‘Stay quiet.'” Calls for action against gun violence On the heels of March 16’s three spa shootings in Atlanta, the latest attack stoked calls for action and expressions of fear. “This past weekend it was a house party in Philadelphia. And last week it was an armed attack on Asian American women in the Atlanta area,” former US Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona, who is a shooting survivor, said in a statement. “This is not normal, and it doesn’t have to be this way. It’s beyond time for our leaders to take action.” The tragedy in Colorado feels especially personal, Giffords said, considering how the shooting she survived outside a Tucson grocery store devastated her community. US Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colorado, also called for a national gun violence conversation and nonpartisan action. “It’s long past time for Congress to take meaningful action to keep deadly weapons out of the wrong hands,” he said. The National Rifle Association tweeted on Monday quoting the Constitution’s Second Amendment: “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.” King Sooper is owned by the Kroger company, which said the store will remain closed during the police investigation. “The entire Kroger family offers our thoughts, prayers and support to our associates, customers, and the first responders who so bravely responded to this tragic situation,” the company said via its verified Twitter account. Correction: An earlier version of this story misspelled victim Denny Stong’s last name based on information provided by the Boulder Police Department. CNN’s Konstantin Torpoin, Alisha Ebrahiumji, Steve Almasy, Paul P. Murphy, Melissa Gray, Keith Allen, Kelsie Smith, Deanna Hackney, Dianne Gallagher and Joe Sutton contributed to this report. Source link Orbem News #boulder #Colorado #counts #Faces #Murder #Police #shooting #Suspect
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Thank Economic Growth for Germanys Boring Elections
To reach gluemaker Delo Industrie Klebstoffe GmbH, you drive an hour from Munich, past villages with onion-domed churches and the Ammersee, a cobalt-blue lake with views of the Alps, before turning into offices nestled between a cornfield and a grove of beech treeshardly the kind of place youd expect to find a global leader in its industry.
Yet one of Delos adhesives is used in 80 percent of the worlds smart cards, and its customers are spread across Europe, the U.S., and Asia. That success is testament to Germanys commitment to globalismnow a dirty word in some countriesand helps explain a political puzzle: How, in 2017, can Europes biggest economy have a normal, even boring, election while crusading populists have upended the political order elsewhere? “Other countries havent had the stability weve enjoyed,” says Delo Managing Partner Sabine Herold. “Its a mistake to believe that you can save your castle by building more walls.”
Sabine Herold, managing partner at Delo Industrie Klebstoffe.
Photographer: Stefan Hobmaier for Bloomberg Businessweek
When Germans vote on Sept. 24, theyre likely to back the same pair of centrist parties that have run the country since World War II, selling pretty much the same policies and messages theyve advocated for decades. Neither side has made Trump-style appeals to restrict trade or pare back globalization. They havent even bashed the European Union. Chancellor Angela Merkel, the sensible shoes of global politics, is all but certain to win a fourth term by pledging to, well, keep things more or less the way they are. When Germans look at countries that have elected populists, they get scared back toward the political center, says Christina Tillmann, a political analyst at the Bertelsmann Institute, a think tank. And then theres the countrys history: “The whole appeal of a nationalist ideal,” Tillmann says, “just doesnt resonate very well here.”
Merkels longevity is doubtless due to her skills as a politician, but its also because most Germans recognize theyre globalizations winners. Germany has thousands of midsize, family-owned enterprises like Delowhat they call the spread across the country, distributing wealth rather than concentrating it in a few cities. And employees typically feel they have a share in a companys success. Delo, for instance, doesnt use any temporary staff, so everyone from janitors to research scientists is a full employee. Delos adhesives, which can top €3,000 ($3,600) for a container the size of a soda can, are all made at the companys factory outside Munich. And as a private company, Delo can prioritize long-term growthits sales have more than tripled in the past decadeover short-term profits. That glue for credit cards? It took seven years to develop. “A big company would have axed the project long ago,” says Herold, an engineer who in 1997 took over the company with her husband.
Successive German governments have nurtured the Mittelstand, which supplies the world with everything from tiny screws that penetrate concrete, to automated ovens for grilling 400 chickens at a time, to tunnel-boring machines as long as oil tankers. The sectors strength helped bring unemployment down to 5.7 percent in July, from almost 12 percent in 2005. Industry still accounts for more than a quarter of German jobs, a level not seen in the U.S. since 1984, the World Bank says. About 1,500 Mittelstand companies are leaders in their niches, vs. only about 300 in the U.S., says Carsten Linnemann, a lawmaker with Merkels Christian Democratic Union and head of the partys group that coordinates relations with the Mittelstand. “Most Germans know that they profit from trade,” he says.
Although the U.S. has also been a winner from globalization, the wealth has flowed mostly to the top, fostering resentment and the rise of figures such as Donald Trump. In Germany, where exports account for 46 percent of the economy, quadruple the U.S. level, stressing the benefits of globalization plays well with the electorate. A recent study by the Bertelsmann Institute found that calls to overthrow the political elite or erect trade barriers alienate German voters. Merkel isnt shy about her fondness for free trade, and she frequently praises the Mittelstand in campaign stops. On Sept. 1 she dropped in at the annual meeting of a lobbying group for the sector in Nuremberg. “The backbone of the economy is the Mittelstand, so thank you very much,” Merkel tells hundreds of delegates packed into the citys convention hall. “We must fight to ensure we keep our status as a great exporter, and that Made in Germany continues to mean something.”
World Bank
Germany, of course, isnt immune to populism and has an active neo-Nazi movement: Last year the interior ministry recorded more than 22,000 right-wing extremist crimes, the highest number on record. But no hard-right party has made it into the Bundestag since the 1950s. Thats likely to change this time around, with polls showing the populist Alternative for Germanyknown by the acronym AfDwill get about 10 percent of the vote in this months elections. The party is strongest in the formerly communist East, where the Mittelstand has shallower roots. Jobs are more scarce and salaries are about 30 percent below those in the West. Across Germany, income inequality is an increasingly hot topic, and long-suppressed nationalism is slowly rising.
In Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, a rural state on the Baltic Sea in the former German Democratic Republic, theres a sense of having been left behind after two decades of brain drain to the West. The AfD really took off after the 2015 refugee crisis, and last year it won 21 percent of the vote in the states elections, trailing only the Social Democrats (31 percent) and pushing Merkels CDU into third place, with 19 percent. Over a tankard of beer before a campaign event in Friedland, a two hours drive north of Berlin on an EU-funded autobahn, AfD candidate Enrico Komning insists his party is neither far right nor xenophobic, despite racist remarks from some leaders and a platform that dismisses Islam as un-German.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Social Democratic leader Martin Schulz at a televised debate in Berlin on Sept. 3, 2017.
Photographer: Herby Sachs/WDR/action press/REX/FEREX
Komning says that while the German economy is thriving, the benefits dont reach many of his supporters. For people who feel traditional parties dont represent them, “along comes the AfD, and we say: Well look after you,” he says. The party taps into national pride that Komning says has been wrongly stifled in the decades since the Nazi era. For most Germans, the memory of Hitlers rule still acts as an antidote to nationalist appeals. But Komning argues that “its wrong to focus on just these 12 years of National Socialism and ignore the good in the rest of German history.”
Komning defends a key AfD strategy: cranking up the heat on the current government in whatever way the party canan approach that came into sharp focus at a Merkel rally an hour further north, in the Hanseatic port of Greifswald. As Merkel makes her way to the podium in Fishmarket square, a plane flies low overhead trailing a blue banner that reads “Vote AfD.” When whistling AfD demonstrators interrupt her, Muttior “mother,” as the chancellor is often calledbreaks from her speech to mock the hecklers. “I dont think whistling will build Germanys future,” she says before returning to her speech. She promises to boost security and avoid a repeat of 2015, when a million-plus migrants crossed into Germanyher biggest point of vulnerability with voters. But mostly she talks about maintaining the countrys economic edge: improving technology in schools, shoring up infrastructure, and helping automakers develop new, cleaner engines.
The message resonates with Hans-Christian Schwieker, a 79-year-old vacationer from Cologne. Tucking into a bowl of hearty pea soup with bockwurst, he says hes not a big Merkel fan but nonetheless plans to vote for her. Sure, the campaign is boring. But thats as it should be, says Schwieker, who as a child in 1945 fled whats now Poland with his family. “Germany has experience with extremism,” he says. “We dont want change.”
Source: http://allofbeer.com/2017/10/26/thank-economic-growth-for-germanys-boring-elections/
from All of Beer https://allofbeer.wordpress.com/2017/10/26/thank-economic-growth-for-germanys-boring-elections/
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There's one thing about baldness, it's neat.
Elmer Fudd
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Boulder Colorado shooting: 10 dead in a mass shooting at a grocery store -- and another community's peace is shattered A suspect is in custody, Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold said, but authorities did not share any information on his identity, the type of weapon used or any possible motive. “We will work around the clock to get this accomplished,” she said, adding that such a complex investigation will take at least five days to complete. While Boulder police investigate Monday’s massacre, witnesses shared their experience with the terror and panic inside the store. Steven McHugh said his son-in-law and two granddaughters were there when a gunman attacked. His son-in-law, Paul, was third in line for a Covid-19 vaccine and his seventh- and eighth-grade granddaughters were on the phone with their grandmother. On the other end of the phone, their grandmother heard at least eight shots ring out. The woman at the front of the line was shot, McHugh told CNN’s Don Lemon. Paul grabbed the girls and hurried them upstairs to take cover in a coat closet above the pharmacy, he said. The girls said they were afraid because the coats weren’t long enough to hide their feet. “The intensity, the awfulness is going to last for the rest of their lives,” he said. Ryan Borowski told CNN he was shopping at the store when he heard the first shots, and by the third one, everyone was running. He said he couldn’t believe it happened in his town. “Boulder feels like a bubble, and the bubble burst,” Borowski said. “This feels like the safest spot in America, and I just nearly got killed for getting a soda and a bag of chips.” He added: “It doesn’t feel like there’s anywhere safe anymore.” The slain officer, 51-year-old Eric Talley, was one of the first to respond to the scene, according to Herold. Talley had joined the Boulder police force in 2010, she said. “He was, by all accounts, one of the outstanding officers of the Boulder Police Department, and his life was cut far too short,” Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said. Officials did not disclose the identity of any of the other victims, saying they needed to first notify family members. What authorities say happened The Boulder police tweeted about 2:49 p.m. (4:49 p.m. ET) that there was an “Active Shooter at the King Soopers on Table Mesa. AVOID THE AREA.” In scanner traffic, officers radioed that they were in a gunfight. They continued to report that they were being fired at with multiple rounds through at least 3:21 p.m. local time. Ambulances and multiple law enforcement agencies arrived at the store, which is part of a large shopping center with a two-story strip mall next door. “He’s armed with a rifle, our officers shot back and returned fire — we do not know where he is in the store,” an officer said, according to a transcript of the audio. One senior law enforcement source told CNN the weapon used in the shooting was an AR-15-style rifle. CNN affiliate KMGH’s helicopter recorded police leading several people away from the store. At one point, police were also seen moving on the roof. The reason for the roof movements was unclear, but one witness who spoke to CNN affiliate KCNC said his relatives in the store were evacuated through the roof. “They hid, ran upstairs, were hiding in a coat closet for the last hour,” the man said. “Half a dozen cops came in through the roof and got them and then told them, you know, ‘Stay quiet.'” As events unfolded, KMGH’s helicopter recorded a shirtless man being taken from the supermarket. The man had what appeared to be blood on his arm and right leg and his hands appeared to be cuffed behind him as two officers escorted him away. The man was taken away in an ambulance. It was unclear whether the man was involved in the reported active shooting inside the store. Calls for action against gun violence In the US so far this year, there have been at least six mass shootings with four or more killed. On the heels of the three spa shootings in Atlanta, the latest attack stoked calls for action and expressions of fear. “This past weekend it was a house party in Philadelphia. And last week it was an armed attack on Asian American women in the Atlanta area,” former Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who is a shooting survivor, said in a statement. “This is not normal, and it doesn’t have to be this way. It’s beyond time for our leaders to take action.” The tragedy in Colorado feels especially personal, Giffords said, considering how the shooting she survived outside a Tucson grocery store devastated her community. Colorado Senator Michael Bennet also called for a national gun violence conversation and nonpartisan action. “It’s long past time for Congress to take meaningful action to keep deadly weapons out of the wrong hands,” he said. The National Rifle Association tweeted on Monday quoting the Constitution’s second amendment: “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.” King Sooper is owned by the Kroger company, which said the store will remain closed during the police investigation. “The entire Kroger family offers our thoughts, prayers and support to our associates, customers, and the first responders who so bravely responded to this tragic situation,” the company said via its verified Twitter account. CNN’s Steve Almasy, Paul P. Murphy, Melissa Gray, Keith Allen, Kelsie Smith, Deanna Hackney, Dianne Gallagher and Joe Sutton contributed to this report. Source link Orbem News #boulder #Colorado #communitys #Dead #grocery #mass #Peace #shattered #shooting #store
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