I watch a video of someone asking where the bricks came from.
I also watched a video of a guy in a good face mask, dressed in black, painting : free stuff on a parts store, then he breaks out the windows in the place with a claw hammer.
The guy doing the video got a good look at his face and his wife confirmed his identity...he is a cop
Have to call BS on this one -
Follow the money
Who paid or donated the bricks?
Who owns that pallet?
Whose forklift dropped the load?
Who drove the truck?
Whose phone transmission crossed state like new?
Where are Wray and Barr?
Get a pallet jack or forklift and start removing them, and you will quickly find out who wants them there.
pre-positioning
In Dallas, TX as well.
It’s April 1968 all over again. This is exactly what outside agitators had waiting for them in Baltimore at certain street corners. Got this information from people linked in to police intelligence at that time.
Nancy Pelosi’s mayor brother Tommy, let the rioters have their way which wiped out many Jewish owned/black help small businesses. That is why Baltimore became a shithole of black extremism, incompetence and a major loss of its economic base.
Thanks Nancy. Thanks Mayor Marxist O’Malley and all the other corrupt black mayors (some are in jail now) and their white leftist/liberal Democrat machine hacks who lived high on the hog while the city went down the crapper.
I can’t speak to every one of these instances, but the one’s I’ve seen DID look like potential construction sites. It’s pretty common now that parks use brick setting techniques for walkways around shopping malls and parks. A few of those pallets were in areas where such walkways were present, indicating possible maintenance.
BTW, when I was a kid going into Philly during the 60’s & ‘70
s cobblestone streets were pretty common in “old town”, Delaware Avenue & some of the older neighborhoods. All of that kinda stopped after the riots that were put down under police commissioner Frank Rizzo. Loose cobblestones were handy ammunition for rioters and looters. Most of those streets were gradually paved over through the 80’s and 90’s. Seems the advent of brick-setting techniques urban planners have forgotten the lesson that “Cobblestones” are bad.
For sale - used bricks. Only thrown once.