VIDEO: Armed Patron Stops BLM Right in Their Tracks

BLM riot gun louisville

BLM is at it again. Marching through peaceful downtown streets and terrorizing the citizens. One man wasn’t having it. Video shows a restaurant patron pull a small revolver and aim it at the thugs.

Of course the mainstream media fails to mention that several of the BLM goons were carrying rifles and wearing body armor as they approached the restaurant patio. Clearly trying to threaten and intimidate. See the video below.

BLM goons try to intimidate restaurant patrons and armed citizen responds

In response to the BLM riots, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law Floridaā€™s “anti-riot” bill, which increases penalties for crimes committed during riots and is aimed at “combating public disorder.”

“If you look at the breadth of this particular piece of legislation, it is the strongest anti-rioting, pro-law enforcement piece of legislation in the country,” DeSantis said at a press conference. “Thereā€™s just nothing even close.”

Florida’s Senate passed the bill last week 23-17. The law, which goes into effect immediately, grants civil legal immunity to people who drive through protesters blocking a road and allows authorities to hold arrested demonstrators from posting bail until after their first court date.

The legislation increases the charge for battery on a police officer during a riot and adds language that could force local governments to justify a reduction in law enforcement budgets.

Americans growing tired of mob justice and Left-wing terrorism

The bill allows people to sue local governments over personal or property damages if they were determined to have interfered with law enforcement response during civil unrest. It also increases penalties for protesters who block roadways or deface public monuments and creates a new crime, “mob intimidation.”

Republicans say the bill would protect law enforcement officers and help prevent public disorder following recent unrest in the U.S.

Civil rights, social justice groups, and Democrats say it is an unconstitutional attack on free speech that would make it easier for law enforcement to charge those involved in a protest.

“The problem with this bill is that the language is so overbroad and vague … that it captures anybody who is peacefully protesting at a protest that turns violent through no fault of their own,” said Kara Gross, the legislative director at ACLU Florida, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

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