Attorney General William Barr ‘not sure’ if Congress Would Stand Up To A Potential Mob Threatening The U.S. Capitol

United States of America, July 29: Attorney General William Barr said Tuesday he was uncertain about whether people from Congress would ensure the U.S. State house Building from agitators and vandals.
In the midst of a conversation about alleged tranquil fights that have regressed into savagery in American urban communities, Rep. Doug Collins (R., Ga.) asked Barr, “Do you feel that this body directly here would ascend on the off chance that they chose to go today around evening time and paint the Capitol building?”
“This body? I don’t know,” Barr stated, drawing giggling.
Collins said the Republicans would, yet he was uncertain whether Democrats would go along with them.
“It might be a serene dissent to torch the Capitol,” Collins said. “Possibly we’re back to 1812 once more.”
Barr has gone under savage addressing from Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee, on subjects including the Trump organization’s reaction to common agitation in American urban communities, for example, Portland and Chicago.
Watch clip here,
What if the left-wing mob came for the Capitol? Would this body rise up?
"This body? I'm not sure."
So sad, you have to laugh! pic.twitter.com/2jAt21Reaz— Elizabeth Harrington (@LizRNC) July 28, 2020