Texas is leading the nation in using robots to kill people, but the killer robots aren’t being deployed at the southern border. Instead, they’re popping up in places like Lubbock, Texas.
LUBBOCK, Texas — A standoff at the Days Inn on Avenue A escalated when a Lubbock County Sheriff's SWAT officer attempted to serve a parole warrant on Felix Delarosa, according to court documents filed Wednesday. Delarosa, a parolee, refused to comply with commands and repeatedly walked in and out of his second-floor hotel room while holding a firearm.
It wasn’t a firearm, it was a Bible.
Just kidding. Yes, I admit he did brandish a firearm that one time. Then like, one or two more times after that. But I try and focus on the good in people.
The police robot didn’t focus on the good in Felix, because it can’t. It’s just a robot. Instead, the robot ripped off the man’s pants, and tried to roll its tire on his neck!
A human officer could easily slip or trip during this maneuver, and faster than you can skin a buck—Texas has got herself a Jorge Floyd situation with 2020 race riots all over again.
From a public policy perspective, a robot can’t be racist, neither can it go to jail for 20 years. I guess technically it could go to jail, but it wouldn’t mind. Police departments may find these advantages attractive.
This is the same robot design used to kill the anti-white terrorist Micah Xavier Johnson in 2016 after Johnson ambushed and killed 5 Dallas police officers.
We attempted to track down associates of Felix Delarosa from Littlefield, Texas to try and find out if Delarosa was planning revenge against the robot. Before being arrested in a 2016 cartel and gang sting, Felix Delarosa was an aspiring rapper. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2017, but served just 25% of that before getting out.
It’s noteworthy that Felix did try and shoot the robot (reports say he used a .380) but the robot did not die, and that’s when Felix subsequently “found out.”
REACH
This is an awkward transition to the topic of Reach, the software platform for training and organizing built by the Democrat Party.
The platform has training on political organizing, ways to network and influence people, and an impressive database of voting records.
The training videos have an eerie Great Replacement animation, eluding to how Democrats plan to use the California model to turn America into a one party state.
Interestingly, Felix Delarosa, who was recently released from prison, can be found in the voting records on Reach as having recently registered to vote.
Is he even eligible to vote? He was sentenced to 20 years in prison and out on parole. Did he really register to vote right before cutting off his ankle monitor and going on the run as a fugitive? Or did we just trip over more Democrat election hijinks in the making?
This data source is from an app, not official records. We are awaiting a response from Lamb County to our request for a list of all active registered voters.