A new report reveals yet more evidence that the Trump administration violently dispersed George Floyd protesters so the president could stage a photo op.
A new report reveals yet more evidence that the Trump administration violently dispersed George Floyd protesters so the president could stage a photo op.

“The attorney general is here. We gotta go now."

Sorry, there needs to be evidence of this? It was broadcast live on international news.
Yeah I'm confused about this. I did't think this was particularly controversial, regardless of if you did or didn't support him. Protestors were removed, he did his photo op and went back.
The part that's controversial is if people think it was justified or not. But proof it happened is as useful as proof that the sun rose over Colombia yesterday.
You might be surprised to read about this official government investigation that disagreed (bolding added throughout by me),
The article then dives into those problems, and they're worth reading, but I'm going to skip down a bit to get to the point
To be fair, while the sun rising over Colombia yesterday is safe to assume and trivial to prove, having the proof of it isn't a bad thing. At the very least, it provides evidence that continues to support our current heliocentric and uniformitarian understanding of how our solar system is structured. And there's a lot of overlap between flat earthers, people who think God changed the laws of physics to allow for Noah's flood, and Qanon people, so you can kinda see where that might fit into a larger, more significant evidentiary pattern.
Sure, it is trivial to prove. Just ask someone who was there, if you weren't there yourself. But that doesn't mean it's useless.
Show me proof that Colombia is real
True, but often times there will be studies and stuff of things that everybody already pretty much knows, which can be useful when presenting arguments to, say, legislative or regulatory bodies that, at least when functioning in healthy ways, shouldn't just be going off of "things that everybody already pretty much knows." Like there was a big formalized study not too long ago about induced traffic in response to road widening projects, with the obvious conclusion being to stop doing road widenings and invest in public transit and ped/bike infrastructure instead, and everybody in that space pretty much already knew about that, but having the formalized study to point to has still been helpful.