XPost: alt.cities.washington, alt.sodomites.barack-obama, talk.politics.guns   
   XPost: talk.politics.misc   
   From: feedback@alternet.org   
      
   On 14 Mar 2022, Rudy Canoza posted some   
   news:wyRXJ.192584$aT3.173810@fx09.iad:   
      
   > There is a simple cure for this. Publicly kill the activists.   
   > Obviously they have no respect for the country in which they live, so   
   > oblige them by removing them from the situation and life. I   
   > personally recommend beating them to death with baseball bats.   
      
   Conservationists at the National Archives are still working to clean up   
   the building's rotunda area after a pair of apparent environmental   
   protesters on Wednesday dumped reddish powder on the display case   
   housing the original U.S. Constitution.   
      
   National Archives administrators granted The Associated Press exclusive   
   access to the site Thursday afternoon as conservationists continue the   
   painstaking work of cleaning the pinkish-red powder from the nooks and   
   crannies of the document’s protective housing. Their tools include   
   everything from vacuum cleaners to cotton swabs to bags full of shredded   
   erasers.   
      
   The Archives building’s rotunda, which displays the Constitution and the   
   Declaration of Independence, will remain closed Friday as the cleanup   
   work continues.   
      
   Two men dumped the powder onto the horizontal display case around 2:30   
   p.m. Wednesday.   
      
   “We are determined to foment a rebellion,” one man said, in a video   
   posted on social media. “We all deserve clean air, water, food and a   
   livable climate.”   
      
   Police then led the pair away, leaving a trail of powder out the door.   
      
   In the immediate aftermath, cleanup crews were reluctant to use any sort   
   of water or liquids in the cleanup, especially since they were still   
   unsure of the exact makeup of the powder.   
      
   “If you're working with a dry powder pigment, using water would just   
   turn it into paint,” said Supervisory Conservator Amy Lubick.   
   “Fortunately we're confident that none of the pigment penetrated the   
   casing.”   
      
   The historic document itself is undamaged and locked away. Subsequent   
   analysis revealed that the powder dumped on the case was a mixture of   
   pigment powder and cornstarch. The resulting powder was so fine that an   
   industrial vacuum failed to pick up much of it.   
      
   Cleanup crews were “on their hands and knees until midnight” Wednesday   
   and resumed their work Thursday morning working to capture every bit of   
   the powder, said National Program Preservation Officer Stephanie   
   Hornbeck.   
      
   Conservationists at the National Archives reached out to colleagues at   
   the National Gallery of Art for tips on specialized cleaning products to   
   use around delicate textiles. They also used decidedly old-school   
   methods such as long cotton swabs and standard-issue erasers.   
      
   Hornbeck displayed several bags of shredded eraser material which were   
   piled up and gently rubbed into stained areas, gradually turning from   
   white to pink as they picked up particles of pigment.   
      
   Archivist of the United States Colleen Shogan said she's not sure when   
   the exhibit will be open to the public again, but said she was “thrilled   
   by the amazing work” put in by her conservation staff.   
      
   Shogan also said she's in contact with local law enforcement authorities   
   to ensure the two vandals are fully prosecuted.   
      
   “The real impact of this is on the thousands of people who came to   
   Washington, D.C., today and tomorrow to see the Constitution and the   
   Bill of Rights, and won't be able to,” she said.   
      
   https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/national-international/national-archiv   
   es-closed-protesters-constitution-display/3545584/   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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