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Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Columbus police try to avert a new wave of BLM anger over the fatal police shooting of a 16-year-old girl by releasing bodycam that shows her attempting to stab two women





Wonder how many millions her family is going to get?




Here she is about to stab somebody.
What are they going to say the video is lying?


If kneeling on George Floyd's neck was bad what in the hell do you call this?


Remember when Nancy Reagan said, "Just say no to drugs." 

Common sense ...right?

So is this!











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Tuesday, April 13, 2021

What's really going on behind the scenes at BLM?




On a tip from Ed Kilbane



We already know when 65 black people get shot in Chicago on a holiday weekend no one gives a damn. That is, until the 66th one got shot by a white cop.

------------------------------------


Now this:

Inside BLM co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors’ million-dollar real estate buying binge


(All you suckers please continue to donate... she's got her eye on a pink Bentley Flying Spur) 



As protests broke out across the country in the name of Black Lives Matter, the group’s co-founder went on a real estate buying binge, snagging four high-end homes for $3.2 million in the US alone, according to property records.

Patrisse Khan-Cullors, 37, also eyed property in the Bahamas at an ultra-exclusive resort where Justin Timberlake and Tiger Woods both have homes, The Post has learned. Luxury apartments and townhouses at the beachfront Albany resort outside Nassau are priced between $5 million and $20 million, according to a local agent.

The self-described Marxist last month purchased a $1.4 million home on a secluded road a short drive from Malibu in Los Angeles, according to a report. The 2,370-square-foot property features “soaring ceilings, skylights and plenty of windows” with canyon views. The Topanga Canyon homestead, which includes two houses on a quarter-acre, is just one of three homes Khan-Cullors owns in the Los Angeles area, public records show.

Some fellow activists were taken aback by the real estate revelations.

Hawk Newsome, the head of Black Lives Matter Greater New York City, called for “an independent investigation” to find out how the global network spends its money.

The "custom ranch" Patrisse Khan-Cullors owns in Georgia.

Realtor.com

“If you go around calling yourself a socialist, you have to ask how much of her own personal money is going to charitable causes,” he said. “It’s really sad because it makes people doubt the validity of the movement and overlook the fact that it’s the people that carry this movement.”

Last year, Khan-Cullors and spouse Janaya Khan ventured to Georgia to acquire a fourth home — a “custom ranch” on 3.2 rural acres in Conyers featuring a private airplane hangar with a studio apartment above it, and the use of a 2,500-foot “paved/grass” community runway that can accommodate small airplanes.

The three-bedroom, two-bath house, about 30 minutes from Atlanta, has an indoor swimming pool and a separate “RV shop” that can accommodate the repair of a mobile home or small aircraft, according to the real estate listing.

The Peach State retreat was purchased in January 2020 for $415,000, two years after the publication of Khan-Cullors’ best-selling memoir, “When They Call You a Terrorist.”

In October, the activist signed “a multi-platform” deal with Warner Bros. Television Group to help produce content for “black voices who have been historically marginalized,” she said in a statement.

It is not known how much Khan-Cullors received in compensation in either deal.

Khan-Cullors began her buying spree in LA in 2016, a few years after the civil rights movement she started from a hashtag — #blacklivesmatter — with fellow activists Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi began to gain traction around the world. 

That year, she bought a three-bedroom, 1.5-bathroom home in Inglewood for $510,000. It is now worth nearly $800,000. Khan-Cullors added her wife, the co-founder of Black Lives Matter in Canada, to the deed in a family trust last year. The couple married in 2016.

Khan-Cullors' home in Inglewood, Calif., is now worth $800,000.

Realtor.com

Two years later, in 2018, Khan-Cullors purchased a four-bedroom home in South Los Angeles, a multi-ethnic neighborhood. Khan-Cullors paid $590,000 for the 1,725-square-foot home, although the price has since climbed to $720,000, according to public records.

Three of the homes were bought in Khan-Cullors’ name, and the Topanga Canyon property was purchased under a limited liability company that she controls, according to public records cited by “Dirt,” the real estate blog that first reported the March 30 purchase. 

Last year, Khan-Cullors and Khan were spotted in the Bahamas looking for a unit at the Albany, a real estate source who did not want to be identified told The Post. The elite enclave is laid out on “600 oceanside acres” and features a private marina and designer golf course. Current homes for sale include a nearly 8,000-square-foot, six-bedroom townhouse with a media room and marina views. The price is only available upon request, according to the resort’s website.

Khan-Cullors paid $590,000 for this South Los Angeles home.

Realtor.com

“People who buy at the Albany are buying their fourth or fifth home,” said a resort worker who did not want to be identified. “This is not a second-home residence. It’s extremely high-end, and people are coming here for complete and total privacy.”

While it’s not clear if Khan-Cullors purchased a property at the island retreat for the super-rich, her mere interest shows just how far she has come from the hardscrabble Van Nuys neighborhood in LA where she spent her childhood with two brothers and a younger sister. 

In her memoir, Khan-Cullors describes growing up in a housing project less than a mile from the affluent and largely white neighborhood of Sherman Oaks, a community of wide lawns and pools where “there is nothing that does not appear beautiful and well kept.” The four kids were mostly raised by her single mother, who worked 16 hours a day to support the family, she writes. The Albany residence Khan-Cullors reportedly looked at is on 600 oceanside acres.Handout

Growing up, Khan-Cullors lived in “a two-story, tan-colored building where the paint is peeling and where there is a gate that does not close properly and an intercom system that never works,” she writes. “The only place in my hood to buy groceries is a 7-Eleven.”

Khan-Cullors embraced activism and Marxism at a young age. “It started the year I turned twelve,” she writes. “That was the year that I learned that being black and poor defined me more than being bright and hopeful and ready.” 

But she didn’t rise to national prominence until 2013, when she and two other activists protested the not-guilty verdict against George Zimmerman, who shot dead Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager in Florida. 

Black Lives Matter protests erupted again in 2020 after the May killing of George Floyd, who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck during his arrest. Patrisse Khan-Cullors at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Taylor Jewell/Invision/AP

Donations and pledges from corporations and individuals poured into the movement at that point. In February, the BLM nonprofit co-founded by Khan-Cullors told the AP that they took in $90 million in 2020, with $21.7 million committed to grant funding and helping 30 black-led groups across the country.

Black Lives Matter leaders would not specify how much money they took in from prominent donors, according to the AP report. 

It’s also not clear how much Khan-Cullors makes in salary as one of the leaders of the movement, since its finances are split among both nonprofit and for-profit entities and difficult to trace.

Patrisse Khan-Cullors' Topanga Canyon property was bought under an LLC.

Realtor.com

Founded by Khan-Cullors and another activist, Kailee Scales, the nonprofit Oakland, Calif.-based BLM Global Network Foundation was incorporated in 2017 and claims to have chapters throughout the US, the UK and Canada, and a mission “to eradicate White supremacy and build power to intervene in violence inflicted on Black communities.” The group does not have a federal tax exemption and donations are filtered through ActBlue Charities and Thousand Currents, two nonprofits that manage the cash.

At the same time Khan-Cullors incorporated the nonprofit, she also set up the similarly named BLM Global Network, a for-profit that is not required to disclose how much it spends or pays its executives.

Some have criticized the lack of transparency. An overview of the homes bought or looked at by Khan-Cullors.

Newsome of NYC’s BLM said, “We need black firms and black accountants to go in there and find out where the money is going.” He added that his group does not receive any financial support from the BLM Global Network.

Neither Khan-Cullors nor BLM Global Network Foundation returned requests for comment.





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Friday, April 9, 2021

There are somethings I'll never understand




North Carolina just paid a man for 15 years of wrongful imprisonment. He was in prison for 44 years


This poor guy spent 44 years in jail for a crime he didn't do. After all that time they're going to give him a lousy $750,000? Looks to me like he just got bit on the ass again by the justice system again. How could George Floyd be worth 27 million bucks and this guy gets a piddly 750,000?


Ronnie Long was wrongfully imprisoned for 44 years on a rape conviction in North Carolina. But the state is only compensating him for 15 of those years. 



He says he deserves more. 

In 1976, Long, who is Black, was accused of raping a white woman and then sentenced to life in prison. His attorneys have said that more than 40 fingerprints and other evidence collected at the scene were never shared. Long was freed in August 2020. He just received a $750,000 check.

North Carolina law states anyone wrongfully convicted of a crime can receive $50,000 for each year they were imprisoned, but the catch is the amount caps at $750,000. That means Long, who is 65, will not be compensated for 29 years of the time in prison.

"You took my 20s, my 30s, my 40s and my 50s and you still talking about this is worth that?" Long told USA TODAY. 



Long's criminal attorney Jamie Lau said in a statement to USA TODAY the amount given to Long is "inadequate." Long's parents passed away during his time in prison and had no savings prior.

"He entered prison healthy and left broken. His ongoing financial security is the least he deserves after so much was taken over those 44 years," Lau said.

Other states have similar caps. Mississippi law allows annual payments of $50,000 for each year a person is wrongfully incarcerated but sets a maximum of 10 years' payment.

Curtis Flowers, a man who spent 23 years on death row after being convicted in the 1996 shooting deaths of four people in Mississippi, was tried six times, with each trial resulting in an overturned conviction or mistrial.

In 2020, Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch said the state would not try the case a seventh time, leaving Flowers a free man. And in March, a state judge ruled Flowers would receive the state's maximum compensation of $500,000. 

Lau said Long's case and those similar highlight the inadequacy in the cap and Long shouldn't have needed a pardon from Gov. Roy Cooper to receive the money.

"It's time to revisit this amount since we are learning the magnitude of the harm caused by wrongful convictions in North Carolina. It's also time to revisit the compensation statute as a whole, as the governor should not have full authority over who does and does not receive compensation," Lau said.

Long told WCNC-Charlotte several civil attorneys have reached out to him about the check and he is considering his options. He added that he is blessed to be free, and he is looking for a new home with his wife, Ashleigh.





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Biden border crisis comes at ‘massive cost’ to American people

 



Illegals warehoused at the border are costing the US taxpayer $60 million a week!!!!!!

To put things in perspective the average VA Hospital cost $112 million to build. 



So inside of a month they could have used that money to begin building 2 new VA Hospital’s with enough money left over to send everybody (legally) in the United States a voter ID card. You know, because a lot of people just can't make it to the DOT to get a free ID.



Would this ever take place? Of course not! For Dems common sense went out the window along time ago when they realized importing illegals and embracing voter fraud (for their new voting block) was the way to go, and for the most part except for conservatives, the American people gave them the green light.







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Groups pressure Senate to end filibuster as Jim Crow relic

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/groups-pressure-senate-to-end-filibuster-as-jim-crow-relic/ar-BB1fsilW

We're at the point now where they could link Jim Crow to a Big Mac and McDonald's would have to get rid of it. 





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