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Sunday, November 28, 2021

A 'large group of people' struck Best Buy



I started to wonder was it... Amish or Orthodox Jews?



I guarantee you if this 'large group' was composed of white supremacists they would've said white supremacists! 


Video 653

The main stream media likes to twist everything in their fight for liberalism. Kelli Stavast is a prime example. She morphed “F Joe Biden” into “Let's go Brandon” and became a national A-hole overnight.











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Saturday, November 27, 2021

'You are eating on stolen land': BLM launches Thanksgiving diatribe sparking social media backlash









What a joke! 

With all that is going on across the country right now (Flash mobs galore) BLM has the audacity to lecture us on stolen property? 





Speaking of stolen that's exactly what happened to the taxpayers who for decades have been footing the bill for welfare checks, section 8, food stamps, Obama phones, Medicaid, etc.

Where do they think this money comes from... just falls from the sky?


BTW... On Thanksgiving where do thousands of  blacks get their turkey dinner? I'll tell you where. Through donations to feed the hungry. From people like me who are hated.

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Black Lives Matter sparked furious backlash on social media after an anti-Thanksgiving tweet that claimed that Americans were eating their holiday meals on 'stolen land.'


On Thanksgiving Thursday the social activism group's official Twitter slammed American's across the country gathering to celebrate the holiday. 


On Thanksgiving Thursday the social activism group's official Twitter slammed American's across the country gathering to celebrate the holiday


When it first launched in 2013, BLM sought to bring attention to and prevent police violence against African Americans


'You are on stolen land. Colonization never ended, it just became normalized,' a graphic with a link to help people find which 'ancestral homeland' they are 'currently occupying' said. 


The link was to Native Land Digital, a digital map that allows people to see the indigenous history of the land they currently inhabit. 


Discussing Native American people who had their land taken by settlers has become an increasingly popular topic during Thanksgiving, with some progressives now keen to discount the annual event as a celebration of colonialism and racism. 


But the post rubbed many the wrong way and some on social media said Black Lives Matter's message was itself 'racist', while also calling out the group for being hypocritical.


Are these 5 homes on #stolenland?' one person tweeted referring to reports that BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors has used her vast earnings as a consultant to purchase multiple luxury homes while preaching Marxist ideas. 


Another person tweeted: 'Fanning the flames of racism. This is the true insurrection, but no one can say anything about it without being chastised and canceled. What a privilege that must be.'


Someone else said the group spreads hate: 'BLM espouses hateful, racist stupidity, utterly ignorant of history & wisdom. BLM professes hate for the very Christian-Judaea values key to this country’s prosperity. Instead, BLM should be grateful for USA’s freedoms, even to be stupid, as is my right to call them on it.' 


BLM has been a constant source of controversy over the years. 


In July the Utah chapter of the Black Lives Matter movement sparked anger on social media during independence Day weekend after it posted a message on Facebook calling the American flag a ‘symbol of hate.’


That same month, the group as blamed the 'cruel and inhumane' US for unrest in Cuba, as the activists praised the Communist regime, sparking furious backlash 


BLM accused the US of causing the instability with its embargoes which have caused 'pain and suffering' for Cubans for 60 years in the message which was branded 'worse than embarrassing'.


When it first launched in 2013, BLM sought to bring attention to and prevent police violence against African Americans.


Today, it describes its mission as one that will 'eradicate white supremacy and build local power to intervene in violence inflicted on Black communities by the state and vigilantes'. 


Supporters say the organization is finally correcting decades of injustice and rebalancing the scales. Critics say they are trying to rewrite history and erase any indicator of white success, particularly in America.





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The state of Missouri should be FORCED to pay this guy


Now this truly is a miscarriage of justice!



Donors raise more than $950,000 to help Missouri man wrongfully convicted in 1979

Kevin Strickland isn't eligible for compensation from Missouri because the state only allows wrongful imprisonment payments to people exonerated through DNA evidence.

Nov. 25, 2021, 9:08 PM EST / Updated Nov. 25, 2021, 9:15 PM EST


KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Donations are pouring in to help a man who was freed from a Missouri prison after a judge found that he was wrongfully convicted in 1979 in a triple killing.

The GoFundMe fundraiser to benefit Kevin Strickland had surpassed its $430,000 goal by Wednesday afternoon, and donations kept coming. By Thursday evening, it had raised more than $950,000. 

Many of the donors expressed outrage that the 62-year-old wouldn’t receive compensation from Missouri. The state only allows wrongful imprisonment payments to people exonerated through DNA evidence, so Strickland doesn’t qualify.

Strickland has always maintained that he was home watching television and had nothing to do with the killings, which happened when he was 18 years old.

Judge James Welsh, a retired Missouri Court of Appeals judge, ordered his release Tuesday, finding that evidence used to convict Strickland had since been recanted or disproven.

The Midwest Innocence Project set up the online fundraiser in June as they fought for his release. They said he needed help paying for basic living expenses.

Organizers praised donors Tuesday, writing that “All funds go directly to Mr. Strickland, who the state of Missouri won’t provide a dime to for the 43 years they stole from him.”

As he left prison, Strickland said, “I can’t begin to say all the things I am thankful for.”





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Monday, November 22, 2021

This is how these dogs think




Illinois Democrats Split With Woman Who Said Waukesha Tragedy Was 'Karma' for Rittenhouse

By Jenni Fink On 11/22/21 at 5:06 PM EST



BTW... As you're reading this let's not forget Trump is banned from Twitter but this bitch was allowed to get away with saying this.

Twitter rule No.1

Safety. Violence: You may not threaten violence against an individual or a group of people. We also prohibit the glorification of violence.


Yes Loretta, there truly is a double standard!

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The Democratic Party of DuPage County has cut ties with a social media director who publicly tweeted that the tragedy in Waukesha, Wisconsin, was "karma" for a jury finding Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty.

Mary Lemanski, the Illinois county Democratic Party's social media director, penned a sarcastic Twitter thread, in which she wrote the driver who plowed into a Christmas parade, killing five people, was probably acting in "self-defense." It appeared to be a reference to Rittenhouse, whose attorney argued he was acting in self-defense when he fatally shot two people and injured a third during last year's protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

"I'm sad anytime anyone dies. I just believe in Karma and this came around quick on the citizens of Wisconsin," another tweet said. "You reap what you sow. It's sad people died, but when you open the door to vigilante justice, everyone seems threatening."

Lemanski faced criticism for the tweets and on Monday afternoon, the DuPage County Democratic Party announced they "severed all ties" with her. They said in a statement that her tweets were "callous" and "reprehensible," adding that "she does not speak for us" and they "unequivocally reject her statements about the tragic events that occurred yesterday in Waukesha."

"We as a party denounce violence of any kind. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families impacted by this heinous act, which shocked and saddened us all," the statement concluded.



The Democratic Party of DuPage County, Wisconsin, severed ties with its social media director after she called the Waukesha tragedy "karma" for a jury finding Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty. Debris left following a driver plowing into the Christmas parade on Main Street in downtown November 22 in Waukesha, Wisconsin. Jim Vondruska/Getty Images



On Sunday, Waukesha residents gathered for an annual Christmas parade that included people ranging in ages from young children to the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies. During the parade, a man, who was later identified as Darrell Brooks, drove a red SUV through the crowd, killing five people and injuring dozens of others.

The Milwaukee Dancing Grannies confirmed some of their members were among the victims, which also included a Catholic priest and Waukesha Catholic school children. Police identified those who were killed as Virginia Sorenson, 79, LeAnna Owen, 71, Tamara Durand, 52, Jane Kulich, 52, and Wilhelm Hospel, 82.

The tragedy came just days after a jury found Rittenhouse to be not guilty of every charge he faced. It prompted widespread outrage as being a miscarriage of justice, although, many others who backed Rittenhouse celebrated the jury's verdict for being a deliverance of truth.

Ken Mejia-Beal, the chair of the DuPage Democratic Party, told the Chicago Tribune Lemanski worked for the party since 2017 or 2018. She tweeted that she resigned, but Mejia-Beal said she was "let go."

"We don't applaud or celebrate tragedy," Meija-Beal said. "This was a tragedy. These were folks that were out at a joyous occasion having a great time at a beautiful and festive time of the year. We, as a party, disavow Mary's Twitter comments, the sentiment behind them. We are with the victims of this tragedy."

After she posted the tweets, Lemanski said she received threatening messages, including from one person who claimed to be outside her home. In announcing her resignation, she said as a believer in free speech, you have to be willing to accept responsibility and consequences for exercising that right. She said the remarks were made "not in good taste" and Mejia-Beal told the Chicago Tribuneshe expressed remorse in private conversations.







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From his lying lips to your ears

 

If life was fair...













The video:

Bribem 2007

Talk about getting bit on the ass!


Video 653












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