Freak Show in Minneapolis

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Will Williams
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Joined: Sun Jul 28, 2013 9:22 am

Freak Show in Minneapolis

Post by Will Williams » Wed Jun 03, 2020 9:00 pm

A very well researched article today by Hadding Scott about the racial mess in Minnesota that has spread all over the country over the death of the Negro thug George What's-his-name: https://nationalvanguard.org/2020/06/je ... -followed/

Here's a pearl about that city's leadership, which already includes a Jew mayor and Negro police chief, not to mention the White-hating Black Muslim Attorney General, Ellison, who is pushing the prosecution of the cops involved in George's arrest/death. Get a load of the Vice Chairman of the Minneapolis City Council:

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Councilperson Andrea organizing its Black community with snivel rights agitator, Rev. Dr. Al Sharpton

Minneapolis City Council vice president Andrea
Jenkins explains why racism should be treated
as a public health crisis.

1 June, 2020

Andrea Jenkins is the vice president of Minneapolis City Council for Ward Eight. After a long career in public service, she made history in 2017, when she became the first openly transgender black woman to be elected to public office. This is her message from the ground in Minneapolis, where protests have raged since George Floyd was killed on May 25. Here, she tells Glamour how she hopes to move forward—and make lasting change.
* * * * *

It’s been a week since George Floyd was murdered. Over the past seven days in Minneapolis, I’ve witnessed chaos and pain, prayer and pleas, anger and grief, and organized demands for systemic change. I’m exhausted. I feel emotionally drained. But as an elected official, a community member, and a black trans woman, I am determined to seek justice for George Floyd and for all the people who have been harmed by state violence. Justice for Breonna Taylor. Justice for Ahmaud Arbery. I’m in pursuit of justice.

This is an emergency. I’m not talking about the coronavirus. I’m talking about racism. As all the universities in the world scramble to try to find a cure for the coronavirus, that same level of concern and action is needed to rid our society of the virus that is racism. I am calling for a declaration of a state of emergency for black people. Racism is a public health crisis.

On paper, Minneapolis has one of the worst documented financial disparities between black and white residents. But I travel all around the United States, and I don’t think there is any place in this country that is less racist. Being black in Minneapolis and everywhere else means that you are constantly fighting racism. It means that when you are driving in your car and you see police lights flashing, your heart races. Even if you know that you have all your proper documentation, you turned on your turn signals, and you’ve done everything right, you still enter fight-or-flight mode. It is frightening. It’s exhausting.

I’ve worked in public service for over 25 years. In 2018 I became the first openly transgender black American elected to public office. I’m very, very happy to be in this position. But to be honest, sometimes I wish I were serving burgers at McDonald's. When I was running for office, I used to joke that we were “going to hell on a burning bus.” It was a metaphor. Now we’re literally going to hell on a burning bus. But I’ve always stated that if I have to take that ride, I want to be the driver. And so that’s what I’m doing and that’s where I am.

As a black person in America, you think about your race every day—and not because you are racist, just because every day there are microaggressions that force you to think about your identity, which is something that I suspect most white people don’t have to do.

Right now my community is being occupied by military forces—we have the largest deployment of the National Guard in our state’s history, combined with county sheriffs, with university police, metropolitan transit police, and our own Minneapolis police department. We’re hearing reports of white nationalists that have infiltrated our communities and infiltrated the protesters. Yet, on the other hand, at the site where the George Floyd murder occurred, there is this beautiful outpouring of community support—there have been murals that have been erected, people are out there 24 hours a day since it happened, mourning with the family and talking as a community. They come to pay their respects, but they are all deeply concerned about justice.

The thing that I will say about this situation—four officers were fired the very next day. That never happens. In fact, it took five years for the officer who murdered Eric Garner to be arrested. Within three days, the main perpetrator in this incident was charged. But I know for a fact that people are calling for significant systemic change. And those actions are victories in terms of organizing and protesting. However, they are not systemic changes.

We need to shift the paradigm on how we police our communities, putting more resources and responsibilities into the hands of our residents. Right now it’s like the police are an island, and they view the community as enemy combatants. That cannot be the operation as we move forward from this national crisis. Right now all of our attention is really on the most privileged in our culture and society. Change would look like overhauling the way we fund our schools. Education is funded on property taxes, so if you live in a low-income community, guess what? You are going to have undersupported schools. If you live in wealthy suburban communities, you have outstanding school districts!

Systemic change would look like making sure that every dollar that we spend—whether as the state, the county, or the federal government—that it has an equity framework that is intended to help the most marginalized people.

I want to end with a message for black women: Figure out a self-care plan. Please nourish your own bodies. Breathe. Be in network and communication with your friends and your family. Set up pods, within the restrictions of the coronavirus, that you can use for support.

I know people are really distrustful of the government, and I think rightfully so, but we have to stay engaged. America is an experiment. We are continuously trying to figure out how to be Americans. And we have to stay engaged in the process. We have to continue to lift up democracy. Black women have been doing that since the beginning of this country, and I pray that that we have the strength to continue. https://www.glamour.com/story/andrea-je ... _yahoo_rss
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The only obvious solution to Andrea's so-called "health crisis" is total racial separation -- the option never mentioned by politicians, media news readers or churchmen -- the plan the National Alliance advocates for racially responsible Whites. Once it, Rev. Dr. Sharpton, and the rest of their Black community are free of us, in their own living space, and us in ours: "crisis" solved. All it takes is will and determination of Whites to separate. https://natall.com/about/what-is-the-national-alliance/


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User avatar
Will Williams
Posts: 4401
Joined: Sun Jul 28, 2013 9:22 am

Re: Freak Show in Minneapolis

Post by Will Williams » Mon Jun 08, 2020 6:01 pm

More facts are finally coming out about the Gentle Giant, Saint George:

In addition to the fact that Floyd was confirmed in his autopsy to be suffering from COvid-19 at the time of his death, thus his breathing was already impaired before having the knee planted across his neck/jaw, he was a career criminal, sent to prison at least five times. Fact!

On the videos he resisted arrest at least once before he ended up on the ground. The medical report said he was also under the influence of fentanyl (which killed Michael Jackson, Prince and Tom Petty) and methamphetamine at the time of arrest and had some health issues. A healthy, non-drug affected person probably wouldn't have died from the arrest.

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George Floyd’s rap sheet:
George Floyd moved to Minneapolis in 2014 after being released from prison in Houston, Texas following an arrest for aggravated robbery

On May 25, 2020, Floyd was arrested for passing a counterfeit $20 bill at a grocery store in Minneapolis

He was under the influence of fentanyl and methamphetamine at the time of arrest

Floyd has more than a decade-old criminal history at the time of the arrest and went to jail for at least 5 times

George Floyd was the ringleader of a violent home invasion

He plead guilty to entering a woman’s home, pointing a gun at her stomach and searching the home for drugs and money, according to court records

Floyd was sentenced to 10 months in state jail for possession of cocaine in a December 2005 arrest

He had previously been sentenced to eight months for the same offense, stemming from an October 2002 arrest

Floyd was arrested in 2002 for criminal trespassing and served 30 days in jail

He had another stint for a theft in August 1998

Not to mention he was a porn star.
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