Last month, the New York Times brought its readers the heartwarming story of the Powderhorn neighborhood in Minneapolis whose residents had decided not to call the police.
"If you are a comfortable white person asking to dismantle the police I invite you to reflect: are you willing to stick with it?" Minneapolis City Council President Lisa Bender had demanded. "Will you be calling in three months to ask about garage break-ins? Are you willing to dismantle white supremacy in all systems, including a new system?"
Powderhorn residents had taken that message to heart and refused to call the police.
A few days later, a “juvenile” girl was assaulted. The Associated Press reported that, “the people who took the victim to the hospital did not call police.”
By July, the encampment had grown to 800 people and 3 sexual assaults.
The oppressive system of “white supremacy” was being dismantled one rape at a time.
MORE
-Stormfax
Sir Douglas Haig, according to his son, visited the front trenches "only once, because the smell of death made him sick, and he felt he could not effectively command when this occurred."
ReplyDeletehttps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1432&context=law_facultyscholarship
Minneapolis elected persons might find the same suckiness of reality were they to visit the objects of their decisions.
No one's a liberal after they get punched in the face.
DeleteNemo
A land where rapees and rapers coexist while they watch unicorn races.
ReplyDeleteThis was not rape. These are people that will be the next letter in the list of the left's alphabet people getting what they are entitled to.
ReplyDeleteActions do have consequences. May the residence of Powerhorn get in full measure what they deserve.
ReplyDeleteJust wondering what those campers will be using for firewood in a few months when that Minneapolis winter settles in !
ReplyDelete