Carson tells Black Lives Matter to refocus
A mother says she is frustrated with the #BlackLivesMatter protesters in St. Louis.
In her first emotional video, which has been viewed over 70,000 times on Facebook and generated over 15,000 comments, Hubbard talks mainly about the shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey.
Hubbard’s rant came after a 9-year-old girl was shot and killed Tuesday night while doing homework on her mother’s bed.
Of course, the protesters are right that racial policing issues exist and some rotten policemen took actions that killed innocent people.
“You tear up other people’s (stuff) for a criminal, a thug”, she says of some of the people who have been killed by police.
“Black Lives Matter (Special Reports)” is a new textbook that is aimed at white students in sixth through twelfth grade.
Added Hubbard, “A little girl is dead”.
“The notion that some lives might matter less than others is meant to enrage”. Her life mattered… Yet you trifling motherf***ers are out there tearing up the neighborhood I grew up in.
“This has never been a race issue,” Hubbard says in the follow-up video, which runs fifteen minutes. I’m guessing roughly a half a dozen if you really think about it and don’t go hit Google immediately. Oh, poor so-and-so. He died due to police brutality. Are you f***ing kidding me? “Open your mind and look to the individual”, she says. You will stay there. You’re hollering this “black lives matter” bullshit.
A black woman in St. Louis has become the darling of the conservative political media after she posted several profane laced videos to Facebook. I’m not puttin’ nothin’ on your books, comin’ to visit you. “You’re yelling, “f*** the police?’ f*** you”.
Carson laid out a seven targets he argues should be lobbied for change: the board of education (for destroying “black lives not in the ones in two, but in whole generations”), the entertainment industry for promoting violence in movies like “Straight Outta Compton”, City Hall for unsafe communities, and unnamed crack houses for “selling poison to our children”, (though its unclear how he expects black people to combat this specific drug trade). “f*** you. I’m from the Madea school of justice”.
The reality we’re dealing with here is actually one which doesn’t fit the metaphor very well at all, though Moe does a good job of attempting to force it. You see, the patient doesn’t just have a broken wrist. You’re shooting at the police.