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To: stuffbug who wrote (161951)9/4/2020 10:58:46 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Read Replies (1) of 218057
 
Joe Kennedy the 3

stood next to this racist pig for forty minutes listening to this without cutting her off

Gee I wonder why he lost:

“This heffer running against Ayanna Pressley,” she says. She then goes on to address Rayla Campbell — a black woman opposing Pressley as a Republican in a write-in campaign — directly. Her words — too obscene to print — accuse Campbell of engaging in sexual acts with white men for opportunistic reasons. Furthermore, Cannon-Grant says Campbell is going to “jeopardize your melanin” by engaging in race-mixing, tells her to sit in the back of the classroom, and directly calls her the n-word.

Her reference to melanin indicates that Cannon-Grant is a proponent of Afrocentric “melanin theory,” a form of racial pseudoscience recently touted by TV star Nick Cannon and Black Lives Matter Toronto co-founder Yusra Khogali. The general idea is that melanin provides darker-skinned people with a plethora of positive qualities such as greater strength, intelligence, compassion, and even supernatural powers. White people are described, to use Cannon’s words, as “savages” and “animals” or, as Khogali described them, “recessive genetic defects” who could easily be “wiped out.”

That Cannon-Grant espouses some form of this racist and scientifically baseless ideology is disturbing.

In another tirade she declares “FTP” — an acronym for “[EXPLETIVE] the police.”

Her many rants, captured by the website, TB Daily News, are offensive and toxic and those politicians who associate with her, including Ayanna Pressley, Joseph P Kennedy III, Elizabeth Warren, Rachael Rollins and Marty Walsh to name a few, should condemn them.


Monica totally cut off Joe K's jr jr balls iwith him standing next to her.

What a douche bag JK 3 is in real life.

Now the word Negro is as bad as saying the real N-word according to this editorial.

Leaders must call out hate when they see it




BOSTON, MA – JUNE 1: Activist Monica Cannon-Grant, founder of Violence in Boston Inc., speaks during a news conference to address racial injustice with Bishop John M. Borders, III, of Morning Star Baptist Church, left, District Attorney Maura Healey, and Boston Mayor Martin Walsh at the Garden of Peace on June 1, 2020 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Staff Photo By Angela Rowlings/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald)

By EDITORIAL |
July 21, 2020 at 1:31 a.m.

If there is one constructive service 2020 has brought to Americans it is the hyper-focused attention to race and hate in everyday life. Brought to fore is the contention that it is time to have tough conversations that make us uncomfortable as we root out prejudice and bigotry in our midst.

Indeed, the presence of statues, literature and even our established historic narrative as a country are being litigated in the court of public opinion. Regardless of where one falls on these issues we can all agree that the discourse is enlightening, didactic, and healthy.

To that spirit we must call out toxic ideology where it exists and more fervently when it resides in and around the very powerful. In that vein, we are highly concerned about the proximity many prominent elected officials enjoy with Monica Cannon-Grant, founder of the Violence in Boston organization. Cannon-Grant has been heavily featured in Boston media, including on WGBH, NBC-10 in Boston, and her writing has been published in the pages of the Boston Globe.

In recent days, shocking social media posts by Cannon-Grant have been unearthed in which she rants in grotesque, racial and sexual terms about the political opponent of Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley.

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“This heffer running against Ayanna Pressley,” she says. She then goes on to address Rayla Campbell — a black woman opposing Pressley as a Republican in a write-in campaign — directly. Her words — too obscene to print — accuse Campbell of engaging in sexual acts with white men for opportunistic reasons. Furthermore, Cannon-Grant says Campbell is going to “jeopardize your melanin” by engaging in race-mixing, tells her to sit in the back of the classroom, and directly calls her the n-word.

Her reference to melanin indicates that Cannon-Grant is a proponent of Afrocentric “melanin theory,” a form of racial pseudoscience recently touted by TV star Nick Cannon and Black Lives Matter Toronto co-founder Yusra Khogali. The general idea is that melanin provides darker-skinned people with a plethora of positive qualities such as greater strength, intelligence, compassion, and even supernatural powers. White people are described, to use Cannon’s words, as “savages” and “animals” or, as Khogali described them, “recessive genetic defects” who could easily be “wiped out.”

That Cannon-Grant espouses some form of this racist and scientifically baseless ideology is disturbing.

In another tirade she declares “FTP” — an acronym for “[EXPLETIVE] the police.”

Her many rants, captured by the website, TB Daily News, are offensive and toxic and those politicians who associate with her, including Ayanna Pressley, Joseph P Kennedy III, Elizabeth Warren, Rachael Rollins and Marty Walsh to name a few, should condemn them.


Likewise, Roger Stone, the longtime Washington, DC provocateur and political operative who just recently had his prison sentence commuted by his longtime ally, President Trump, was recently heard on the radio airwaves using racist language.

During an interview with Mo Kelly on radio station KFI, Stone remarked — presumably thinking the black radio host could not hear him — “I can’t believe I’m arguing with this Negro.”

To Kelly’s credit he kept his composure and pressed Stone on the remarks which he denied saying.

Stone’s words are obscene and the logical assumption is that he considered the radio host lesser simply due to the color of his skin. It is incumbent upon President Trump to address the situation and disavow the comments.

Elected leaders have a responsibility to represent all constituents. When hateful rhetoric is spewed by prominent people in their proximity they must condemn it. It may be tough and make them uncomfortable but it is their responsibility.

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