Fat Pig Sow, Patrisse Cullors, co-founder of Black Lives Matter (They couldn't call the founder because that turned out to be a white guy posing as a liberal Negro) brings white hating racist message to Naperville
PHOTO: Patrisse Cullors, co-founder of Black Lives Matter, speaks with the media Tuesday in advance of the address she was to give at North Central College in Naperville. (Hank Beckman / Naperville Sun)
BY Hank Beckman
Naperville Sun
George Zimmerman's acquittal in the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Florida was the wake-up call that Patrisse Cullors said she needed. (The courts and jury proved it was a justified shooting after the feral Negro Trayvon Martin ATTACKED George Zimmerman)
"I knew my role had to be more than just to grieve on social media," Cullors said Tuesday of her motivation to form Black Lives Matter, the criminal justice reform group she co-founded with two friends to combat what they believe are the unjust killings of black people at the hands of law enforcement officers.
Cullors spoke in advance of an appearance at North Central College in Naperville, one of several events being held this week as part of the school's commemoration of Martin Luther King's birthday.
The group takes its name from the #blacklivesmatter that Cullors used after the Martin killing.
"We're seeing a lot of people come together," she said.
In particular, she cited a meeting being organized by the group with the mayors of large cities throughout the country – including Chicago's Rahm Emanuel – to discuss their grievances and push for change.
"If you can't show up for black lives, we will push you out of office," she said.
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BY Hank Beckman
Naperville Sun
George Zimmerman's acquittal in the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Florida was the wake-up call that Patrisse Cullors said she needed. (The courts and jury proved it was a justified shooting after the feral Negro Trayvon Martin ATTACKED George Zimmerman)
"I knew my role had to be more than just to grieve on social media," Cullors said Tuesday of her motivation to form Black Lives Matter, the criminal justice reform group she co-founded with two friends to combat what they believe are the unjust killings of black people at the hands of law enforcement officers.
Cullors spoke in advance of an appearance at North Central College in Naperville, one of several events being held this week as part of the school's commemoration of Martin Luther King's birthday.
The group takes its name from the #blacklivesmatter that Cullors used after the Martin killing.
"We're seeing a lot of people come together," she said.
In particular, she cited a meeting being organized by the group with the mayors of large cities throughout the country – including Chicago's Rahm Emanuel – to discuss their grievances and push for change.
"If you can't show up for black lives, we will push you out of office," she said.
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