Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 20, 2015
Last year, when that Jew woman walked down the street getting harassed by Blacks and the feminists said it was oppression of women and then the anti-racists were like “you racists, these people only harass women because of oppression,” I predicted the imminent collapse of the SJW movement, due to the lack of basic logic and high levels of emotional volatility involved.
This year, this prediction is coming true.
Recently, Blacks tried to protest in a queer neighborhood in San Francisco and got trash thrown at them.
Yesterday, Blacks literally protested themselves, attacking a Martin Luther King Day celebration in the name of dead Black cigar thief and cop-attacker Michael Brown.
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In the latest echo from last year’s Ferguson unrest, protesters invoking Michael Brown’s name burst into an auditorium at Harris-Stowe State University Monday afternoon and briefly disrupted a Martin Luther King Day celebration.
The protesters accused the university and clergy at the King event of being part of the “establishment,” and later got into a confrontation with Harris-Stowe students outside the venue, as police converged on the area.
The conflict — which was reminiscent of the internal Civil Rights Movement divisions that King himself had to navigate half a century ago — ultimately dissipated, and the King Day event resumed. There were no immediate reports of arrests.
…
Shortly before 1 p.m., about two-dozen protesters entered waving an upside-down American flag and chanting “No Justice, No Peace!” They took the stage, and as the crowd began filing out angrily, they used a microphone to accuse the university and the clergy of being part of the problem.
Protesters left the stage and left the building after Brown’s mother, Lesley McSpadden, appealed for calm. But later, the protesters and Harris-Stowe students confronted each other about the disrupted event.
Some Harris-Stowe students, watching protesters facing off with police, got frustrated and started yelling, asking why protesters would target a Martin Luther King Jr. event at a historically black college.
As students got louder, protesters moved away from the police and confronted the students. At one point, people in both groups had to be held back as the shouting became intense. The confrontation ended with Harris-Stowe students holding peace signs in the air.
So why are these Blacks attacking other Blacks?
I have no idea. Some Blacks were interviewed about it but their explanations don’t make any sense.
The only thing I can gather is that they think that seeking any form of college education – even at a historically Black culture – makes you an Uncle Tom.
“This program is more of the same,” protester Tory Russell said of his group’s decision to disrupt the King service. Russell, who said he attended Harris-Stowe, said the university represents the “establishment” and “the politics of respectability.” He defined that as an ideology that says people who are outside the mainstream don’t deserve the same protections under the law.
“We are the people who worked all those days, and put up all that resistance and went to the U.N.,” Russell said. “Don’t you see how they disrespect us? As soon as we showed up, they wanted us gone. They want to run back to their masters.”
Another protester, Deray McKesson, offered a similar explanation on Twitter. “The split is between those who feel like respectability politics isn’t going to lead to freedom,” he wrote. “And that this (King Day) program is respectability.”
They went on to interview college students who said they agreed with the cigar-thief revolution against the White oppressors but that they were trying to do something else for a few hours.
Though I am certain the tensions between feminists and Blacks, faggots and Blacks and immigrants and Blacks is going to continue to rise, I didn’t actually expect Blacks to start protesting other Blacks.
Hopefully, this is going to be a trend. If I was a highly-skilled internet troll (actually I am, but I’m busy all the time), I would get into these people’s networks and encourage more protests against other Blacks.