The Congressional Black Caucus and 270 left-leaning groups tried to block me from testifying in Congress. Their rationale was extremely hypocritical and, dare I say, Orwellian.
CBC Chair @RepYvetteClarke said the hearing—which focused on my research on the SPLC—was a "deliberate effort to intimidate and discredit an institution that has spent decades defending civil rights, exposing hate, and advancing opportunity for all Americans."
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She said the hearing "undermines the very civil institutions that give everyday people voice, protection, and power."
So, she's endorsing the SPLC's "hate" accusations and failing to admit that the SPLC itself has undermined "civil institutions." More on that later.
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The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights organized 258 left-leaning groups against the hearing, including AFL-CIO, Center for American Progress, Human Rights Campaign, Brennan Center, Demos, SEIU, Tides, and the Western States Center.
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The letter claims that the hearing “is not about any single organization—it is about a broader effort to use government power to silence people.”
FACT CHECK: False. It was about the Southern Poverty Law Center, and its using government to silence people.
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“At stake is whether people—regardless of their viewpoint—can express themselves without fear of government retaliation," the letter says. It warns against "the repression of dissent."
That's quite ironic...
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The National Council of Nonprofits & Independent Sector warned the hearing would "chill the speech of organizations throughout our sector." The groups warned that this is subjecting "perceived political opponents to harassment."
Again, ironic.
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If these Democrats and activist groups truly cared about “repression of dissent” and the chilling of free speech, they wouldn’t line up so readily to defend one of the worst offenders in American society.
That's the message @JudiciaryGOP invited me to testify about.
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The SPLC routinely defames mainstream conservatives and Christians, comparing them to the Ku Klux Klan by putting them on a “hate map.”
I testified alongside two men whose organizations faced political violence after the SPLC attacked them.
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If these groups really oppose using "government power to silence people," they shouldn't be defending SPLC.
The FBI cited SPLC on "radical-traditional Catholics," SPLC briefed prosecutors in Merrick Garland's DOJ, & sent its "hate map" to Kristen Clarke's team.
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As I told @RepMcClintock, "there are few organizations that engage in the chilling of civil society more than the Southern Poverty Law Center."
It is beyond hypocritical for these groups to defend the SPLC in the name of upholding civil society.
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By protecting SPLC from scrutiny, the Congressional Black Caucus and its 260 allied leftist groups are abetting the chilling of speech. It seems these groups are fine with government silencing people—just so long as it’s not their people.
The Human Rights Campaign, which acts like an LGBTQ mafia, is demanding companies provide coverage for new forms of transgender "health care," including liposuction, facial surgeries, and "tracheal shave."
HRC publishes a "Corporate Equality Index" rating companies on their pro-LGBTQ policies and stances. ESG investors used the survey as a benchmark for investment. HRC is on the back foot now, but 108 of the Fortune 500 companies still get a perfect 100 CEI score.
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Why did Target push "tuck" swimsuits in 2023? Why did Bud Light send Dylan Mulvaney beer? HRC's index incentivizes public displays of affection for the transgender cause—and penalizes dissent.
It acts like a protection racket: back our policies or face the mob.
A veteran told @marissastreit the new IMLS-funded Freedom Trucks make him feel "relieved."
"I sacrificed defending my great country, and what do I come back to? An education system... teaching my kids everything I sacrificed was not worth it" b/c America is "racist."
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“What a disgrace it is that these museums make veterans feel what they’ve done for our country was in vain,” Streit, president of @prageru, which helped with the trucks but took no federal 💰 for it, told me.
Reminder: this is the church invasion where a leftist activist, William Kelly AKA "DaWoke Farmer" told children, "Do you know your parents are Nazis? They're going to burn in hell."
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Some agitators blocked the stairs to the church's childcare area. Kelly also allegedly walked in front of a minivan with kids in it, yelling at congregants, while a "journalist" interviewed an agitator right in front of the van, blocking it from leaving.
Can we please stop lying around here? Here's the grand jury indictment laying out why Don Lemon was charged.
At the pre-op briefing Chauntyll Louisa Allen briefed Lemon and the other conspirators about where and what they were doing.
On camera, Nekima Armstrong tells Lemon—who knows the location but is hiding it from his audience—that they're going to "disrupt business as usual" at what we later learned was Cities Church.
When did the disruption start? As the pastor was beginning his sermon.
The agitators "oppressed, threatened, and intimidated the Church's congregants and pastors by physically occupying most of the main aisle and rows of chairs near the front of the Church, engaging in menacing and threatening behavior (for some) chanting and yelling loudly at the pastor and congregants, and/or physically obstructing them as they attempted to exit and/or move about within the church."
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In this indictment, we learn that it was William Kelly ("DaWoke Farmer") who shouted at a little kid, "Do you know your parents are Nazis? They're going to burn in hell."
When Don Lemon observed others leaving the service, he described people as "frightened," "scared," and "crying," which he said was understandable because the experience was "traumatic and uncomfortable," which he said was the purpose of the invasion.
Again Lemon said "the whole point of [the operation] is to disrupt."
The invasion of Cities Church was even worse than we thought.
Agitators blocked stairs so "parents were unable to get to their children" at Sunday School.😡
One told a kid, "Do you know your parents are Nazis, they're going to burn in hell?"
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William Kelly, "DaWoke Farmer," shouted, "This ain't God's house. This is the house of the devil."
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About 50 members of the congregation were "stuck" towards the front of the church. Not only did the agitators take over the service, but they "made it nearly impossible for parishioners to get out and leave."