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."
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One woman broke her arm.
Congregants "were terrorized, our children were weeping, college students and young women were sobbing, it was impactfly and it will take time to work through."
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An agitator "continued to scream in the faces of young children while they were crying."
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Nekima Armstrong, a main ringleader, said that @citieschurch "cannot pretend to be a house of God while harboring someone who is directing ICE agents to wreak havoc upon our community and who killed Renee Good."
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Make no mistake: this church invasion was an atrocity.
Sadly, Democrats like @Jacob_Frey, are carrying water for the agitators. Judges denied arrest warrants for 5 of the 8 charged defendants.
But @HarmeetKDhillon says this isn't over. Stay tuned.
In 2020, I wrote "Making Hate Pay" about the SPLC's corruption. I knew they scammed donors by inflating "hate," and I suspected they were planting racists...
Now @FBIDirectorKash and @DAGToddBlanche confirmed my suspicions.
As I testified before @JudiciaryGOP last year, the SPLC publishes a "hate map" that it claims reveals the "infrastructure of white supremacy" in America.
The hate map includes:
1⃣ random people with no impact
2⃣mainstream conservatives
3⃣people on SPLC payroll.
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I've been analyzing this hate map for years, noting that the SPLC pads the numbers, partly by including groups for no reason other than their disagreement with the SPLC's hard-left agenda, and partly by listing every single chapter of an org as a "hate group."
The paid informant at the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville didn't just tip SPLC off. The SPLC supervised his r*cist postings and helped coordinate transportation, boosting the white nationalist side. SPLC paid him $270K between 2015 and 2023.
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2⃣NATIONAL ALLIANCE
SPLC paid a neo-Nazi leader more than $1M between 2014 and 2023.
This story is familiar to me because it involves the case of Glen Keith Allen, because the SPLC used the stolen documents to destroy his reputation.
The indictment includes six counts of wire fraud, because the SPLC claimed that it aims to "dismantle white supremacy" but it actually funded a broad swath of white nationalist groups.
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Beginning in the 1980s—the decade when SPLC's offices got firebombed—the SPLC cultivated a network of informants with violent extremist groups. It maintained those informants as recently as 2023, according to the indictment. SPLC funneled more than $3 million to them.
Bryan Fair, the SPLC's CEO, was kind enough to mention my congressional testimony in his video. He also mentioned my exclusive on @FBIDirectorKash separating the FBI from the SPLC last year.
As a piece of damage control, Fair's announcement is very interesting.
He acknowledges that SPLC paid informants to monitor "extremely violent groups." He claims this program is over. He frames it in terms of the civil rights movement and the 1984 bombing of SPLC HQ.
One of the strongest defamation lawsuits against the Southern Poverty Law Center has a new lease on life. The Dustin Inman Society legal team—@todd_mcmurtry @libertycounsel & more—filed an appeal at the 11th Circuit
DA King founded the Dustin Inman Society to oppose illegal immigration, but his sister is a legal immigrant and legal immigrants are on the society's board.
Even so, SPLC said the group "focuses on vilifying all immigrants." King sued for defamation.
The American Medical Association should face an investigation and potentially lose its tax-exempt status, @donoharm says in an official complaint to the IRS.
“Based on the evidence in our complaint, we believe the IRS should revoke the AMA Foundation’s tax-exempt status for operating a racially discriminatory program,” Dr. Kurt Miceli told me.
The problem?🤔 The AMA Foundation offers scholarships on a racial basis.
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That may not sound bad at first, but let's remember what Supreme Court precedent and President Donald Trump's executive orders say about racial discrimination, particularly in education.