Everybody wants something for free just because of who they are, not because they deserve it. The nation has talked about "reparations" for the injustices suffered by other people paid for people who didn't make the others suffer. Just what's the real injustice here?
The reparations for both real and perceived injustices to black people is probably familiar to many of you, and now we see that it isn't only related to slavery that had been abolished in the Nineteenth Century by the sacrifices made by hundreds of thousands of white folk who fought and died to end it. And while there are no reparations for the 2,000 British sailors who fought the African slave trade, this isn't about reparations for their white families either.
Reparations knows no limits in spite of no antebellum slave still being alive today.
In a report on Tuesday in the New York Post, a 'Karen' named Karen Ivery was 'reparationing' at a Target store last October, The incident occurred in Blue Ash, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati where Ivery demanded $1,000 in merchandise free of charge for "reparations". She was placed under arrest after a loss prevention officer at the store physically confronted her.
In a report on Tuesday in the New York Post, a 'Karen' named Karen Ivery was 'reparationing' at a Target store last October, The incident occurred in Blue Ash, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati where Ivery demanded $1,000 in merchandise free of charge for "reparations". She was placed under arrest after a loss prevention officer at the store physically confronted her.
CCTV footage showed the Target security employee punching her in the snot-box after she repeatedly talked to the cashier about those dandy "reparations" regarding her bill.
After what was described in the police report as a brief encounter, a manager approached Ivery and the cashier. The report then said that Ivery began "aggressively" walking in the direction of the manager, who was born a white woman.
“Ivery kept berating her about reparations and her privileged life,” the report said. [By 'privileged', did she mean that the woman had a job?]
According to the report, Zach Cotter, the store’s loss prevention officer, then stepped in and told Ivery to 1) chill out and 2) leave the store.
Instead of chilling she began turning her Karen-esque entitlement on Cotter — then, when he retreated, followed him back to his office. When he tried to shut the door, she kept him from doing so by force and, according to Cotter’s own words on the police bodycam video, cornered him “in an enclosed space.”
“And I hit her in the face,” he told police.
Don't you wish you could have been there? While I don't usually approve of violence, it was totally justified in this case. So check out the Twitter link below and enjoy:
Target security guard punches customer asking for ‘reparations’ https://t.co/GzlVBsRpVs pic.twitter.com/WD23AGitGUWhen the police officer asked Ivery, who was in the office, if she was all right, she responded, “Physically I am OK. Emotionally I am very, very angry.”
— New York Post (@nypost) April 12, 2023
She is also very, very delusional to think she's entitled for an establishment to pay for her items based on her melanin level.
According to the U.K.’s Daily Mail, the reparations incident got stranger from there.
The report said the full police bodycam footage shows that when the officer told her to stop talking, Ivery responded, “Do you know who I am? Clearly, you don’t know who I am.”
According to the U.K.’s Daily Mail, the reparations incident got stranger from there.
The report said the full police bodycam footage shows that when the officer told her to stop talking, Ivery responded, “Do you know who I am? Clearly, you don’t know who I am.”
Does anyone up to this point know who she is?
When the officer asked about the incident, she described it thusly: “I was asking the cashier to reach out to her manager so we could have a larger conversation about how money works, and how provision works, and how it’s been working in our community in a very wrong way.
Ivery later called it “my Rosa Parks moment.”
When the officer asked about the incident, she described it thusly: “I was asking the cashier to reach out to her manager so we could have a larger conversation about how money works, and how provision works, and how it’s been working in our community in a very wrong way.
Ivery later called it “my Rosa Parks moment.”
More like her Jussie Smollett moment.
The police were disagreed. The report “determined that Ivery was the aggressor.” She eventually was sentenced to a day in jail and $110 in fines for disorderly conduct.
The police were disagreed. The report “determined that Ivery was the aggressor.” She eventually was sentenced to a day in jail and $110 in fines for disorderly conduct.
But she only received 20% of what Smollett got for his "This is Trump Territory" fake mugging.
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