Tuesday, January 8, 2019

New Orleans Women's March cancels over anti-Semitism accusations

Yet another Women's March march event has been canceled just days before it was scheduled to be held on January 19th. The organization was first founded following the election of Donald Trump as president over Hillary Clinton who is not president. The Baton Rouge [which translated means 'red stick'] chapter of the Organization for Women posted on Facebook that the New Orleans March will not be taking place due to the refusal of the anti-Semitic national Women's March leaders to resign.

The late December announcement coincides with the cancellation of two other events in major areas. A Northern California Women's March was canceled because attendees at the first two events had been " overwhelmingly white." Chicago organizers are not holding a January event there, saying a substitute event was held in October to drum up excitement for the midterm elections.

"The controversy is dampening efforts of sister marches to fundraise, enlist involvement, find sponsors and attendee numbers have drastically declined this year. New Orleans is no exception," the Baton Rouge chapter wrote. "Many of the sister marches have asked the leaders of Women’s March, Inc. to resign but as of today, they have yet to do so."

The leaders, Linda "Sarsour, Carmen Perez, Tamika Mallory and Bob Bland [a woman] have commandeered the organization and spread their anti-Israel and anti-Semitic bile publicly.

For example, the Women's March, Inc. has been hit with accusations of anti-Semitism when it was reported that leaders of the organization may have tried to push a theory that Jews were "proven to have been leaders of the American slave trade." Three of the national group's co-chairs, Linda Sarsour, Carmen Perez, and Tamika Mallory, support Louis Farrakhan, the black nationalist leader of the Nation of Islam who has also made anti-Semitic comments. The revelations led one of the founders of the Women's March to ask the co-chairs to resign

The Women's March also posted a controversial tweet criticizing white women for not voting how the organization wanted them to vote, tweeting: 
"There needs to be accountability and an honest reckoning. There’s a lot of work to do, white women. A lot of learning. A lot of growing."
The flagship Women's March is set to return to D.C. after holding the 2018 event in Nevada, which was a key state during the run-up to the midterm elections.

The snake is eating its own tail.

It's a new year and the world still hasn't come to an end with President Trump in the White House, in spite of what the media and the left [but I repeat myself] would have you believe.

I hope that you will follow Brain Flushings throughout the year and feel free to comment on any issues of concern. Please subscribe and check out the sponsors on these pages too.



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