BLM co-founder’s nonprofit flooded with secret cash from tech titan fund
Dignity and Power Now received nearly 60% of its 2020 cash from Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
Dignity and Power Now received nearly 60% of its 2020 cash from Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
You might have seen some of the recent headlines about how Black Lives Matter has spent its money.
The talking points have apparently gone out, and it is now OK for the mainstream press to gently criticize the Black Lives Matter movement.
Black Lives Matter bought a swanky Southern California home for nearly $6 million using donation cash, according to a report Monday.
A high-profile social justice activist in Boston and her husband used a nonprofit they founded to scam at least $185,000 from donors who included a Black Lives Matter chapter and the local district attorney’s office, federal authorities allege.
Bravo’s The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City reality television show features a woman who is accused of running a cult and another who faces federal charges for running an allegedly fraudulent telemarketing scheme, but sure, that Asian lady who called out Black Lives Matter during the riots of 2020 is the real problem with the show.
Identity politics has engulfed America’s cultural landscape like a tsunami. Unsure how to escape its destructive path, Americans feel like deer caught in the headlights, on a road paved with eggshells. This divisive ideology—steeply rooted in Marxism and fueled by racial narratives—has spread like wildfire through America’s most cherished institutions. Anyone who resists it or dares question the motives of its doctrines or disciples—Critical Race Theory and the Black Lives Matter movement, for example—is dismissed as a racist.
A notable venture capitalist and board member at the public company behind iconic brands like The North Face and Timberland was dismissive of racism in the U.S. and called Black Lives Matter “the true racists,” according to emails obtained by Axios. Details: Veronica Wu was a co-lead on a fund that it once described as the largest pool of money dedicated to seed startups.
Big Tech has showered Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors’ PAC and charities with millions in donations — and censors her online critics — as she backs their battle to control the internet. Philanthropists linked to Facebook, Twitter and Netflix have donated more than $7.5 million to a host of non-profits controlled by Khan-Cullors, who has helped them lobby for “net neutrality.”
Black Lives Matter (BLM) activists and supporters are rioting in our streets. They are attacking law enforcement officers, desecrating houses of worship, and destroying historical landmarks. And as they loot and burn businesses in your town, they do so while enjoying the support of one of America’s largest corporations – Amazon. The behemoth online retailer that you probably use regularly has pledged financial support to the Marxist BLM organization. At the behest of the BLM mob, Amazon even canceled contracts that aided local police departments.