You are easily the most racist person on this board.
So when racist ron makes completely false statements about minorities you don't see the racism in his statements (even when I prove them to be false)
But when someone makes a completely factual statement you pop in to call them racist without reason 🤣
Here's ANOTHER example of racist extremists in law enforcement / military
Think this guy's racist beliefs doesn't affect how he conducts himself in his professional life?
Conservatives like you scream injustice because of the perceived political bias of 2 FBI agents investigating donald trump...
So what do you say investigations conducted by racially biased cops like this?
Nothing.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/marched-nazi-rally-charlottesville-then-211807571.html
He Marched At The Nazi Rally In Charlottesville. Then He Went Back To Being A Cop.
Christopher Mathias
Thu, October 13, 2022 at 5:18 PM·16 min read
A Massachusetts police officer attended the
deadly “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, five years ago and acted in key security and planning roles, HuffPost has confirmed. He also used an alias to post racist and antisemitic comments online. The officer, John Donnelly, was still an active-duty member of the police force until Thursday, shortly after HuffPost inquired about his status with the department and role in the deadly white supremacist rally.
Donnelly, 33, was a patrolman for the Woburn Police Department near Boston, where he has been employed since 2015.
But on the morning of Aug. 12, 2017, Donnelly could be seen on video arriving at the Charlottesville rally with Richard Spencer,
a prominent white supremacist for whom Donnelly was apparently acting as a security guard. Spencer, Donnelly and a coterie of other suit-and-tie fascists worked their way into a city park where they held court beneath a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, posing for photos and talking into livestreams.
Donnelly was
among hundreds of white supremacists who invaded the university town. His fellow attendees violently attacked counterprotesters, with one neo-Nazi driving his car into a crowd of anti-fascists, killing a 32-year-old woman and injuring 19 others. That evening, Donnelly went to a party at a house near Charlottesville, where he joined in a celebration of the day’s events.
Donnelly then returned to Massachusetts and resumed his job as a cop.
His white supremacist activism and involvement in the Charlottesville rally has gone unknown for five years, during which time Donnelly — while still working as a police officer — became the president of a “back the blue” nonprofit raising money for law enforcement, as well as an award-winning real estate agent whose face is featured on a massive billboard in Woburn, a Boston suburb.
But last month, an anti-fascist collective called
Ignite the Rightprovided HuffPost with evidence showing Donnelly attended the Charlottesville rally and connecting him to a series of deeply alarming messages posted online in which he advocated violence against leftists and minority groups.