What will Beyonce’s next act be after Obama’s act on cop hatred is not hip?
If you are sitting there wondering – what can we learn from Beyonce’s performance at the MTV VMS’s, we can learn a lot. Beyonce is promoting Obama’s hatred against cops as further evidence of her slaying performance.. As we all know that Beyonce is a fan of Obama’s and Obama is an open fan of hers. Therefore, she continues supporting Obama in his quest to continue to cause the racial divide in this country.
She is a frequent performing guest at the White House. The problem a lot of performers have is that with each appearance they have to top the last performance and the competition. And, sooner or later, they get to the point that Beyonce has reached, you run out of ideas to top the last one and then what you present gets to the ridiculous rather than the sublime.
Superstar singer Beyonce didn’t just bring daughter Blue Ivy to the 2016 MTV VMAs; she also brought the mothers of police shooting victims Mike Brown, Trayvon Martin,Eric Garner and Oscar Grant to the red carpet.
Brown, Martin, Garner and Grant are some of the most important names to catalyze the Black Lives Matters movement. Beyonce brought in the mothers of Brown, Martin and Garner to partake in her visual album, “Lemonade,” as well. They held photos of their late sons in the video.
Beyonce first created waves with her support of Black Lives Matter in February, when she released the music video for “Formation,” which had imagery that evoked Hurricane Katrina, with Beyonce being submerged on top of a sinking police cruiser, graffiti reading “stop shooting us” and an image reminiscent of Trayvon Martin.
She then stirred controversy at the Super Bowl during her halftime performance when her dancers donned berets, sported Afros and wore all black, drawing comparisons to the Black Panther party.
Now steps in the White Lives Matter group who are from Houston, TX, Beyonce’s home town. Maybe Beyonce should take a page from this group also and be FAIR AND BALANCED:
The Confederate flag waved in front of the NAACP office Sunday. The red flag with its blue X holding white stars hung over the shoulder of a White Lives Matter member who was joined by others in his group in a protest against the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
“We came out here to protest against the NAACP and their failure in speaking out against the atrocities that organizations like Black Lives Matter and other pro-black organizations have caused. The attack and killing of white police officers, the burning down of cities and things of that nature,” White Lives Matter member Ken Reed said. “If they’re going to be a civil rights organization and defend their people, they also need to hold their people accountable.”
The protest drew much attention as people took photos of the group which held assault rifles and “White Lives Matter” signs on the Third Ward block.
“We’re not out here to instigate or start any problems,” Reed said. “Obviously we’re exercising our Second Amendment rights but that’s because we have to defend ourselves. Their organizations and their people are shooting people based on the color of their skin. We’re not. We definitely will defend ourselves, but we’re not out here to start any problems.”
Though area residents agreed with the message of equality that, at times, was shouted from the bull horn, some were taken aback by the Confederate flags and the presence of firearms.
“That’s a bold statement,” resident Quintina Richardson said. “You come into their home, front door, and say ‘hey!’ You’ve got some nerve.”
“The Conferderate flag throws me off,” Richardson said. “You’re saying Black Lives Matter is a racist organization but when you’re throwing the Confederate flag up and saying White Lives Matter, are you saying you’re racist?”
Reed said the flags were being flown as a symbol of Southern heritage.
“It has nothing to do with racism on our part,” Reed said. “We’re proud to be Southern. It has all to do about heritage, nothing to do with hate.”
kommonsentsjane