Amber Athey, the Washington editor for The Spectator magazine’s world edition, claimed she lost her regular spot on DC talk station WMAL after she referenced the delivery giant’s slogan in a tweet about Harris’ attire at the State of the Union address.
“Kamala looks like a UPS employee — what can brown do for you?” Athey’s March 1 tweet read. “Nothing good, apparently.”
According to Athey, who recounted her experience in a Spectator column, the tweet initially made no waves.
A few days later, however, Athey “spoke critically of protests in favor of ‘trans kids’ at the University of North Texas” — and, as she wrote, “a group of maniacal left-wing activists who want to chemically castrate children in the name of ‘gender affirmation’ came after me.”
“All of a sudden, the Kamala tweet was being re-framed as racist and dozens of Twitter accounts were bragging about contacting my employers about my ‘bigotry,'” she said.
Chapelle was right:
“In our country, you can shoot and kill a n—-r, but you better not hurt a gay person’s feelings,” Chappelle says.
A prominent Salt Lake City art gallery has cut ties with a famous Western painter, after complaints from Indigenous activists that the painter’s work often appropriated and abused Native American iconography.
The activists, though, are questioning why the gallery didn’t act sooner — and only after hearing criticism from them that artists represented by the gallery took action.
What Denae Shanidiin and Kalama Ku’ikahi Tong saw when they walked through Salt Lake City’s Modern West Fine Art, at 412 S. 700 West, was triggering and insensitive to Indigenous people, they said.
I know, right? How dare those bigots at the New York State DMV alledge there are only 3 genders? We need a P for pansexual, a 2 for 2-spirit, and H for hedgehogophiliac, at the very least. Karen Honchul needs to resign, immediately!