HopeKillCure
Banned
What is his end gameYall still can't recognize game? Yall can't see this is all a stage play for the most part?
What is his end gameYall still can't recognize game? Yall can't see this is all a stage play for the most part?
What is his end game
@HopeKillCure I think he's misunderstood, with good reason obviously. His methods warrant deserved criticism and he's probably mental. Still, he might not be a c00n. I didn't paste the whole article, but its interesting.
Racist slurs on Tampa truck shock, confuse and mislead onlookers
Daniel has gotten more than a dozen tickets. He says they're illegal and a form of retaliation.
"That gives you a good example of how racism and city government work," he told the Tampa Bay Times. He said city officials recently converted two spaces next to City Hall into handicap spaces, where parking fines could be up to $250, "to prevent us from parking there."
In 2015, a Tampa insurance company sued to stop Daniel from picketing outside its office with signs — some showing Nazi and Confederate flags — and using the company's name and racial slurs, including, "We support tradition. N------ get nothing."
Daniel told the judge the insurance company had issued a policy to a roofer who left his roof uncovered during a storm.
Computers, music recording equipment, T-shirts and other merchandise he uses to make money were ruined, he said. (Daniel has been well-known as an organizer of alcohol- and drug-free talent shows, car shows and dance parties since the 1990s.) When Daniel couldn't get a satisfactory response from a claims adjustor — he said an employee involved in the claim told him the damaged goods were stolen merchandise — he took his protest to the company.
The Tampa company was "the closest representative of a network" that was treating "a simple insurance claim in a racist manner," Daniel said at a hearing.
Daniel described himself as a "professional protester" associated with the African People's Socialist Party, or Uhuru movement. And he said he would not try to resolve his insurance problem by, for instance, complaining to the Florida Department of Financial Services.
"There are no instances in which I would appeal to any person, white, to resolve any matter for me — no ifs, no ands, no buts," he said in court.
Camareno, a Republican and former state and federal prosecutor, said he doesn't know what's going on with the truck and agrees with "maybe only 1 percent" of what Daniel says. But he said he respects Daniel for exposing him to the teachings of Malcolm X and Steve Biko — "stuff I never learned in college or law school" — and said he's been consistent in his activism.
In the 1990s, Daniel was arrested and banned from Tampa City Council meetings after calling then-Mayor Sandy Freedman a "Jew dog" and City Council member Perry Harvey an "Uncle Tom n------." Daniel chained himself to a row of seats at one meeting and tried to walk into another carrying a dead possum.
No clue what elseThe media's end game for giving him a stage is polarizing their general audience...... you get people polarized, they stop dealing in logic...... only in emotion..... ask yourself... what can he really be getting out of this besides a check from TPTB?
Interesting@HopeKillCure I think he's misunderstood, with good reason obviously. His methods warrant deserved criticism and he's probably mental. Still, he might not be a c00n. I didn't paste the whole article, but its interesting.
Racist slurs on Tampa truck shock, confuse and mislead onlookers
Daniel has gotten more than a dozen tickets. He says they're illegal and a form of retaliation.
"That gives you a good example of how racism and city government work," he told the Tampa Bay Times. He said city officials recently converted two spaces next to City Hall into handicap spaces, where parking fines could be up to $250, "to prevent us from parking there."
In 2015, a Tampa insurance company sued to stop Daniel from picketing outside its office with signs — some showing Nazi and Confederate flags — and using the company's name and racial slurs, including, "We support tradition. N------ get nothing."
Daniel told the judge the insurance company had issued a policy to a roofer who left his roof uncovered during a storm.
Computers, music recording equipment, T-shirts and other merchandise he uses to make money were ruined, he said. (Daniel has been well-known as an organizer of alcohol- and drug-free talent shows, car shows and dance parties since the 1990s.) When Daniel couldn't get a satisfactory response from a claims adjustor — he said an employee involved in the claim told him the damaged goods were stolen merchandise — he took his protest to the company.
The Tampa company was "the closest representative of a network" that was treating "a simple insurance claim in a racist manner," Daniel said at a hearing.
Daniel described himself as a "professional protester" associated with the African People's Socialist Party, or Uhuru movement. And he said he would not try to resolve his insurance problem by, for instance, complaining to the Florida Department of Financial Services.
"There are no instances in which I would appeal to any person, white, to resolve any matter for me — no ifs, no ands, no buts," he said in court.
Camareno, a Republican and former state and federal prosecutor, said he doesn't know what's going on with the truck and agrees with "maybe only 1 percent" of what Daniel says. But he said he respects Daniel for exposing him to the teachings of Malcolm X and Steve Biko — "stuff I never learned in college or law school" — and said he's been consistent in his activism.
In the 1990s, Daniel was arrested and banned from Tampa City Council meetings after calling then-Mayor Sandy Freedman a "Jew dog" and City Council member Perry Harvey an "Uncle Tom n------." Daniel chained himself to a row of seats at one meeting and tried to walk into another carrying a dead possum.
No clue what else
So is he confused or the people receiving the message?Welp.... turns out it wasn't the way it was received, or actually portrayed.....
Ehh, you do realise this is the south right?