I am not following this cool/uncool conversation and respectfully disengage. I'm not 12.
jmo
I am not following this cool/uncool conversation and respectfully disengage. I'm not 12.
jmo
Lemon is a disgraced former journalist. He now has a social media site and calls himself an independent journalist. Anyone can do the same.
I haven't justified storming the church.Your post was very clear. Basically some people are trying to justify the storming of the church with their own biases which will have nothing to do with the court case against those arrested, including Lemon.
The core issue is that Lemon was at a church with a group of agitators and charged with being one of them and not solely there as an independent journalist. A grand jury found probable cause to indict him. We haven't seen the evidence yet. And it has nothing to do with one of the church's pastors or white nationalism. Good luck with that if that is where Lemon is going.I haven't justified storming the church.
I myself have stated more than once that I don't support disrupting worship services, but my feelings are tested knowing it's a white nationalist congregation.
It's a difficult topic that challenges me personally and I'm not shy about saying that it is difficult. I'm a church member and it is shocking to me that a church would be white nationalist.
And I'm not shy about my disapproval that a minister of the gospel and ICE member is part of a white nationalist church.
I didn't know anything about the church until the arrests. The DOJ brought a lot of attention to the church. But just because I'm learning about the church and at least one of its leaders does not mean I approve of disrupting worship. It's a big, false leap to assert that.
What disgraced Don Lemon? That's large word that sounds like it means in general to all and of course that's not true. IMO
Many pastors, who are not affiliated with a white supremacist Christian nationalist church, have other jobs that are not related to evicting brown people, who may or may not be legal immigrants, from the country they live in.Many pastors have other jobs, they don't all expect to be supported by their congregation. God bless him for his willingness to serve his country and his church.
Faith. Family. Country.
I assume this is your opinion?Your post was very clear. Basically some people are trying to justify the storming of the church with their own biases which will have nothing to do with the court case against those arrested, including Lemon.
Many pastors, who are not affiliated with a white supremacist Christian nationalist church, have other jobs that are not related to evicting brown people, who may or may not be legal immigrants, from the country they live in.
MOO
It's okay that a pastor who is affiliated with a white supremacy church is a federal law enforcement officer? That seems very Third Reich to me, but MOO.I'm sure they do. This church, however, has a pastor who works for law enforcement at the federal level who deal with the arrests of illegal immigrants in our country. And it has nothing to do with this case of Lemon and company storming a church in the U.S. which is against the law.
His defense will likely be he was there as a journalist not a protest participant. That makes it a core issue.The core issue is that Lemon was at a church with a group of agitators and charged with being one of them and not solely there as an independent journalist. A grand jury found probable cause to indict him. We haven't seen the evidence yet. And it has nothing to do with one of the church's pastors or white nationalism. Good luck with that if that is where Lemon is going.
It's information that the public should know. And thanks to journalists, the wider public does now know.It's okay that a pastor who is affiliated with a white supremacy church is a federal law enforcement officer? That seems very Third Reich to me, but MOO.
Please provide a link that shows Don Lemon was a part of the protest. If not link is provided the post will be removedOf course, you are right, there was always going to be a criminal complaint. Congregants were crying, children were crying, people were followed out to their cars, as they sat in their church pews praying and worshipping protesters were in their face, shouting about their beliefs, demeaning them as Christians, etc. It was a violent, loud and nasty protest and Lemon was part of it, now trying to hide behind a first amendment right. Shameful and shows the coward that he is.
Canada has the Canadian Human Rights Act, which is not the same as the US.What about synagogues with IDF members. Are they "cool", or "uncool"? If uncool, can they be invaded?
Reporting or "reporting"?There really is not anything out there that I have seen - even after a cursory google - that indicates there is any evidence that this reporter DL engaged in anything but reporting.
This is not proof that he was part of the protest, but he has been charged with being part of the protest.Please provide a link that shows Don Lemon was a part of the protest. If not link is provided the post will be removed
BBM. IMO, his words are important and speak directly to his decisions and actions beforehand.Speaking on camera from a snowy parking lot in the Twin Cities, Lemon said he had done some “reconnaissance” with activist groups ahead of the storming of Cities Church.
“These are resistance protesters, they’re planning an operation we’re going to follow them on. I can’t tell you exactly what they’re doing, but it’s called Operation Pull-Up,” he said in the livestream.
“So that’s what we’re doing here, and after we do this operation, you’ll see it live, these operations are surprise operations, again I can’t tell you where they’re going,” he said.
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Video proves Don Lemon was embedded with anti-ICE agitators before they stormed church — despite claiming ‘no affiliations’
Speaking on camera from a snowy parking lot in the Twin Cities, Lemon said he had done some “reconnaissance” with activist groups ahead of the storming of Cities Church.nypost.com