In the 60’s white death lead to civil rights in 2019 and 2020 nothing and it is sad.
The women of TYT nailed that Republican party is not an a part of QANON but yes they are part of the party, They are the party of poor people who fight against their own interest. White supremacy is way worst than socialism, it just means we all should have the same privilege and there should not be poor people, and that does not work either. So rich Republicans just want to keep all the money and privilege if you can just starve. The rich people don’t want help because they have all they need. Democrats are not in power now. The Republicans are the party of helping the rich and don’t care about the poor people who need their help.  Kenosha was where a 17-year-old white kid killed two white people. So the white man that killed a white male veteran who was with the black girlfriend, the veteran died at BLM protest.
This the hero that died. Anthony Huber is a hero, Riots are the voice of the unheard. Killing unarmed black men is wrong period. So Meghan doesn’t confuse the two. And you don’t know the difference you are now killing a white man so what is the threat now? They’re not black. Trump supporters did this and the Capitol was the chicken’s coming home to roost. Malcolm X spoke on this violence always snap back at the innocent. Garret Foster was a hero also. It looks like the killer is going to get away with it.
Sheila Foster struggled to put words together as she stood in front of the memorial in downtown Austin dedicated to her son Garrett, who died July 25 after being shot by a motorist at a protest against police brutality and racism.
“I wasn’t planning on coming here today; it was very spontaneous. I took the day off and was planning to lay in bed and cry all day. Honestly, that was all I had planned,” Sheila Foster said Friday afternoon. “And that’s what I was doing until it just occurred to me that I need to get down here, and I don’t know why. I just needed to get down here.”
Foster, who is from the Dallas area, said family members and friends, including her son’s fiancée, Whitney Mitchell, came to Austin to commemorate what would have been Garrett’s 29th birthday.
Though it was difficult for her to revisit the location where her son was fatally shot, Foster said she did not regret the decision.
“It’s good for my heart to see Whitney. I needed to hold her again because she’s all I have left of my son,” Foster said.
Garrett Foster was 28 years old when he was shot by Daniel Perry, a 33-year-old U.S. Army sergeant who was working in the area as a ride-hailing service driver on the night of the shooting.
Garrett Foster worked for the U.S. Air Force as a flight mechanic until he was 19 when he was discharged so he could be a full-time caretaker for his fiancée, Mitchell, who requires a wheelchair for her mobility.
After his death, protests erupted in the city in support of Garrett Foster, who was known to attend political demonstrations against police brutality with Mitchell.
Garrett Foster’s father, Steve — who also traveled from the Dallas area to Austin for the event on Friday — said no one could match his son’s desire to help those who were less fortunate than himself, and he also remembered how committed Garrett was to his fiancée.
Perry’s lawyers have denied that accusation and said that Perry was acting in self-defense.
Legal experts have told the American-Statesman that the state’s laws regarding self-defense might result in no one being criminally punished for Garrett’s death.
When asked about the investigation Friday, Steve Foster said his son deserves to have all of the facts presented in court.
“I would like the city of Austin and the attorney general to step up and investigate this death,” he said.
https://youtu.be/Q5AvEmFPq1g?t=12