Monday, June 22, 2020

The Des Moines Register is the Enemy of The People

Shelby Fleig of the Des Moines Register

The Des Moines Register is absolutely insane.

There's Walter Duranty-style propaganda from creepy, man-looking-woman Ashton Weis in the anarchy zone in Seattle, special to the Register.  Archive link

There's the story on the ugly ass cunt from Fort Dodge, Mary Jo Laupp, who engaged in likely illegal behavior to get tickets to the recent Trump rally in Tulsa.  I'd like to see her arrested and thrown in prison rather than celebrated for election interference.  Archive link

And there's the story on the BLM assholes at the HyVee on SE 14th St in Des Moines, and the scared police hiding while a patrol car is spray painted by a white arm.  Funny how the Register's photographer Bryon Houlgrave doesn't take a picture of the person committing the crime.  Archive link

You're not a "protester" if your vandalizing something.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Democrat Janet Lyness is a Criminal

Do Nothing Dave Loebsack and Do Nothing Janet Lyness, Democrat Scumbags

Archive link

It's no surprise that Mazin Mohamedali, previously convicted of 2nd degree robbery, drug charges, and who knows what as a juvenile, was slapped on the wrist by Johnson County Attorney Janet Lyness.  All of Mohamedali's recent numerous charges were dismissed, except one involving disorderly conduct, which is what this blog mostly predicted.

Mazin Mohamedali, black criminal privilege in Democratr-run Johnson County

Just like in other deep blue cities and counties, if you want to riot, destroy shit, and cause problems then you can get away with it all if you're an anarchist communist and your lawyer is whitey red like Rockne Cole.

Lyness has a long track record of letting criminals go free, or mostly free.  She was the assistant county attorney under J. Patrick White when ICPD Officer Jeffrey Gillespie killed sculptor Eric Shaw in his studio in 1996 because Shaw had his back door propped open on a warm summer evening and was talking on the phone.  Gillespie was never charged, never faced a grand jury, and was able to resign.

I'm sure we'll see Mohamedali in the crime report in the future.  Mohamedali got 3 years probation for a First Degree Robbery charge that was plead down to Second Degree Robbery, still a felony.  Who gets probation for a felony?  Anybody in Democrat Janet Lyness's jurisdiction.  And Mohamedali couldn't even manage to make it through probation.

Iowa Freedom Riders's Wylliam Smith is a Racist Fucking Asshole


Wylliam Smith, one of the assholes leading the "Iowa Freedom Riders" through their terrorism and destruction in Iowa City, just so happens to be a total racist and black supremacist, at least that's the impression I get when reading his columns a few years ago in the Daily Iowan and watching his dumb short film that is anti-cop fantasy.

Do you mean to say that corporate tools like Hillary Ojeda and Zachary Oren Smith at the Iowa City Press-Citizen, the Cedar Rapids Gazette, the local TV news, or anybody at the Little Village lefty weekly hasn't bother to perform a quick check of Smith's past writings?

Yes, that's right.  The same bunch of fucking asshole "journalists" who have no problem with deep diving into Children's Hospital charity organizer Carson King's dumb teenage joke tweets and trashing him, can't be bothered to perform a simple Google search on some dickhead black supremacist racist loser who wants to "defund the police" and amass power through intimidation and destruction.

Let's take a look at some of Wylliam Smith's writings, archived in case the Daily Iowa decides to memory hole this shit.

Headline:  Why the University of Iowa needs Black only Events, by Wylliam Smith, published February 12, 2018.  Archive link.

Black students should host all-black events made by black people for black people. Black students need events in which there are other black men and women as a means to help them feel comfortable.

Iowa is a strange place. Living in Iowa City, where the population of black individuals is below 10 percent, is something I had never experienced before, and it is constantly changing my viewpoints on race relations. Last year, I would’ve said that all-black or black-only events are wrong.

I’m sure on face value, black-only seems wrong. Separating black kids into areas in which it is just them and excluding other students looks prejudicial. Some may even say it is racist.

But is it? Is asking for a safe place for black students to be black without consequence wrong? No — not only is it not wrong, it is heavily needed, especially here in Iowa.

Only 3.1 percent of students at the University of Iowa are black, according to the UI Undergraduate Admissions. A lot of those students come from Chicago, making that transition to Iowa a real game-changer for them. I don’t even live in Chicago, and it was hard for me to adjust to the overwhelmingly large white-to-black ratio.

Being thrust into a situation like that is almost heartbreaking, because as silly as it sounds, not seeing someone like you can make the campus seem even more foreign. It’s hard to feel the university is your new home or that “you are welcome here” when you constantly feel like an outsider.

Not only that, but being in a white-majority area comes with a cost. In order to be seen as professional, there is almost a constant need to conform. Code switching, or talking white, is just the tip of the iceberg. A black or brown student in Iowa has to talk white, act white, dress white in order to fit in.

Of course you don’t have to conform, but that’s when you get the stares. The people asking you borderline racist questions, the people who cross to the other side of the street when they see you coming, those who follow you throughout the store to make sure you’re not stealing anything.

Having events where black kids can just be black, where they can relax and be themselves without judgment is extremely needed. An environment like this can be lonely for students of color.

I was hesitant to say that UI needed black-only events, and I found myself trying to compromise. I thought perhaps we could have black-theme events that still encourage everyone of coming. But even in situations such as that, you find problems.

Once I took a friend to Panchero’s. The people behind the counter were black, and I started joking with them. After leaving with our food, my friend looked at me and said, “It’s really cool how you can switch from talking white to talking black like that.”

While he may have thought that was a compliment, to me it was slightly annoying and a little sad that he couldn’t even recognize why black people need to code switch in the first place.

Most white people are not inherently trying to be racist, but Iowa as a whole has a culture that either rejects or glorifies blackness. If we have black-only events it removes those ingrained expectations. It rids black kids of the constant need to fight stereotypes. It frees students to truly be themselves, with no onlookers casting judgment.


Wylliam Smith made a weird short film that's available on the University of Iowa Libraries site.  It's called PowerLess Smalltown Hero.  He uses the music of gay UK band Bronski Beat and their gay anthem "Smalltown Boy" in an amateurish mess that ends with a female cop shooting him in the back for no reason.



Back to Wylliam Smith's columns, because they are telling.

Here is "The Reality of Being Black in Iowa" by Wylliam Smith, published May 2, 2018.  Archive link.

When I was about to graduate from high school in Grand Rapids, Michigan, many people ridiculed me for only applying to three colleges. My classmates had applied to eight or nine colleges and insisted I needed to broaden my options.

But I didn’t need to apply to 15 schools because I knew that no matter what happened, I was going to the University of Iowa. I wanted to to go to the UI because I’m a writer, and this is ranked No. 1 in the nation for its writing program.

When I told my family this, my mother said, “Enjoy all the White people and the corn.” I ignored everyone and came here anyway.

I didn’t think about the race, money, or location when I moved here. In my mind, it didn’t matter. I had secured a job at The Daily Iowan, I was a getting a degree for a career I loved, I was making connections with great writers, and I was following my dreams.

It never occurred to me that being one of 1,035 Black students in a school of 33,564 students would be a problem.

It’s been two years since I first visited UI to sign my registration papers. Now, I see the uglier side of Iowa. I see the kids crossing to the other of the street when I walk by. I notice professors complimenting me on how “articulate” I am. I hear conversations cease when I walk into the room.

“Sometimes the s****y part is you don’t know if it’s in your head or if it’s actually happening,” said UI senior Sam Osaro, who is involved in Hubbard Scholars, a black male group on campus, as well as the National Association of Black Journalists.

I felt crazy. People told me I was being overly dramatic, or that I was looking for racism in society, and that’s why I kept seeing it.

“As somebody who studies race, I can say that things aren’t just in people’s head,” said Jessica Welburn, a UI assistant professor of sociology and African American Studies. “I’ve gone into the CVS in the mall and felt like I was being watched and followed … And I knew that [the CVS employee] would never guess that I was a faculty member on campus.”

After my first year, I started to embrace my Blackness, and there was a massive backlash. Whenever I tried to speak out both in my classes and when I wrote for the DI, I was met with hate mail and bigotry.

After I wrote the story “Why the University of Iowa Needs Black-Only Events,” I received an email from “mlucky99” that said, “Can we get our drinking fountains back too. It goes both ways young man. Be careful what you wish for …”

When I grew my hair out, I was told it was nappy. When I wore a hoodie to my job, someone said I looked ghetto.

Black student activist and UI senior Matthew Bruce has described people telling him his natural hair being dreadlocks are unprofessional, and some have suggested he change it for job interviews.

The campus claims it’s diverse, and its motto is, “You Are Welcome Here.” But everywhere I turn, I feel as if I am instead being told, I am not welcome. My feelings on this issue are complex, but some UI students fully feel campus is “anti-Black.”

“My initial gut reaction is no, [UI is] not anti-Black. I think what the campus is, is status quo,” said Nadine Petty, the executive director of the Center for Diversity and Enrichment. “And the status quo here on this campus is White.

“Most of the campus community who are decision-makers are White, which means most of the programming and the services and the campus-focused activities are going to come from a lens that is also White.”

I find that people at the UI liked me more when I was being complicit in the racist beliefs on campus. They liked it when I laughed at stereotypes, such as “all Black men are criminals.”

When I say that this campus is not a place where Black students thrive, I am met with a five-worded response: “You chose to come here.”

Some would argue because of that fact alone, Black students should get over it. We did, after all, choose to go to this school.

Yes, I chose to go here, but I came here because I love to write. I did not come here to suffer racism both in and out of the classroom, and the idea that Black individuals should “know what they are getting into” is asinine to me.

I am not expecting the university population to have a Black percentage in the double digits, but that does not excuse both subtle, and blatant, racism. Saying that racism is just a product of being Black in the Midwest is the reason it still exists.

They did not like it when I wrote stories dissecting those racist beliefs, such as my DI article “Acting Black, acting the part.”


What is there to say about this column?

Grand Rapids, Michigan is only 20% black.

The University of Iowa is dominated by Democrats, which is the party of slavery, Jim Crow, the KKK, separate but equal, and aborting black babies.

Many years ago, it was determined that 8% of employees identified as Republican, and most of them were doctors.  I'm sure the number is even smaller today.

Maybe you should be blaming racist Democrats for all your problems, rather than "white people in Iowa".

And, if all that wasn't enough, Wylliam Smith claims to be bi-sexual.

This is from a column headlined "The myth of gay being the new black" by Wylliam Smith, published November 14, 2017.  Archive link.

When I was in high school, my school put on the play To Kill a Mockingbird. Regardless of my school’s lack of actual black students in a play that focused heavily on racism, the performance was quite good. Because my school had a heavy majority of white students, the play felt the need to include a questionnaire afterward to open the discussion of racism for the students and their parents.

That was the first time I heard the notion of “gay being the new black.” Of course, my entire family erupted in laughter, thinking the idea was a joke at best, but what I noticed was that other people in the audience were calmly nodding their heads in agreement.

At first I dismissed it, chalking it up to my school just being blind to racism, something that I realized it was prone to do quite a bit. But recently, I have been hearing this idea of “gay being the new black” more and more.

There is no way being a member of the LGBTQIA+ community could ever be compared to being black in America.

Both are two completely separate circumstances that come complete with their own problems. Yes, both are under attack from prejudice, but the situations are in no way the same.

The systemic racism that has been a part of this country since its foundation has caused problems from slavery to unjust shootings of black men to stereotypes as simple as the assumption of amazing athletic ability.

African Americans are still dealing with racism to this day, and it exists on a systemic level. The very play To Kill A Mockingbird, and the book it’s based on, is about the unjust legal system convicting an obviously innocent black man of a crime he didn’t commit.

One thing that separates the two is one cannot hide that he or she is black. You cannot come out as black. You receive racism from the day you’re born and most likely to the day you draw your last breath.

I’m not condoning that some people hide their sexual orientation, but people in the LGBTQIA+ community have a choice to mark the day they start telling people about who they really are. They can wait until they know who they are inside before revealing that to the world. You can’t wait till you’re ready to be black. In most cases, it’s the first thing people notice about me.

As a bisexual black man, I can definitely state that I can see the problems that arise in both situations. I have dealt with racism and with bigots against gay rights. I am not saying that one is easier to handle than the other. But the fact remains is that one problem does not equal the other.

Non-black people of the LGBTQIA+ community don’t face the problems of inherently being seen as delinquents. They don’t have to code switch or learn to “talk white.” They will never struggle with the thought of their names being “ghetto.” And while they do suffer many hate crimes, when police notice them, their defining feature won’t be black male.


After all that narcissistic insanity, what comes next?

Yes, that's right:  AWARDS  (archive link)

Wylliam Smith was awarded the Master Columnist award, first place, for his racist bullshit in the Daily Iowan.  And look at everybody else who won awards:  that anti-Semitic bomb-thrower Rekha Basu, that leftist ass-licker Todd Dorman, and thankfully now-dead gambling addict and fatso Ken Fuson.

For being a dick-sucking black guy from Grand Rapids, it seems that Wylliam Smith has done fairly well in Iowa City.

Poor Wylliam Smith.  He's never happy.

Just recently the Press Citizen let Smith have a column (archive link) to bitch and moan that "his side of the story" wasn't being told.  Smith couldn't even handle a column in the Little Village (archive link) that interviewed a variety of people who took part in the protest.

One wonders why Wylliam Smith continues to hang around Iowa.

It's easy to push around lefty whitey in Iowa.  All a black person has to do is spout some racist bullshit in print and the fat white Democrat seals start clapping and giving him awards.  A white person couldn't talk that way, or they'd be called a "white supremacist", and rightfully so.

What happens in the future?

I don't know.  How long can somebody continue to play the self-hating / narcissistic card before it gets old, they commit suicide, or they get into trouble and have to leave?



If we had a responsible media in Iowa, much less at the University of Iowa, then we wouldn't see this kind of racist stuff printed and Wylliam Smith given awards.  He should have been run out of the state a long time ago for being a racist fucking asshole.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Democrat Miasma

No links in this column.

Some questions we should be asking:

Why are deep blue Democrat-run cities, Democrat-run counties, Democrat-run states, most colleges and universities that are run by Democrats, the Democrat-run entertainment industry, and the Democrat-run media outlets filled with crooks, racists, perverts, and losers?

The University of Iowa and Iowa State University are all run by commie-leftist nutjobs who make way too much money.  Didn't I read years ago that the University of Iowa only had 8% of staff who identified as Republican, most of them were doctors?  That numerous departments didn't have a single Republican professor.  That the University of Iowa Law School, with nearly 50 professors at one time, only had one registered Republican and he was constantly being bothered about it.

Because the universities are filled with so-called "liberals" then why does a school like the University of Iowa need a department with a budget in the multiple millions devoted to "diversity"?  Every college and university and too many large companies run by libtards think they need this.

If everybody is so "smart" and "enlightened" and on the same page about leftist politics, when why are they so incompetent when an actual sexual assault case happens on campus?

Same thing with the justice system in those counties. 

The Democrats import criminals for their welfare dollars and to import drugs, play "catch and release" with offenders to keep the Democrat Industrial Complex (police, jail, prison, parole officers, halfway houses, welfare, social workers, therapists, psychiatrists, politicians, abortion clinics, etc) employed, and then they wonder why our jails and prisons are filled with actual criminals. 

They say it must be "systemic racism" on the part of "white people".

No, it's systemic racism on the part of Democrats.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

The Iowa City Press-Citizen Doesn't Have An Editor

Carol "Cunter" Hunter

Archive link:  http://archive.vn/5hvXI

I was wondering how a newspaper like the Iowa City Press-Citizen could print such obvious lies like Shams Mohamed Ghoneim's column about the shooting of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta.

Doesn't the Press-Citizen have an editor?

Turns out, the Press-Citizen doesn't really have an editor.

According to Little Village, in late April 2020, editor Tory Brecht was fired due to budget cuts and the editor position was allegedly moved to some unnamed person in the Des Moines Register's office in Des Moines.  This was further fallout of the Gannett merger with GateHouse media.

Not that Gannett was well-run.  Carol "Cunter" Hunter kept her executive editor job at the Register even after the disastrous example she set following the trashing of children's hospital charity fundraiser Carson King by "reporter" Aaron Calvin.

Aaron Calvin, asshole

Shams Mohamed Ghoneim and the Iowa City Press Citizen (Gannett) Spread Lies About the Death of Atlanta's Rayshard Brooks


Archive link:  http://archive.vn/U5m9p

Shams Mohamed Ghoneim writes occasional columns for the Iowa City Press-Citizen and recently wrote one about the police shooting of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta.

There's police bodycam footage, bystander video footage, and surveillance video from the Wendy's (before it was burned by white girls) all showing Rayshard Brooks being treated respectfully before his arrest, but then resisting arrest, stealing a taser from an officer, and aiming the taser at the officers, and deploying the taser.

That certainly justifies using potentially lethal force against Rayshard Brooks.

Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

See for yourself:


and


Shams Mohamed Ghoneim and the Iowa City Press-Citizen (Gannett) are liars.  Nothing new here.

Black Lies Matter: How the Des Moines Register Reported on the Marcus Owens Hoax Before It Was Revealed to be a Hoax


Marcus Owens faked a "hate crime" in Iowa City in 2016, but video surveillance evidence along with personal statements showed Owens' claims to be a hoax.  

Here's how the Des Moines Register reported on the incident before it was revealed to be a hoax.

At the end, there is one final story after the hoax was revealed.


Des Moines Register by Jeff Charis-Carlson, May 6, 2016.  The family meeting with the UI President, probably hoping to get paid off.  The media says the response has been terrible.  Be on the lookout for racist whitey!

A family member of Marcus Owens said Thursday he worries that Iowa City police officers don't share the family's "sense of urgency" in terms of finding the three men who reportedly attacked the black University of Iowa student Saturday while shouting racial slurs.

"My largest fear is that the students are leaving town next week," said Darrell Owens, Marcus Owens' uncle. "Memories fade, and people won't be around for the police to question. So time is of the essence."

Darrell Owens said his 19-year-old nephew was assaulted Saturday night in the alleyway of the 200 block of Iowa Avenue. The business major from Naperville, Ill., was walking outside Eden Lounge when he was attacked by three white, college-age men.

In an interview Thursday, Darrell Owens repeatedly praised UI President Bruce Harreld for spending most of Wednesday with his nephew and other family members. Harreld and other UI staff were working to provide Marcus Owens with whatever academic, medical and psychological support he needs to make it through the rest of the semester and beyond.

"Marcus Owens and his family allowed me to spend the day with them, and I was humbled by their strength and desire to move forward," Harreld said Thursday in a campuswide message. "No one should feel that their race or any aspect of their identity makes them a target. This kind of violence is unacceptable and must be denounced by the entire community."

Harred added that, if UI students were involved, "they will be subject to disciplinary procedures under the student code of conduct."

Since Saturday, Marcus Owens has received 15 stitches in his lip as well as treatment for a broken blood vessel in one eye and two broken front teeth, Darrell Owens said.

Doctors say there won't be any permanent damage to his sight, but Marcus Owens will need surgery to correct his dental problems.

Although satisfied with the response of UI administrators Wednesday, Darrell Owens said the family still "was not necessarily pleased on two fronts."

"We don't want to be (the Iowa City Police Department's) adversary, and we want to work with them," he said.

"But it doesn't feel that they have the same sense of urgency that we have."

Marcus Owens and his father, Melvin Owens, spent Thursday morning talking with Iowa City police about the case, Darrell Owens said.

Iowa City police officials said in a statement Wednesday that they have developed information on suspects and are investigating leads. Because of the racial slurs reported, the incident is being investigated as a hate crime.

The family's second complaint focuses on what happened Monday night when Marcus Owens tried to report the attack to the UI police. Because the assault happened off campus, police redirected him to the Iowa City Police Department.

"Here you have a victim who goes to the campus police and who has been assaulted -- he's a bloody mess -- and they say, 'We don't want you to repeat it again, so you need to go talk to someone else?'" Darrell Owens said.

"That's a problem for me."

Another problem, Darrell Owens said, is whether his nephew's race played into that decision.

"Had that been a blond, blue-eyed white female coming in after being assaulted, I think there would be zero chance that they would have given the same response," he said.

The UI Office of the President issued a statement Wednesday confirming that, based on Marcus Owens' experience, UI police officials were re-evaluating the department's policy for redirecting complaints.

Had UI police taken Marcus Owens' full statement Monday, they would have had the information needed to issue a campuswide crime alert sooner than 10:45 a.m. Wednesday.

Many members of the UI community have questioned why the university took so long to issue either a crime alert, which would be required under federal law, or a Hawk Alert, which UI public safety officials use for warning the community of an immediate threat to the campus.

Since a Chicago news station first reported Tuesday on Marcus Owens' injuries, members of the UI community have been critical of the university's response.

Nearly 7,000 tweets have been added in that time to #ExplainIowa, which became one of the top trending hashtags on Twitter for part of Wednesday.

Students have vowed to continue pressuring the university until the administration does more to combat racism on the UI campus and throughout the community.

"We will continue to use #ExplainIowa until we are content in seeing that justice will exist for the foreseeable future when it comes to the interests of black students at the University of Iowa," UI's National Pan-Hellenic Council said in a joint statement. "Justice is NOT a campus atmosphere which fosters anti-black racism so strong that 3 white students feel empowered to attack an innocent, unsuspecting black student while walking."


Des Moines Register by Jeff Charis-Carlson, May 7, 2016.  The "protests" begin.  People are "outraged" at "three white, college-age men", which really means all Whitey.

More than 75 students lined up Friday afternoon in Iowa Memorial Union for a largely silent study-in protest outside the office of the University of Iowa vice president of student life.

Participating students declined to answer questions from the media, except to say that they were drawing attention to the failures of the university and local community in response to last week's reported hate crime against a black UI freshman.

Marcus Owens, 19, reports being assaulted Saturday night in the alleyway of the 200 block of Iowa Avenue.

The business major from Naperville, Ill., was walking outside Eden Lounge when he was attacked by three white, college-age men. Since Saturday, Owens has received 15 stitches in his lip as well as treatment for a broken blood vessel in one eye and two broken front teeth.

"We hope we don't get punched for studying," read the lone sign at the Friday protest.

The protest comes after several organizations on campus issues have statements in support of Owens and condemning the university's sluggish response to the reported assault against him.

"Numerous instances of racial and religious discrimination happen on this campus each day, and we will no longer remain silent, passive or apologetic for not feeling our institution truly embodies the mantras of 'diversity' and 'inclusiveness,'" reads a joint statement from the Black Student Union and the Black Law Student Association.

The protest also follows the creation of the hashtag #explainiowa, which has been included in thousands of tweets since Tuesday night.

"The #explainiowa hashtag is being used in the much the same way other campuses have been utilizing social media to engage the community and to mobilize their collective sentiments in the immediate moments following a jarring incident," said Cassie Barnhardt, an assistant professor of Educational Policy and Leadership Studies at UI.

Barnhardt said the hashtag is being used to convey multiple statements.

"It is being applied to communicate moral indignation of Marcus Owens' attack, to provoke a response from university administrators, and it is serving as an invitation of sorts to prompt others in the community to think about and pay attention to acts of racial aggression and bias," she said.


Des Moines Register by Jeff Charis-Carlson, May 11, 2016.  Here's when the BLM liars start reporting their micro-hoaxes that can never be proved to be hoaxes but generate headlines to keep the issue going.  Notice the quote by Center for Microaggressions.  All the "persons of color" having racial insults "hurled" at them in downtown Iowa City on weekend nights - this is almost certainly fraudulent to create a hostile environment of "hate whitey" because Black LIES matter.

Campus police are investigating racially offensive drawings scrawled on a whiteboard in a University of Iowa residence hall on Friday.

The drawings, which defaced a positive Black Lives Matter statement, were racially biased and contained hate speech directed at black people, according to an email sent Monday by Monica Marcelo, acting hall coordinator for the Quadrangle Residence Hall, a 358-resident dorm.

Marcelo said the person responsible has not come forward.

"I am hopeful that they will so that we can have a learning opportunity from the incident," Marcelo wrote. "Words can and have had a negative impact on our community."

The drawings and messages have been removed, UI officials said.

"We will not tolerate anything but a safe and inclusive campus for students of all backgrounds," UI spokeswoman Anne Bassett said by email. "No one should feel that their race or any aspect of their identity makes them a target."

The incident Friday came less than a week after Marcus Owens, a black UI freshman, reported being assaulted by three white men outside a downtown bar near campus. Iowa City police are investigating the reported assault as a possible hate crime.

Officials from the university and the Iowa Board of Regents have since issued statements condemning racism in any form.

"We want our universities to be places where everyone feels welcome and must do everything we can to make our students feel safe," said Josh Lehman, a spokesman for the regents.

Many members of the UI community have been critical of the university's handling of the reported assault.

They also point out the assault represents the latest example of the hostile environment that students of color experience in Iowa's three predominantly white public universities.

"Statements like the ones that were written send the statement that not everyone is welcome in Quadrangle Hall or the University of Iowa, which is counter to our mission and values," Marcelo said in the email.

Multiple students of color at UI have reported racial slurs being hurled at them in the downtown area -- especially on weekend nights.

UI's Center for Diversity and Enrichment reported earlier this year that recurring complaints of bias and discrimination in the Iowa City area include students being followed at local bookstores and other retail venues as well as microaggressions in class, the dorms and the community.

Some high-profile events over the past two years include:

December 2014: A visiting University of Iowa art professor displayed a Ku Klux Klan figure on the UI Pentacrest in the same spot where hundreds of protesters had gathered the night before. UI officials had not authorized the display of the sculpture. The artist says the sculpture was meant to highlight ongoing racial violence in the U.S., but many members of the UI community saw the sculpture as a threat. The incident sparked campuswide debates over the conflicts between the university's commitment to academic freedom and its responsibility to ensure a safe and welcoming campus for all its students.

October 2015: UI Student Government issues a statement condemning a series of comments posted by UI students on several social media platforms targeting Asian, Asian-American and Pacific Islander students.

November 2015: Racist graffiti is found carved into a bathroom door in Spence Laboratories, 308 Iowa Ave. UI staff sanded the door down to remove the comment, and UI administrators denounced the slur.



Des Moines Register Editorial by staff, published on May 15, 2016.  Look at how the Des Moines Register presumes that the police failed, and that it was a "racially motivated attack".  The word "ALLEGED" is not used once here:

A thistle to the University of Iowa campus police for failing to adequately respond to the racially motivated assault of Marcus Owens, a 19-year-old student. Owens reported the incident to campus police but was immediately referred to Iowa City police, without being fully questioned, because the incident took place downtown, off campus. As a result, the university didn't issue a campus-wide alert for two days. What's most disturbing, however, is the fact that the UI officials say there are no protocols in place for Iowa City police to notify the campus police when an incident is under investigation -- even one that involves a UI student and may warrant campuswide notification of students and faculty. To his credit, UI President Bruce Harreld has met with Owens and appears to be leading the effort to ensure communication between the two agencies is improved.



Des Moines Register by Stephen Gruber-Miller, May 18, 2016.  The aftermath.  The Johnson County Democrats refuse to charge Marcus Owens with anything.  Leon Spies is Owens' lawyer, just like he was also the lawyer (with Alfredo Parrish) on the Tarsha Michelle Claiborne fake hate crime in Iowa City back in 2000.

A University of Iowa student who police say inaccurately reported being the victim of a hate crime two weeks ago will not face charges, officials said Tuesday.

"If we were going to charge him, we could charge a variety of other people with disorderly conduct or different things (concerning this incident). And it seemed more important to the community to get the information out on what had happened," Johnson County Attorney Janet Lyness said.

UI freshman Marcus Owens, who is black, reported being assaulted on the night of April 30 by three white men shouting racial slurs. An Iowa City Police Department investigation found that Owens was involved in a series of altercations that did not completely match the account he gave police, and officials determined the incident did not meet the criteria for a hate crime.

"Marcus was not the victim of an assault," Iowa City Police Capt. Troy Kelsay said. "Marcus was an active participant and even an instigator in three separate physical confrontations or assaults that occurred at bar close. During at least one of those he suffered injuries. That is unfortunate, but when you go looking for multiple fights, that is going to happen."

The Owens family issued an apology letter Monday night, acknowledging that there were substantial differences between Marcus Owens' account and the police investigation.

"I want to extend my gratitude to the family for doing the right thing," said Lt. Mike Brotherton, who is in charge of investigations. "Because they did issue that apology letter. I think it was very necessary and critical for the community."

The Iowa City Police Department and Johnson County Attorney's Office held a news conference at City Hall on Tuesday morning to present a timeline of events and surveillance video that captured the incident.

"We very quickly learned through video evidence that the events as reported by Marcus just did not happen. Marcus was not even present yet at the bar at the time he reported he was assaulted, and video evidence from outside the bar and along the street nearby showed that these events actually occurred at or near bar close when Marcus came out of the bar," Kelsay said.

Surveillance video shown at the news conference revealed three separate fights involving Owens between 1:30 and 1:45 a.m. on May 1, including a large brawl outside Eden Lounge on the 200 block of Iowa Avenue. All three incidents occurred hours after Owens said he was assaulted. Someone did use the N-word, as Owens reported, which led to the second altercation, Kelsay said.

When Owens, 19, went to UI Hospitals and Clinics for treatment about 4:30 a.m. on May 1 -- nearly three hours after the fights occurred -- his blood alcohol content was .116 percent, Kelsay said.

Police also sought assistance from the FBI, which declined to investigate the incident as a hate crime after reviewing the evidence, Kelsay said.

The FBI defines a hate crime as a "criminal offense against a person or property motivated in whole or in part by an offender's bias against a race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender, or gender identity."

Lyness and Kelsay said officials took seriously the report of a hate crime and acknowledged it as a divisive issue. Describing the community as the victim in this case, Lyness said it was more important to ease people's fears than to charge Owens with making a false report.

"If we charged him, we could be having trial in the fall sometime and delay it. And it seemed much more important to be able to get the information out so that people aren't afraid of being downtown or (afraid) that there were three white men who were going to attack people randomly because of racial things," Lyness said.

After the incident, Owens hired Iowa City lawyer Leon Spies, Kelsay said, and all communication between the department and Owens' family was conducted through Spies.

Police praised witnesses, including friends of Owens, for coming forward to tell their stories so officials could learn the truth. Kelsay mentioned that the community response to the incident and outrage at the idea that a hate crime could have occurred made some people afraid to come forward with a different story.

"The first liar is the one that's believed, and that was Marcus in this case," he said.

The ICPD and city of Iowa City will not seek restitution for their efforts in investigating the case, Kelsay said, citing a reluctance to get involved in a civil suit.

"I hope that he learned a lesson from it," Kelsay said of Owens. "But it was more important to get the truth out to the community, and that is a function of the Iowa City Police Department so, no, we are not going to be counting pennies or getting any sort of restitution."

Iowa City police say student's family did 'the right thing' by issuing apology letter


As you can see, the Des Moines Register absolutely wanted this to be a racial incident.  

The Des Moines Register never used the word "alleged" in any stories referenced here about Marcus Owens.  

The Des Moines Register and Owens' family presumed the police were incompetent.

The Obama Administration's FBI wouldn't even look into it.  Why is that?  (they knew)

Black Lies Matter got some additional headlines with fake stories of residence hall drawings, racial slurs being yelled at random black people in downtown Iowa City.  Anything to push the narrative that white people are being racist.

In the end, Owens was never charged.  Just like Tarsha Michelle Claiborne was only charged for marijuana possession and not making threats or likely setting fires.  And just like how Lujayn and Raneem Hamad were never charged for their "hate note hoax".

If you want to get away with a "racial crime hoax", deep blue Johnson County and libtard-filled Iowa City is a good place to try it.  

We expect to see much more of this nonsense in the future.

And we'll be looking into other incidents and noting media reaction.



Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Black Lies Matter in Iowa: Tarsha Michelle Claiborne


"I figured it was going to be a white guy between 25 and 55 because they’re the root of most evil." 

- Ann Rhodes, University of Iowa

Ann Rhodes

Archive link:  http://archive.vn/fxqiM

The Dental School Case:

                For a three-week period in March and April of 2000, the University of Iowa was terrorized by an anonymous e-mailer making a pattern of threats against minority students.  Although a single student was eventually arrested for the events, it took time and innovation since the e-mailer used no less than three fictious accounts and names. 
                A.            The Threats:
                On Tuesday, March 28, 2000 the first email was sent out.  The Dean of the College of Dentistry, David Johnsen, and three faculty members received the email.  The e-mail demanded that the school get rid of its minority students and threatened bomb violence, as possible forms of action if it did not within three days if nothing happened.  “The e-mail said the dental school was a random place to start and that the group will try to rid all minorities – with blacks going first – from the UI.”  The e-mail was sent from the e-mail address “minoirtyrid@excite.com” [sic].  The Excite.com address was registered to an Iowa City male. 
                On Thursday, March 30, 2000 the second email was sent from “minoritygetout@excite.com.”  This time eight College of Dentistry students, all minorities, received the email.  It continued threats of violence and threatened the use of gun violence against students, and that the students and their families should fear for their lives.  It also said that the person or people sending the e-mail would be responsible for any vandalism to the cars of the minority students and advised them to stay home from school.
“According to the Excite.com Webpage, neither of the two accounts were active as of Sunday afternoon.  The [alleged] groups sending the e-mail goes by four names – Minorityout, Minoritygetout, Minorityrid Committee and the Committee of Minority Flight – but Rhodes said she thought one person was probably responsible for the threats.  Rhodes said the e-mails were consistent in nature and did not appear to be the work of a national group because they were unorganized and poorly written.  Investigators determined that the first e-mail posed no ‘credible’ threats to the students, but the second seemed to be more directly aimed, Rhodes said.”
                On Tuesday, April 4, 2000, Kurt Holmes, an African-American Dental School student discovered outside of his apartment at 2425 Bartelt Road, Apt. #2B in Iowa City a package.  In the package was a quantity of noodles dyed red along with a note which read “Dead Black Man’s Brains.” 
                On Thursday, April 6, 2000, a coat caught fire in the Dental School.  The fire broke out just before 10 AM, when a coat apparently was ignited by a Bunsen burner, said Steve Parrott, the director of university relations.  The fire was put out by a dental student who used a fire extinguisher, and nobody was injury, Parrott said.  The Iowa City Fire Department responded to an alarm, but the fire had already been put out by the time firefighters got there, he said.”  According to one fourth-year dental student, “a lab coat catching on fire in the dental lab is not uncommon – in fact, it happens at least once a year.  What’s unusual, she said, is that nobody was wearing the coat.”  Authorities quickly discovered just how unusual the incident was when a third email later that day claimed responsibility for setting the coat ablaze.  It asked, “Are you going to take us seriously now?”
                After two weeks of this Tuesday-Thursday pattern of threats, an impromptu rally was held on the University of Iowa campus, “Walk the Walk.”  Approximately 1,000 students marched beside President Mary Sue Coleman, Mayor Ernie Lehman made the 15-minute hike from the Pentacrest to the Dental School for a rally at approximately 11:45 A.M.  “The crowd held several signs that denounced racism and shouted chants such as, ‘Hey hey, ho ho, racism has got to go,’ and ‘if you talk the talk, walk the walk.’”
                A fourth and final email was sent on Tuesday, April 18, 2000.  The e-mail originated from the address “BOMBSQUAD52244@yahoo.com” and was signed “mejones.”  “At approximately 1:20 PM, an undisclosed number of students and administrators within the dental school, none of whom were minorities, received the message, said Ann Rhodes, the UI vice president for university relations.”  This time the email was more explicit and included a bomb threat against the school.  The e-mail reportedly stated, “We want you to come out and protest, but everyday you should say goodbye to your family and loved ones.  Let the war begin.”  The threat was issued with a window of Wednesday, April 19, 2000 through Friday, April 21, 2000.  “The account registered for the address on the Yahoo! Web site – bombsquad52244 – identifies the user only as male and was last updated on Tuesday.”
As a result of this e-mail, the Dental School closed its doors Tuesday evening and canceled classes for Wednesday while the building was searched for a possible bomb until 6:30 A.M. Thursday.  “This was the first building closing due to a bomb threat, said Steve Parrott, the UI director of university relations [and] this was the UI’s first closure of a building in more than 30 years, during the anti-Vietnam War demonstrations.” “Approximately 30 members of bomb squads from Johnson and Linn counties, Marion Township the state Fire Marshal’s Office and UI public safety conducted an ‘extreme and thorough’ investigation of every locker and office in the building.”  All locks to the building were also changed, and administrators had to determine who got new keys.  Reopening only the third-level entry door, with increased security precautions and two security guards, students were searched upon entering.  Officials opted not to use a metal detector. 

                B.            The Sting:
                “The threats received a tremendous amount of publicity in the local media, and university officials were under added pressure to find the culprit.”  Charles D. Green, Director of Public Safety for the 28,000 student university, said “his officers used a combination of old-fashioned police investigative techniques and 21st century cyber sleuthing to nab Claiborne.”
                “Although cyber-crime is new, basic tracking techniques used to combat it haven’t changed since the Internet’s inception, said Doug Jones, a UI Associate professor of computer science.  The first step is to examine the message’s header in its entirety, he said.  The 15-20 lines of delivery information in the header is the most important because this is where the e-mail’s forwarding agents are identified, Jones said.”
                “Next, by examining the message’s path, investigators can identify the Internet service provider.  Authorities then determine information about the sender by working with the service provider, which is usually very cooperative, Jones said.  ‘They don’t want to be seen as a shelter for abusive use,’ he said.  Online e-mail services, such as Excite.com in the Claiborne case, are also involved in the process.  Once the companies have been altered, they help track the alleged Internet criminal when he or she logs on.”
                “Authorities were able to determine Claiborne’s identity by working with Excite.com to pinpoint the origin of the e-mails sent from the addresses ‘minoirtyrid@excite.com’ and ‘minoritygetout@excite.com.’  Once the e-mail activity was tracked back to the computers in the UI’s Pathology Learning Center Instructional Technology Center, [approximately three blocks from the Dental Sciences Building], authorities placed the site under surveillance.”  “Claiborne was seen on videotape leaving the ITC, Rhodes said.  A member of the dental faculty identified Claiborne on the surveillance video Wednesday, she said.”





 
According to Sgt. Duane Papke of UI Public Safety, with the rise of internet crime authorities have been forced to go about investigations in a different way.  “It’s a completely new ball game. Its definitely something that we will be dealing with more on a daily basis in the future, so we need to be prepared.”

                C.            The Arrest:
                Three weeks after the first email was received, the suspect was caught.  Police reports indicate that Tarsha Michelle Claiborne was arrested at her apartment, 2427 Bartelt Road, Apt. 2A, at 12:20 A.M. on Thursday, April 20, 2000.  Claiborne, who is a native of Baton Rouge, La., has a Bachelor of Science degree from Xavier University of Louisiana in 1998.  Apparently a talented piano and violin player, “U of I officials said there was no evidence that she was having trouble academically or had been under any undue stress since coming to Iowa City.”  As a second year dental student, she is one just of 13 black students in the entire dental school.  She was charged with “six counts of third-degree harassment, criminal trespass elevated to hate-crime status and threats in violation of individual rights.”  “While Claiborne has allegedly admitted to sending the e-mails, the investigation continue[d].”
Armed with a search warrant, “more than 40 items relevant as evidence in the criminal prosecution were recovered during the search of Claiborne’s car and apartment, including lists of the names of dental school victims and others, according to court documents.  Officials also confiscated issues of the Daily Iowan found in her car and apartment that covered the recent threats. One of the issues recovered, the Nov. 29, [1999] issue, includes an article about the low number of hate crimes in Iowa.”  Police Sgt. Bill Campbell also said they “found ramen noodles, red dye, [and] paper matching the handwritten note” that said ‘Dead Black Man’s Brains’ which was left on the doorstep of a third-year minority dental student, whom Claiborne knew and who lived in an adjacent building.  “Authorities also seized computer equipment and information related to the e-mail victims from the apartment, Campbell said.  There were no weapons or explosives found inside Claiborne’s apartment, he said.”
Claiborne was initially only charged with two counts in connection with the threats.  The first charge was specifically related to the last email which shut down the school because it contained a bomb threat.  It read:
Count I:  Threats – Violation of Individual Rights – “The said Tarsha Michelle Claiborne on or about the 18th day of April, A.D., 2000, in the County of Johnson, State of Iowa, did threaten to place, or attempt to place, any incendiary or explosive device or material, or any destructive substance or device in any place where it will endanger persons or property, committed against a person because of the person’s race, color, ancestry, national origin or because of the person's association with other persons of a certain race, color, ancestry or national origin, to-wit:  the Defendant sent a bomb threat by electronic mail to facility [sic], staff and students of the University of Iowa College of Dentistry which e-mail continued earlier e-mails, specifically targeting minority students as targets of hate and injury, in violation of Section(s) 712.8, 719.9 and 729A.2 of the Iowa Code.”

The second charge dealt with the physical action that Claiborne allegedly took by placing a package of noodles and the “Dead Black Man’s Brains” note outside the apartment of a fellow minority student.  It read:
Count II:  Trespass – Violation of Individual Rights – “The said Tarsha Michelle Claiborne on or about the 4th day of April, A.D., 2000, in the County of Johnson, State of Iowa, did enter upon property without the express permission of the owner, lessee or person in lawful possession, with the intent to commit a public offense, harass, or place thereon or therein anything animate or inanimate, or for the purpose, or with the effect of unduly interfering with, the lawful use of the property by others, committed against a person because of the person’s race, color, ancestry or national origin, to-wit: the Defendant went on the property at 2425 Bartelt Road in Iowa City, Iowa, and placed a quantity of noodles dyed red and a note stating “Dead Black Man’s Brains,” which address was occupied by an African-American male, in violation of Section(s) 716.(1) and/or 716.8(c) and 729A.2 of Iowa Code.”

A third count was added for Claiborne’s allegedly setting a lab coat on fire in the Dental School.  It read:
Count III:  Reckless Use of Fire – “The said Tarsha Michelle Claiborne on or about the 18th day of April, A.D., 2000, in the County of Johnson, State of Iowa, did use fire or any incendiary material so as to recklessly endanger the property of [sic] safety of another, to-wit:  the Defendant did place a coat on or in immediately [sic] proximity to a Bunson [sic] burner in Room N208 of the University of Iowa College of Dentistry, in violation of Section(s) 712.5 of Iowa Code.” 

Claiborne was also charged later with Possession of a Schedule I Controlled Substance after police found a small amount of marijuana in her apartment when it was searched.

D.            Post-Arrest:
                                ·  Ann Rhodes Comment:
                “There is a saying in journalism circles that good reporters ‘Never Assume.’ … The University of Iowa was rocked when the suspect turned out to be Tarsha Claiborne. … But then the improbable became the incredible.  And the result has been that a bizarre hate crime case has been eclipsed by an example of more subtle bias.”
At a press conference held on April 20, 2000 to discuss the arrest, a reporter asked Ann Rhodes, Vice President of University Relations, if she was surprised the person arrested was a black female dental student.  Rhodes replied, “I figured it was going to  be a white guy between 25 and 55 because they’re the root of most evil.”  This comment quickly became a story in itself.  “Several hours after Rhodes’ comment, the Office of University Relations issued an official apology from Rhodes for the statement she called a ‘poor attempt at humor.’” 
                In response to the comment, “more than 300 negative phone calls and e-mails [were] logged with the school following Rhodes’ comments.” In addition to negative publicity, the California-based European American Issues Forum President Louis Calabro filed a complaint with the Department of Education Office of Civil Rights against the UI for Rhodes’ comment on April 27, 2000. That complaint was dismissed on June 9, 2000.  Nonetheless, Rhodes stepped down from her position effective July 1, 2000.
                Meanwhile, President Mary Sue Coleman had issued her own statement directed to the entire University of Iowa Community in an email on April 21, 2000.  In it she stated that:
Yesterday’s arrest in connection with threats against minority students in the College of Dentistry has brought a measure of relief, tinged with sadness and confusion.  One thing is clear:  we still have much work to do to rebuild trust and regain our sense of common purpose.  I want to assure all persons on campus that you are valued members or our community, both individually and collectively.  Each of you has earned your place here on the basis of your individual merits.  No person’s credibility, now or in the future, should be compromised by this unfortunate incident.  Instead, let us take it as a wake-up call that reminds us that we should judge each other as individuals, by the content of our character.  And now I hope we can move forward, in accordance with our core values, to ‘encounter each other in a spirit of cooperation, openness, and mutual respect, to form a richly diverse and intellectually stimulating community.’

(Emphasis added).  The same anger that was raised against Rhodes’ comment could have easily been asserted against President Coleman herself.  The question never answered is why the arrest is “tinged with sadness and confusion” if the race of the pre-arrest alleged perpetrator wasn’t a factor? 
                                · Psychiatric Assessment and Bail:
                A personal signature bond was set at $53,500 for Claiborne and although defense attorneys asked the judge to reduce it, their motion was denied.  With court approval, Claiborne was evaluated in the Johnson County Jail by Dr. E. Enekwechi of the University Counseling Service (UCS) on April 28, 2000.  Dr. Enekwechi diagnosed Claiborne with Major Depressive Disorder (severe) “causing disabling physical and psychological symptoms.”  Claiborne was transferred to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics (UIHC) for psychiatric evaluation on May 2, 2000.  Claiborne finally posted bond on May 17, 2000 and was released from the UIHC to return to Baton Rouge, Louisiana to live with her mother, Lillie Addison Claiborne, pending trial.  The court ordered Claiborne “not to initiate personal contact in any form with the University of Iowa College of Dentistry or its faculty, staff and students.”
                                · Not Guilty Plea:
                On June 15, 2000 defense attorneys for Claiborne filed a written plea of not guilty in lieu of a court appearance while Claiborne was staying in her hometown of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
                                ·  Diminished Capacity defense
                Many people wondered what excuse the accused might have for making the various threats, but according to Andrea Herbster, a UI law student, “I would certainly not excuse her actions because of the stress of graduate school.  These actions go way beyond stress but may have exacerbated her feelings and made her more willing to act out her emotions.”  Instead, Claiborne’s attorneys felt that the stress of her father’s death due to cancer a year earlier could be the source of a possible defense.
On July 10, 2000, Claiborne’s attorneys announced their defense.  “Claiborne’s attorneys were required to file a notice [under Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 10(11)(b)(1)] saying they would use the diminished-responsibility defense before her trials, but Leon Spies declined to comment on why the defense was chosen or how the attorneys will use it.” “Diminished responsibility differs from a claim of insanity in that it cannot be used as an entire criminal defense, Spies says.  It can affect only certain elements of the defense, he says.  Diminished responsibility can also result in a conviction of a crime or degree of crime less serious than originally charged.”
                “Insanity defense claims the defendant was incapable of distinguishing right from wrong because of a mental illness of some kind, Spies said.  Claiborne’s defense of diminished-responsibility claims that she had a limited capacity to think about the nature of her actions, Spies said.”  “He declined to comment on other defenses considered and Claiborne’s involvement in the decision-making process.”
                “A diminished-responsibility defense is not unusual, but the opportunity to use it does not come up very often, Iowa City attorney Randy Larson said.  It can help convince the jury that the defendant was not completely aware of the nature of her or his actions, Larson said.  At the UIHC, Claiborne was diagnosed with depression.  Johnson County Attorney J. Patrick White declined to comment on how the new defense will affect the prosecution’s approach to the case.”  However, as determined from the Judge’s canceling of the scheduled March 5, 2001 trial, a plea agreement was apparently agreed upon.
·  Drug Charges & Plea
                Upon searching Claiborne’s apartment police discovered an undisclosed amount of marijuana.  Claiborne returned to Iowa to face the separate drug charges stemming from her arrest and pleaded guilty in November, 2000 to possession of a schedule I controlled substance.  She faces a sentencing/plea hearing on May 3, 2001. 

E.             Sentencing:
                Currently Claiborne is set to enter a guilty plea on the remaining charges and be sentenced on May 3, 2001.  Claiborne could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $10,000 for Count I, a Class C felony; up to 1 year in prison and a fine of $1,500 for Count II, a Serious Misdemeanor; and up to 30 days in jail and a fine of $500 for Count III, which included 6 emails, a Simple Misdemeanor. The Judge could order that her sentence, potentially totaling 11 years, 6 months and a fine of $14,500 be carried out consecutively (meaning 11 years, 6 months) or concurrently (meaning at most 10 years).  Parole may or may not be available.


That was an article from 2000-2001 about the case, archive link at the top of the page.
From what I can see in the Iowa Court Search, Tarsha was sent back to Louisiana, and only the marijuana charged was adjudicated.  All her harassment charges about the emails were dismissed.

In other words, yet another case of BLACK PRIVILEGE.  

It helps to have Alfredo Parrish on your legal team.


"I figured it was going to  be a white guy between 25 and 55 because they’re the root of most evil." 

- Ann Rhodes, University of Iowa

Ann Rhodes
Ann Rhodes, still at Iowa, making $181,000 a year.


Predictions on More Fake Hate Crimes in Iowa City


It looks like the Black Lies Matter mob of commies and criminals has visited the home of every City Council member in Iowa City, blocking traffic along the way, tagging many objects and road ways with spray paint, and threatening Mayor Bruce Teague with "we'll be back" if all their stupid demands aren't met.

I wonder if Teague is reconsidering bitching about the tear gas, letting this mob tag up Interstate 80, closing down many streets every night, and letting this ramp up to the point where the hospital, Kinnick Stadium, and the statue of Nile Kinnick were defaced, along with the Pentacrest and Old Capitol.

The reason I write this is because the Mayor of Olympia, Washington, Cheryl Selby, found out the hard way of constantly giving into the mob as one white "BLM" terrorist spray painted the front of her house right next to Selby's rainbow flag.  (archive link)

I predict that the mob in Iowa City will grow restless and that something similar will happen there.

It'll probably take the form of some kind of vandalism or graffiti that will, to a very stupid libtard, look like the act of a "white supremacist" or some kind of MAGA type.


Look, Lujayn and Raneem Hamad got away with their "hate note hoax" in 2016 with their willing accomplices in the media, CAIR, the Iowa City Police, and the entire Democrat machine in Johnson County.  Why not try something similar in another part of town, maybe to some other "people of color".


You've got enough stupid people there who would automatically believe that "white supremacists" lurk all over the place, like the racist, whitey-hating, mentally ill, sixth grade teacher Monique Cottman.


The media, like Erin Jordan of the Cedar Rapids Gazette, or Stephen Gruber-Miller of the Des Moines Register are standing by, as are staff of the Press Citizen like Zachary Owen Smith,  the Daily Iowan, local tv stations, the free lefty tabloid Little Village, and national media outlets.


It wasn't that long ago, in October 2019, that the Press-Citizen was trying to say there was "racist graffiti" found at the University of Iowa.  This showed up right after a "White Privilege 101" movie screening at the United Church of Satan downtown.


And how we forget former University of Iowa Vice President for Racism and Bigotry, Melissa Shivers, who made $284,000 a year being a race hustler and intolerant Christian-Hater who got sued and not only lost but lost qualified immunity.


Every "racist" thing going on in Iowa City always turns out to be a hoax.  Look up also Marcus Owens, Tarsha Michelle Claiborne, and others.  SAY THEIR NAMES

Marcus Owens, liar
Archive link
Owens, 19, had claimed that three white men yelling racial slurs had jumped him on the night of April 30, after he came out of a downtown bar.  But on Tuesday, Iowa City police revealed that an exhaustive investigation, which had relied upon surveillance video and eyewitnesses, showed that Owens had in fact instigated multiple fights – and that the drunken mayhem he provoked that night, and injuries he received, were his own fault.  Although somebody did indeed utter a racial slur during the altercations, police said that didn't rise to the level of a hate crime.  Whether the person who uttered the slur is black or white was not reported.  Owens and his family – who had given several media interviews, and even met with University of Iowa president J. Bruce Harreld – subsequently issued an apology. 
Prosecutors decided not to charge Owens for filing a false police report, believing it was more important to get out the truth about what happened, instead of undertaking a prosecution that would have prevented some material from being immediately released, the Press-Citizen reported.  Apparently, Owens will not be expelled.  His lawyer told the Press-Citizen his client plans to return to the University of Iowa and complete his business degree. 
Referring to Owens’s tall tales, Watt pointed out that the young man's claims were nevertheless believable because of the undercurrent of racism that, she claims, exists in Iowa City and across the country.

That's Sherry Watt, associate professor of education and faculty fellow of the University of Iowa "Chief Diversity Office".

Sherry Watt, LIAR
More about the Marcus Owens incident at this archive link.

The county attorney who declined to press charges was none other than Democrat Janet Lyness.

It probably pained then ICPD captain Troy Kelsey (who is now the chief at the speed trap known as University Heights) to actually investigate.  All that video evidence and personal accounts showed it was a hoax.

That's how come Lujayn and Raneem Hamad got away with their hoax.  No video evidence.  And a corrupt, all-Democrat community who are willing to lie in order to try to trash Republicans and Trump supporters.