CRT supporter allegedly threatens parents, says he's got '1,000 soldiers ready to go ... locked and loaded'



A Fort Worth, Texas, parent supportive of teaching critical race theory in classrooms recently reportedly threatened other parents during a school board meeting, saying he's got "over 1,000 soldiers ready to go" and that he'd be "locked and loaded" next time.

What happened?

Officers were called on to escort the enraged parent, Malikk Austin, from the Fort Worth Independent School District board meeting on Nov. 9 after he turned around to face other parents in the room and shouted at them repeatedly, Fox News reported.

"For those who got an issue with this critical race theory equity, this is something I fought for, for my children," Austin, who is black, said at the start of his remarks.

"How dare you come out here and talk about the things that my daddy and my grandparents went through, the lynching, the oppression, Jim Crow, and my kids are still being afflicted by this. How dare you come out here and challenge me on critical race theory," he continued looking at other parents in the audience.

"Look up the word, 'racism,' this is something deliberately done to people of African descent," he added. "They're shackling us down. This hate, fear, [inaudible] ain't gonna work no more."

"We are not our ancestors. I got over 1,000 soldiers ready to go," Austin then threatened, as seen in video of the contentious meeting.

Fort Worth ISD School Board Meeting November 9, 2021 youtu.be

A separate video posted on Twitter shows Austin warning, saying, "I'll bring my soldiers with me next time ... locked and loaded."

He can be heard repeating the phrase "locked and loaded" several times as officers walk him out of the building.

A Far-Left activist in an FWISD Board meeting threatened parents all because they were criticizing CRT. The activist said that he would bring 1000 soldiers and that he will be "lock and loaded" next time.pic.twitter.com/VmqNaQQh10

— Carlos Turcios (@Carlos__Turcios) 1636751802

What else?

Parents at the meeting reportedly told Fox News that Austin's comments made them feel threatened and unsafe.

"Absolutely, it made me feel threatened," Hollie Plemmons, a stay-at-home mother of three, said. "I'm scared and I'm afraid he's going to do something."

"Everyone there felt threatened," Carol Guarneri, a grandmother of four students, added. "This gentleman was profoundly angry, he was not putting on a performance. When he made the statement that he had his thousand soldiers and they'd be back locked and loaded, it was very frightening to me."

"I was thinking about calling my husband and having him come to the parking lot because I was afraid to come to my car," she recalled.

According to Fox News, Guaneri claimed that Austin had attended a school board meeting in August wearing "tactical gear." Fox noted that Austin can be seen wearing the gear at the 39-minute mark in this video.

Anything else?

When reached for comment, Austin reportedly told Fox News that it was not his intention to threaten anyone.

"First Amendment rights, freedom of speech, need to be implemented," he argued, adding that "locked and loaded" is "a term I used when I coached football. It means, 'Prepare and get ready.'"

VIDEO: Dumbfounded CNN anchor reverts to Democratic talking point over and over again when confronted with evidence of critical race theory in VA classrooms



CNN anchor Brianna Keilar was rendered inarticulate during a recent interview after being confronted with direct evidence regarding the implementation of critical race theory in Virginia classrooms, forced only to regurgitate the Democratic talking point that the teaching doesn't exist.

What happened?

Keilar was speaking with Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott, who serves as chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, on Monday when the exchange occurred.

The two were discussing Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin's successful bid for the governorship and whether his issues-focused campaign would be the "playbook" for Republican candidates in the 2022 midterms when Scott used Youngkin's opposition to critical race theory as an example of a winning strategy.

"Glenn Youngkin won his race because he talked about issues," Scott said, noting that Youngkin addressed what his opponent, former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, refused to acknowledge — that the theory was being promoted by the state's education department and being taught in its classrooms.

"Parents know their kids are being indoctrinated with critical race theory in Virginia, and the Democrats wanted to deny it," Scott explained.

That's when Keilar jumped in to say, "Well, it's not in the curriculum" — a claim she would repeat verbatim several more times over the next 30 seconds.

When confronted with direct evidence, all this CNN anchor can do is repeat the talking points her producer gave her \n\nPretty embarrassinghttps://twitter.com/therecount/status/1457754273949929472\u00a0\u2026

— Jon Levine (@LevineJonathan) 1636392490

Scott responded to Keilar's denial in amazement. He began reading from a report that detailed specific instances in which McAuliffe himself, when he was governor of Virginia, specifically implemented critical race theory and embraced race-based teaching in the commonwealth.

"In 2015, while Terry McAuliffe was governor, the Virginia Department of Education promoted incorporating a critical race theory lens in education. You can still find it on the Department of Education's website, it's still there," Scott read. "In 2019, a superintendent memo for the Virginia Department of Education promoted critical race theory and the idea of white fragility."

The anchor, apparently unable to offer any substantive retort, reverted time and time again to her refrain that critical race theory "is not in the curriculum" in Virginia.

"I looked at it yesterday! It's still there, Brianna," Scott shot back as Keilar shifted uncomfortably and tried to change the subject.

"Brianna, wait a minute. Let's all agree: They were trying to indoctrinate kids, Terry McAuliffe denied it, it's still on the website," the senator continued as the segment closed.

"This is happening," he added to silence from the CNN host.

What else?

MSNBC anchor Nicolle Wallace similarly argued last week that the rise of critical race theory in schools is merely Republican propaganda, even going so far as to say that the theory "isn't real," despite mounds of evidence to the contrary.

As conservative journalist and filmmaker Christopher Rufo pointed out in a Twitter thread recently, Virginia public education officials have endorsed in recent years the explicit use of critical race theory as an "important analytic tool" to "further spur developments in education."

"Right now, on its website, the Virginia Department of Education recommends 'Critical Race Theory in Education' as a 'best practice' and derives its definitions of 'racism,' 'white supremacy,' and 'education equity' explicitly from 'critical race theory,'" Rufo wrote late last month.

Right now, on its website, the Virginia Department of Education recommends "Critical Race Theory in Education" as a "best practice" and derives its definitions of "racism," "white supremacy," and "education equity" explicitly from "critical race theory."pic.twitter.com/QVSJVpju2A

— Christopher F. Rufo \u2694\ufe0f (@realchrisrufo) 1635607788

Whitlock: MSNBC’s ‘Three Stooges’ — Maddow, Reid, and Wallace — invite election viewers to hell on social media’s earth



Last night I watched MSNBC's election coverage. It was anchored by Rachel Maddow, Joy Reid, and Nicolle Wallace, the Mo, Sha'Carri, and Shirley of the Alphabet Mafia.

The three stooges of sexual identity, racial identity, and gender identity presented a portrait of American reality far different from my interpretation.

In their view, critical race theory doesn't exist and certainly isn't being taught in American schools, an investigation into Thomas Jefferson's worldview is a high priority, Jan. 6 was a violent bloodbath that nearly toppled our republic, and Virginia's gubernatorial race was a referendum on re-instituting Jim Crow laws.

The picture painted by Maddow, Reid, and Wallace likely explains why Republican Glenn Youngkin won his race for governor and why he'll be joined in office by Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears, the first black woman to win a statewide election in Virginia.

It's difficult to retain and sustain power with lies. The political left and its propagandists in corporate media have been lying nonstop for the past year. A wise con man conceals his lies with occasional truths. Politics attract con men, both left and right.

Big Tech and its social media apps convinced Democrats to be unwise, to abandon truth completely. Big Tech believes its Twitter and Facebook algorithms are in control of truth.

Youngkin and Sears believe in a much higher power, a truth spelled out in the Bible and backed by the blood of Jesus.

Democrats and their pundits will spend the coming days and months trying to figure out how the state of Virginia elected President Joe Biden by a 10-point margin and 12 months later elected Youngkin and Sears. They will, of course, blame racism, Donald Trump, the Proud Boys, and Thomas Jefferson, and eventually they will shred Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe as a horrible candidate.

They will not admit that voters rejected their reliance on lies. They will not admit that Twitter and Facebook baited them into believing that lies supported on the social media matrix could be converted into real-world truths. It's not just comedian Dave Chappelle. Ordinary American citizens are snapping out of the woke coma induced by Twitter.

"Twitter isn't a real place."

Twitter is where the Three Stooges go to have their lies confirmed. On social media, you can earn likes and retweets pretending that January 6 was the modern-day Pearl Harbor. Yesterday, Nicolle Wallace claimed police were "maimed by flag poles" during an insurrection.

The truth is a bunch of frustrated taxpayers, at the behest of FBI informants, staged a mostly peaceful protest inside the Capitol. An incompetent police officer shot and killed a tiny, non-threatening woman, Ashli Babbitt. In comparison to the riots, looting, and arson we witnessed across the country in the Summer of St. George Floyd, January 6 was a 1950s-style sorority panty raid.

On social media, you can garner likes and retweets firing off tweets claiming that 2021 America is no different from 1921 America. Late last night, as it became evident Youngkin would win, Jemele Hill tweeted: "It's not the messaging, folks. This country simply loves white supremacy."

The tweet has 16,000 likes and nearly 5,000 retweets. Hill thinks she's tweeting hard truths to power. She's just running to Twitter to get her insanity and lies confirmed. I'm sure Joy Reid did the same thing after ranting on TV that Republicans are a danger to our national security.

Is Winsome Sears a danger to America? She immigrated to America at age 6. She joined the Marines before she was an American citizen. She's lt. governor-elect of the state of Virginia. She's black. So is her husband. So are her kids. Are they all a danger?

MSNBC's Three Stooges argued that Republicans have constructed a fantasy world, an unfair political terrain that makes it difficult for Democrats to compete. Nicolle Wallace argued that schools are not teaching critical race theory. She backed Terry McAuliffe's lie that the state of Virginia was not implementing critical race theory into schools.

These lies are too easily debunked. While serving as governor in 2015, McAuliffe's department of education explicitly directed public schools to embrace critical race theory. The Virginia Department of Education website recommends CRT. Check out this string of tweets.

The left has abandoned the truth. Men are birthing people. Biden appointee Rachel Levine made history as the first female four-star admiral. Police pose a much greater threat to black men than gang violence. George Floyd is a hero. Biological men should be allowed to compete against women in sports. The only way to survive COVID is with three masks, six vaccines, and in constant isolation.

The world the Three Stooges believe exists is on Twitter. It's a satanic world where the truth is under constant attack. Virginia voters live in a different world, a world that answers to a higher power than Jack Dorsey and Mark Zuckerberg.