Antifa thugs attack women protesting potential placement of murderous transsexual in women's prison: 'These are the kind of men we want to keep out of the prison'



Leftist radicals were caught on camera attacking a group of women who had gathered outside a California courthouse on Monday to protest the placement of a murderous male transsexual in a women's prison.

What are the details?

A group of women, some affiliated with the U.S. chapter of Women’s Declaration International, gathered outside the René C. Davidson Courthouse in Oakland, California, to protest the possible placement of Dana Rivers in a women's prison after his triple conviction last month.

TheBlaze previously reported that Rivers, a national transsexual rights activist and former American Federation of Teachers labor leader, was found guilty in November of butchering two lesbians and murdering their adopted African son.

Rivers, whose name was originally David Warfield, stabbed 56-year-old Charlotte Reed over 40 times and shot her twice on Nov. 11, 2016. Rivers also shot and stabbed 57-year-old Patricia Wright.

Before setting fire to the victims' house, the transsexual activist shot 19-year-old Benny Diambu-Wright, who later perished.

The Post Millennial reported that the protesters do not want Rivers — in court for sanity proceedings — to be incarcerated among real women.

They held signs that read, "Dana Rivers is a man" and "No men in women's prisons."

Among the protesters wearing sashes that read "Woman Adult Human Female" were Lierre Keith, founder of the Women’s Liberation Front (WoLF), attorney Kara Dansky, president of Women’s Declaration International, and biology professor Arla Hile.

Keith told the Post Millennial that her protest on Monday was extra to ongoing legal efforts by her group to protect women from being jailed with men.

WoLF filed a lawsuit in California on Nov. 17, 2021, challenging a law that houses a criminal "in a correctional facility designated for men or women based on the individual’s preference."

According to the women's group, the transfer of hundreds of men into women's prisons has "resulted in intimidation, sexual harassment, physical assaults, and sexual assaults committed by the men against female inmates."

After making their grievances known on the steps of the courthouse, the protesters moved to nearby Lake Merritt Park, where over a dozen Antifa thugs reportedly descended upon them.

In a video capturing part of the resultant attack by what appear to be two male leftists, one witness can be heard saying, "These are the kind of men we want to keep out of the prison."

The thugs wore masks and hood and were dressed in all black. One, mounted on a bicycle, wore a red armband.

The attackers whipped pies and eggs at some of the women, jabbed one protester with an umbrella, and proceeded to bull over others, ultimately taking their banner.

\u201cThe far-left & #Antifa again used Twitter to organize & promote a violent attack on women's rights protesters in Oakland today. The women were hit in the face & robbed. @atomly & @IGD_News promoted the direct action. Antifa group @pridewasariot_ celebrated attacks. cc: @elonmusk\u201d
— Andy Ng\u00f4 \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08 (@Andy Ng\u00f4 \ud83c\udff3\ufe0f\u200d\ud83c\udf08) 1670280117

The Antifa Twitter account @pridewasariot_ belonging to so-called "Militant Queer | Lavender Angels" celebrated the anti-woman attack, adding hashtags "QueersBashBack" and "QueerMeansAttack."

The day before the attack, an event listing was posted to the leftist activist site IndyBay.org calling for radicals "to counter a rally by leaders of the TERF group WoLF (Women's Liberation Front), which works closely with the far-Right, white nationalists, right-wing think-tanks, and the Republican party to attack trans people."

Another listing on the leftist site for a related counterprotest entitled "F--- TERFs" denounced Kara Dansky and Lierre Keith as "transphobes" who allegedly "choose to focus on ... enforcing gender bigotry in prisons. In doing so, they clearly align themselves with the most hateful demagoguery currently animating far-right politics."

The posting suggested that efforts by real women to keep men out of women's jails "are just one short hop away from White Nationalism."

Keith later told the Post Millennial that despite getting hit in the head and having an injured eye, she was still able to see that "they're just cowards. They came, they hit us. It's a bunch of men hitting a bunch of women, as usual."

Jesika Gonzalez, among the protesters, said, "They were quick because they're men. ... They could easily overpower us, grab our signs and run away. That's all they were after; they wanted to steal our message from us."

Photojournalist went undercover to expose white supremacists at riots, but found black bloc anarchists instead



Photojournalist Jeremy Lee Quinn was furloughed this year, so he set out to document the protests and the riots that beset cities across the U.S. following the death of George Floyd. Quinn expected to discover white supremacists caused havoc and violence at riots, but what he actually found shocked him — violent left-wing anarchists who were extremely organized.

On May 31, Quinn covered a Black Lives Matter protest in Santa Monica, California, where "suburban moms" were kneeling. Then he was alerted to a shoe store being looted about a mile away.

"He arrived to find young people pouring out of the store, shoeboxes under their arms. But there was something odd about the scene," Farah Stockman wrote in the New York Times. "A group of men, dressed entirely in black, milled around nearby, like supervisors. One wore a creepy rubber Halloween mask."

The next day, Quinn went to another protest, and another store was being looted. A white man wearing all black smashed the window of the store with a crowbar, but he walked away without stealing anything.

Quinn started pouring over footage of looting that was happening across the country. Once again, he noticed that white men dressed in black were often the culprits of the looting.

@IGD_News The Video Man. Here. you know, when the Black guys are saying "This is not what it is." But the white guy… https://t.co/FDR1nCR5FR
— Jeremy Lee Quinn - Public Report (@Jeremy Lee Quinn - Public Report)1601551522.0

Quinn believed that the caucasian men causing damage were white supremacist supporters of President Donald Trump, who were attempting to make Black Lives Matter protests appear in a negative light. In an effort to expose the alleged racist Trump supporters, Quinn went undercover and infiltrated the groups. Instead, he found that these destructive forces were "true believers in insurrectionary anarchism."

Over the next four months, Quinn marched along with "black bloc anarchists in half a dozen cities across the country." He was in Washington D.C., where militant agitators harassed diners, and in Portland where rioters launched fireworks at the Mark O. Hatfield Federal Courthouse.

"He says he respects the idealistic goal of a hierarchy-free society that anarchists embrace, but grew increasingly uncomfortable with the tactics used by some anarchists, which he feared would set off a backlash that could help get President Trump re-elected."

Quinn told the New York Times that the far-left anarchists were not "a spontaneous eruption of anger at racial injustice," like much of the mainstream media categorized the violence as. "It was strategically planned, facilitated and advertised on social media by anarchists who believed that their actions advanced the cause of racial justice."

Quinn cautioned that the violent militants in Washington, Portland, and Seattle generated a "cultlike energy."

Quinn saw something else he did not expect to see during the protests, Black Lives Matter protesters praying together with Trump supporters in Tulsa.

Quinn detailed his experience during protests and riots on his website, Public Report, where he warned how dangerous far-left anarchist groups could be.

"Establishment media still continues to overlook trending Anarchist black bloc tactics especially in DC, Portland & Seattle with satellite activity in Denver, Sacramento and San Diego," Quinn wrote. "Insurrectionary Anarchist ideology & rhetoric however has permeated into the social justice movement with blazing efficiency."

"In our experience in Louisville, Community was strong and gravitating towards non violent protest," he wrote. "Earlier in the afternoon we saw individual protesters shutting down agitators trying to use fireworks. But the arrival of a U-Haul with Anarcho / Antifascist symboled shields changed everything."

This is that Anarcho-Antifa Uhaul. A dyed silver hair white chick summoned the crowd to come get shields. Follow fo… https://t.co/kpR2tRgfgh
— Jeremy Lee Quinn - Public Report (@Jeremy Lee Quinn - Public Report)1600892344.0

Many of the left-wing extremists consider themselves "insurrectionary anarchists," some of which "advocate using crimes like arson and shoplifting to wear down the capitalist system."

The NYT article cites a report by Rutgers researchers that documents the "systematic, online mobilization of violence that was planned, coordinated (in real time) and celebrated by explicitly violent anarcho-socialist networks that rode on the coattails of peaceful protest." The research found that some anarchist social media accounts had exploded 300-fold since May, garnering hundreds of thousands of followers.

Stockman explained the problem with making alliances with insurrectionary anarchists.

"If they help you get into power, they will try to oust you the following day, since power is what they are against," she wrote. "Many of them don't even vote. They are experts at unraveling an old order but considerably less skilled at building a new one. That's why, even after more than 100 days of protest in Portland, activists do not agree on a set of common policy goals."

"We are not sure if the socialist, communist, democratic or even anarchist utopia is possible," admitted a host of the anarchist-supporting podcast "The Ex-Worker." "Rather, some insurrectionary anarchists believe that the meaning of being an anarchist lies in the struggle itself and what that struggle reveals."

Stockman hints that the far-left anarchists are not truly destroying American cities to declare that black lives matter or demand racial equality, but because they crave anarchy and their mission is to topple the status quo.