Think about how hard you work every week. Can you afford a $1.4 million dollar home? If not, how long before you think you can?
BLM is a profitable organization and they are raking in the dough.
According to the New York Times, just one Black Lives Matter online petition raked in $5 million in contributions.
The death of George Floyd in Minneapolis has been a gold mine for BLM and other black rights groups.
The New York Times piece above goes on to explain that progressive and racial justice groups have seen a flood of donations since Floyd’s death. As a matter of fact, those infamous bail funds alone have garnered 90 million bucks.
Between Floyd and “Defund The Police”, so much money has been pouring into BLM that they’ve actually had to redirect donors to other causes.
The reason for the cash overflow is that rich celebrities and woke corporations are donating huge sums at an alarming rate. It’s an easy way for liberals to wash away their “white guilt” and score progressive brownie points.
As it stands now, BLM is so filthy rich, they don’t even know exactly how much cash they have… or if they do, they’re not telling anyone.
But where is all that money going? Most people figure that it’s going straight into the Democrat coffers, and they’re probably right.
But is there more to it than just that?
A curious new purchase by BLM co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors is now calling into question just how those BLM riches are being spent.
Khan-Cullors just purchased herself a swanky little $1.4 million-dollar Cali pad in a city called Topanga, just outside of Beverly Hills.
The kicker in all of this is that Topanga is an elitist white neighborhood where only 1.4 percent of the population is black.
It’s rather curious that suddenly, Khan-Cullors is able to afford a million-plus home, and that she opted to purchase the home in a rich white neighborhood.
Apparently, all that “white supremacy” and “oppression” can be erased for the small one-time fee of only $1.4 million dollars.
This new house purchase isn’t sitting well with the black community.
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