Chronicling the creeping demise of Diversity™, Equity™, and Inclusion™, otherwise known as institutionalized racism.
Tim Walz: We lost 2024 because we didn’t pimp the DEI line hard enough
Fake-folksy Minnesota governor and alleged CCP crony Tim Walz offered his doozy of a post-mortem analysis recently: "We let them define the issue on DEI… We got ourselves in this mess because we weren’t bold enough to stand up and say ‘you’re damn right we’re proud of these policies.’"
🚨 Tim Walz: "We got ourselves into this mess because we did NOT embrace immigrants, wokeness, and DEI" pic.twitter.com/S9SjI9C4xg
— JOSH DUNLAP (@JDunlap1974) April 23, 2025
In classic Democrat fashion, he is parroting a version of the constant argument/excuse exonerating themselves of their failures, which is that they failed not because their policies suck and American voters reject them but because they just didn’t message them the right way. It’s always a style issue and never a substance issue.
Related: 12-Foot Statue of Obese Black Woman Appears in Times Square
Please keep it up, Governor.
2028 is all yours!
Reparations pastor goes on DEI crusade for National Museum of African American History and Culture
Another reverend in a long line of Reverends of Color™ moonlighting as social justice activists, Robert Turner, made a stop during his monthly pilgrimage from Baltimore to Washington to demand government cash for chattel slavery.
The extra leg of the reparations journey was to the National Museum of African American History and Culture to protest a March executive order from President Trump calling for the removal of “improper ideology” (race-baiting) from the institution.
Related: Trump Slashes ALL South Africa Aid, Cites Anti-White Government Policy
These people so desperately need to relive the Civil Rights days while simultaneously recognizing a critical lack of actual civil rights abuses against non-white racial groups that they are forced to turn themselves into caricatures to justify their so-called activism.
Via Associated Press (emphasis added):
As he does one day each month, the Rev. Robert Turner hit the road from his home in Baltimore last week and traveled — on foot — 43 miles (69 kilometers) to Washington.
He arrived by evening on April 16 outside the White House, carrying a sign that called for “Reparations Now.”
This time, Turner added another stop on his long day’s journey — the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Turner knelt in prayer and laid a wreath at the entrance of the museum in support of its mission, which incurred President Donald Trump’s criticism alongside other Smithsonian Institution sites. In a March 27 executive order, Trump alleged that Smithsonian exhibits had disparaged the nation’s history via a “divisive, race-centered ideology.”
Turner wanted to show support for the museum, which opened in 2016 and received its 10 millionth visitor in 2023. The museum tells the history of chattel slavery, Jim Crow segregation and its lingering effects, but it also highlights the determination, successes and contributions of Black Americans and Black institutions*.
“I laid my wreath down there to show solidarity with the museum and the history that they present every day,” said Turner, pastor of Empowerment Temple African Methodist Episcopal Church in Baltimore.
*This is a problem with Social Justice™ ideology in general as it pertains to all manner of “marginalized communities”: they seek to frame themselves both as terribly persecuted — in order to maximize their alleged persecution to achieve the highest position on the oppression totem pole — while simultaneously as empowered and brave champions of the cause.
Brave all-weather warrior or shrinking violet?
These are dissonant, mutually exclusive identities.
Also, why don’t they just organize and build their own damn museums? Why do they always demand the government sponsor their causes?
Somehow, the Selma people managed to put ọn their epic bridge march without any kind of government sugar daddy astroturfing their movement.
What kind of an authentic civil rights movement challenging an oppressive power structure relies on that same power structure to fund its cause?
The contradictions abound.