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Walton And Johnson

The legacy of the Walton & Johnson show continues after 4 decades as Steve Johnson hosts with longtime producer Kenny Webster. The show is a mix of...Full Bio

 

Maxine Waters Requested a Police Escort to Attend Anti-Police Protest

Is she great or what?

Nick Monroe reports:

With jury deliberation now underway for the Derek Chauvin trial, America’s attention is once again glued to Minnesota.
The records published by Townhall show the outspoken Democrat Congresswoman Maxine Waters needed “police escort in & out” of her recent trip to Minneapolis.
The irony being that a politician like Waters who is vocally acting against the police in her remarks, leaned on the exact same authorities for her own personal protection.
By early morning April 18th, Waters told the crowd: "I’m going to fight with all of the people who stand for justice. We’ve got to get justice in this country and we cannot allow these killings to continue."
The backlash came with this next part. "I know this, we've got to stay in the streets. We are looking for a guilty verdict. If nothing does not happen then we have to not only stay in the streets but we have to fight for justice. I am very hopeful and I hope that we are going to get a verdict that is guilty, guilty, guilty and if we don't, we cannot go away."
Mere hours later, two National Guardsmen were shot in Minneapolis. Republicans unilaterally slammed Waters for seemingly inciting an already intense moment. CNN defended her. The Biden White House steered clear of getting themselves involved. While Rep. Greene introduced a resolution to expel Maxine Waters from congress.

Representative Maxine Waters, a Democrat from California and chairwoman of the House Financial Services Committee, holds up a finger as she address technical difficulties during a virtual House Financial Services Committee hearing on a laptop computer in Tiskilwa, Illinois, U.S., on Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021. Robinhood Markets and Citadel, central players in the GameStop Corp. saga that riveted markets last month plan to deliver a unified message to U.S. lawmakers that conspiracies swirling in Washington, that they worked together to harm retail investors are categorically false. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images


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