Obama Secretly Met With Ferguson Missouri Agitators In A Quest For Vengeance?
The media is reporting that he met with Ferguson "protest leaders," ...
translation... he secretly met with outside agitators, criminals and looters...
Is Obama on a quest for vengeance against the American people for voting
Democrats out of power?
(Gateway Pundit) President Obama met with Ferguson protest leaders on November 5th, the day after the midterm elections. The meeting was not on his daily schedule. He was concerned that the protesters “stay on course.”
What does that mean?
And why is the president meeting with the violent Mike Brown protesters before a verdict is reached in the court case?
The Ferguson protesters have looted over 100 businesses in the St. Louis area.
The New York Times hid this in the 21st paragraph of their report:
"But leaders here say that is the nature of a movement that has taken place, in part, on social media and that does not match an earlier-era protest structure where a single, outspoken leader might have led the way. 'This is not your momma’s civil rights movement,' said Ashley Yates, a leader of Millennial Activists United. 'This is a movement where you have several difference voices, different people. The person in charge is really — the people. But the message from everyone is the same: Stop killing us.'"
Read The Full Story
(Gateway Pundit) President Obama met with Ferguson protest leaders on November 5th, the day after the midterm elections. The meeting was not on his daily schedule. He was concerned that the protesters “stay on course.”
What does that mean?
And why is the president meeting with the violent Mike Brown protesters before a verdict is reached in the court case?
The Ferguson protesters have looted over 100 businesses in the St. Louis area.
The New York Times hid this in the 21st paragraph of their report:
"But leaders here say that is the nature of a movement that has taken place, in part, on social media and that does not match an earlier-era protest structure where a single, outspoken leader might have led the way. 'This is not your momma’s civil rights movement,' said Ashley Yates, a leader of Millennial Activists United. 'This is a movement where you have several difference voices, different people. The person in charge is really — the people. But the message from everyone is the same: Stop killing us.'"
Read The Full Story