Facebook blocks users from sharing news reports on Black Lives Matter co-founder's mansions
Facebook is working to quash distribution of revelations about how the leading Black Lives Matter (BLM) organization’s homosexual co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors has enriched herself, as evidenced by the purchase of no less than four high-end residences totalling $3.2 million.
(Article by Calvin Freiburger republished from
LifeSiteNews.com)
As reported by the
New York Post and the
Daily Mail, 37-year-old Khan-Cullors has in recent years purchased a $1.4 million property in Los Angeles (her third in the city) as well as a $415,000, 3.2-acre property in Georgia.
Her latest L.A. property boasts two houses with “soaring ceilings, skylights and plenty of windows,” while the Georgia home features a pool and even a hangar for a private jet. Her other L.A. homes reportedly cost $510,000 and $590,000, and she is apparently considering “property in the Bahamas at an ultra-exclusive resort where Justin Timberlake and Tiger Woods both have homes,” as well.
The revelations provoked questions about how she could afford such purchases, having been paid just $120,000 from 2013 to 2019 (roughly $17,000 per year) in her capacity as a BLM spokesperson. The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation insists that “as a registered 501c3, BLMGNF cannot and did not commit any organizational resources toward the purchase of personal property by any employee or volunteer.”
Khan-Cullors’s primary income appears to come through her “wife,” Black Lives Matter Toronto co-founder Janaya Khan, a
professional public speaker who charges a fee ranging from $25,000-$39,999 per U.S. appearance. Regardless, some of her own allies have questioned the optics of a self-professed Marxist engaging in such extravagant commerce.
“If you go around calling yourself a socialist, you have to ask how much of her own personal money is going to charitable causes,” said Hawk Newsome, whose Black Lives Matter Greater New York City is not affiliated with BLMGNF. “It’s really sad because it makes people doubt the validity of the movement and overlook the fact that it’s the people that carry this movement.”
As an organization, however, BLM has
claimed that questioning Khan-Cullors’s wealth “not only puts Patrisse, her child and her loved ones in harm's way, it also continues a tradition of terror by white supremacists against Black activists.”
Social media giant Facebook apparently agrees, as it has
blocked users from sharing both the
Post and
Mail reports on the story, under the pretext that the stories could enable readers to locate her private residences (a standard Facebook does not consistently apply):
https://twitter.com/AbigailShrier/status/1382774842986954753
https://twitter.com/AbigailShrier/status/1382780559802306561
https://twitter.com/benyt/status/1382870464066945028
Last fall, social media platforms
similarly blocked sharing of the
New York Post’s coverage of data gleaned from a discarded laptop belonging to presidential son Hunter Biden, which was never debunked and has
recently been authenticated.
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