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View Full Version : Black Lives Matter cashes in with $100 million from liberal foundations



PorkChopSandwiches
08-17-2016, 07:38 PM
http://twt-thumbs.washtimes.com/media/image/2016/08/16/BlackLivesMatter_s878x585.jpg?9739c089d09019457eff 90957353d2bf131e7da7



For all its talk of being a street uprising, Black Lives Matter is increasingly awash in cash, raking in pledges of more than $100 million from liberal foundations and others eager to contribute to what has become the grant-making cause du jour.

The Ford Foundation and Borealis Philanthropy recently announced the formation of the Black-Led Movement Fund [BLMF], a six-year pooled donor campaign aimed at raising $100 million for the Movement for Black Lives coalition.

That funding comes in addition to more than $33 million in grants to the Black Lives Matter movement from top Democratic Party donor George Soros through his Open Society Foundations, as well as grant-making from the Center for American Progress.


“The BLMF provides grants, movement building resources, and technical assistance to organizations working advance the leadership and vision of young, Black, queer, feminists and immigrant leaders who are shaping and leading a national conversation about criminalization, policing and race in America,” said the Borealis announcement.

In doing so, however, the foundations have aligned themselves with the staunch left-wing platform of the Movement for Black Lives, which unveiled a policy agenda shortly after the fund was announced accusing Israel of being an “apartheid state” guilty of “genocide.”

Released Aug. 1, the platform also calls for defunding police departments, race-based reparations, breaking, voting rights for illegal immigrants, fossil-fuel divestment, an end to private education and charter schools, a “universal basic income,” and free college for blacks.



As far as critics are concerned, the grab-bag platform combined with the staggering underwriting commitment offer more evidence that Black Lives Matter is being used as a conduit for left-wing politics as usual.

“It’s about time people woke up to the fact that big money is using people as pawns to stoke racial hatred and further their global agenda,” said the Federalist Papers Project’s C.E. Dyer.

Bill Johnson, executive director of the National Association of Police Organizations, said corporations and others may want to think twice about partnering with the Ford Foundation, the fifth-largest U.S. philanthropy with $12.4 billion in assets.

“The Ford Foundation has traditionally been leftist, at least since the 1970s, on law-enforcement matters. So it’s not a huge surprise, but it’s certainly disappointing,” said Mr. Johnson. “I guess potential donors may want to look at the [Black Lives Matter] movement and see the damage, destruction and murders that they’ve left in their wake.”

For Black Lives Matter, the grant-making partnership isn’t risk free, lending legitimacy to the movement but also credence to those who say it has strayed from the concerns of black Americans calling for equal treatment at the hands of police.

“I think whoever’s in charge of vetting a grant like that didn’t do their homework,” said Mr. Johnson. “Or maybe this was already in the works before they realized what exactly they were dealing with before this platform came out—before it became more apparent that it’s become today’s Velcro for what the leftist-fringe movement desires.”

And that’s a shame, he said, “because instead of having a serious movement that might have been a basis for dialogue and improving relations in communities, especially communities of color, it’s kind of become in some ways a very violent movement, in some ways a very, very far-left [movement] with an almost statist agenda.”

Borealis and Ford did not return requests Wednesday asking for comment, but one of the newly launched fund’s partners, the Movement Strategy Center in Oakland, California, praised the foundations for bringing resources to “this transformative movement.”

“Ensuring that all Black Lives Matter, in this land and around the world, will require an infusion of assets into Black communities,” said the center in an Aug. 8 statement.

In their July 19 announcement, Ford Foundation program officers Brook Kelly-Green and Luna Yasui said that, “Now is the time to call for an end to state violence directed at communities of color.”

“And now is the time to advocate for investment in public services—including but not limited to police reform—together with education, health, and employment in communities for people that have historically had less opportunity and access to all those things,” they said. “These are the reasons we support the Movement for Black Lives.”

Ford and Borealis are hardly alone: They said the fund will “complement the important work” of charities including the Hill-Snowden Foundation, Solidaire, the NoVo Foundation, the Association of Black Foundation Executives, the Neighborhood Funders Group, anonymous donors, and others.

In addition to raising $100 million for the Movement for Black Lives, the Black-Led Movement Fund will collaborate with Benedict Consulting on “the organizational capacity building needs of a rapidly growing movement.”

Ford has locked horns over Israel before: In 2003, the foundation announced after years of criticism that it would not renew its funding for leftist causes through the New Israel Fund, according to Forward.

The Black Lives Matter movement exploded in August 2014 after an officer shot dead unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Since then, police shootings of black men have prompted rioting and protests in dozens of U.S. cities, as well as the deaths of eight officers in separate incidents this year at demonstrations in Baton Rouge and Dallas.

Mr. Johnson confirmed that his organization, an advocacy group for police, has no grant-making alliance with Ford.

“We don’t receive any funding from Ford. But yeah, thanks very much,” he said with a laugh.

Not that he wouldn’t take it. “Of course it would come in handy — look at what’s going on across this country with the attacks on police,” Mr. Johnson said. “We’re not looking for a handout from Ford, but it would be nice to see groups like that or George Soros try to give some nuts-and-bolts help for people who are hurting, instead of throwing money around on grand schemes.”

deebakes
08-17-2016, 08:05 PM
:shock:

RBP
08-17-2016, 08:11 PM
Oh boy. How do you give money to a "movement" with no central organization?

PorkChopSandwiches
08-17-2016, 08:21 PM
Soros wants to fund a terrorist group obviously, he has a plan

RBP
08-17-2016, 08:32 PM
Soros wants to fund a terrorist group obviously, he has a plan

And elsewhere...

http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/11/02/soros-admits-involvement-in-migrant-crisis-national-borders-are-the-obstacle/
http://dailycaller.com/2016/08/15/leaked-soros-memo-refugee-crisis-new-normal-gives-new-opportunities-for-global-influence/

I know... the sources... but you can do your own homework on the issue. He seems very interested in global instability and a one-world order for some reason.

PorkChopSandwiches
08-17-2016, 08:37 PM
And elsewhere...

http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/11/02/soros-admits-involvement-in-migrant-crisis-national-borders-are-the-obstacle/
http://dailycaller.com/2016/08/15/leaked-soros-memo-refugee-crisis-new-normal-gives-new-opportunities-for-global-influence/

I know... the sources... but you can do your own homework on the issue. He seems very interested in global instability and a one-world order for some reason.

I have read that too, is breitbart not legit? I thought they were

RBP
08-17-2016, 08:38 PM
I have read that too, is breitbart not legit? I thought they were

I think so, but definitely a right-leaning source. Their top dude is now at the top of the Trump campaign.

PorkChopSandwiches
08-17-2016, 08:39 PM
:dance:

RBP
08-18-2016, 01:44 AM
Who gets the money... http://www.borealisphilanthropy.org/#!blmf-grantees/v22w3

Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) http://blackalliance.org/

National with Local Organizing Committees

BAJI is a racial justice and immigrant rights organization that works to end racism, mass criminalization and economic disenfranchisement of African American and Black immigrant communities.

Black Lives Matter http://blacklivesmatter.com/

National and Canada with 38 Local Chapters

Launched in response to the acquittal of George Zimmerman, BLM began as a call and demand that Black lives matter. Since then, BLM has grown to a network of over 3,000 individuals and 39 chapters that aims to fight structural racism, protect Black people from state-sanctioned violence, and hold police and prosecutors accountable for enforcing the law.

Blackbird http://action.movementforblacklives.org/

National

Blackbird emerged from the first 100 days of turmoil and action in response to the murder of Mike Brown in Ferguson, MO. As early as the second week of community uprisings, Blackbird helped create the conditions for collaboration among a crowded (yet divided) field of organizations and emerging leaders through the use of a coordination table. Our team helped establish the importance of developing collaborative spaces as the center of organizing during and after crisis moments and helped match intense protests at sites of decision making with methodical base building in working class Black communities. Currently, the project provides creative and strategic support in key regions through rapid response—plugging a critical gap in resources available to these formations and groups. Our rapid response model does not seek to create momentum where it does not exist, but rather follows the energy generated by local organizers.

Black Youth Project 100 http://byp100.org/

National with 6 Local Chapters

BYP100 is an organization of Black 18-35 year olds dedicated to creating justice and freedom for Black people through leadership development, direct action organizing, advocacy, and education. The organization is guided by Black, queer, and feminist leaders.

BlackOUT Collective http://www.blackoutcollective.org/#Home

National

The BlackOUT Collective uses direct action and direct action training as a critical movement strategy to work towards liberation of Black people.

BOLD Organizing http://boldorganizing.org/

National

Black Organizing for Leadership and Dignity (BOLD) aims to rebuild and recenter Black organizing and Black-led organizations by providing new nonprofit directors and social movement leaders with training and by creating a network of Black leaders with a shared political analysis.

Dignity and Power Now http://dignityandpowernow.org/

Local - Greater Los Angeles, CA Area

Dignity and Power Now aims to build the political power and resilience for currently and formerly incarcerated people and their communities in Los Angeles County.

Enlace http://www.enlaceintl.org/

National

Formed to promote and protect the human and labor rights of residents and immigrants of North and Central America, Enlace’s leadership views the private prison lobby as the single greatest obstacle to the passage of immigration reform and, therefore, works to convince public and private institutions and politicians to cut financial ties with private prisons.

Freedom Inc. http://freedom-inc.org/

Local - Madison, WI

Freedom, Inc. organizes communities to end violence against women, gender non-conforming and transgender individuals, and state violence against communities of color.

Million Hoodies Movement for Justice http://millionhoodies.net/

National with 6 Local Chapters

Million Hoodies is a racial justice network that works to build the next generational of leaders fighting mass criminalization in Black communities through grassroots organizing, online mobilization, and public education.

Organization for Black Struggle (OBS) http://obs-stl.org/

Local - Greater St. Louis, MO Area

Based in Saint Louis, OBS was founded by activists, students, and union organizers to fill a vacuum left by assaults on the Black Power Movement. Since its founding, OBS has been committed to fighting for political empowerment, economic justice, and cultural dignity.

Project South http://projectsouth.org/

Regional - Southeastern U.S.

Project South grows social movements by connecting Black youth organizing to Southern-wide regional collaborations, education programs, and community-led programs to address state violence, economic independence, and political participation.

Southerners on New Ground (SONG) http://southernersonnewground.org/

Regional - Southeastern U.S.

SONG is a multi-racial and regional anchor institution in the South that aims to build, sustain, and connect a base of LGBTQ people to fight for and win policy, structural, and cultural changes.

UndocuBlack Network http://undocublack.org/

National

The UndocuBlack Network grew out of a need to tackle xenophobia and racism Black undocumented people were experiencing. The Network aims to increase understanding of Black undocumented migration and provide resources to help the Black undocumented community.

RBP
08-18-2016, 01:47 AM
I turned on the Urban Views station on satellite radio yesterday.

I turned it off when the host said she dismisses the black-on-black violence argument as bullshit because, white people kill white and Asian people kill Asian people; you kill who you live near.

*click*

Muddy
08-18-2016, 01:53 AM
These people are getting money as big as Iran.. wth??

PorkChopSandwiches
08-18-2016, 03:33 PM
They need to militarize them so they can kill whitey

Muddy
08-18-2016, 04:33 PM
They are freedom fighters, not terrorists..