Can’t protects da border cuz ain’t no money! Cuz ya know dey gonna putcha in chains and datz da greatest tret to Amerikkka!!!
Part 43,636 on law breaker Joe f*kn over the American people:
Founded in 2020 in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests, the Black Legacy Project describes itself as "a musical celebration of black history to advance racial solidarity, equity and belonging." It brings together artists of all backgrounds "to record present day interpretations of songs central to the Black American experience and compose originals relevant to the pressing calls for change of our time."
A similar arts group, Nu Art Education Inc., an offshoot of the NorCal School for the Arts, says it is "following the theory of change that utilizing theater arts" can be "a tool to teach and practice conflict resolution in the classroom."
While both outfits share a mission of using the arts to inspire social change, they have something else in common: counterterrorism. Or rather, both have received taxpayer grants through the Department of Homeland Security's "Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention" (TVTP) program. Together, the two groups have received more than $1.4 million since the Biden administration doubled the program's annual budget, to some $20 million per year.
Grants to arts cooperatives and educational initiatives strike some as odd for a department charged with protecting the United States -- including its southern border, now viewed by many as virtually open to illegal migrants. Against that backdrop, FBI Director Christopher Wray recently warned Congress of the heightened threat of terror in the U.S. at a time of wars raging on two continents with America involved on the sidelines.
On Tuesday, Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee the "threat matrix" is "blinking red lights everywhere."
Given such concerns, Andrew Arthur of the Center for Immigration Studies, a critic of Biden policies, said the DHS grants are misplaced. "It's kind of hard to see how all that is going to help stop terrorism," he told RealClearInvestigations.
Part 43,636 on law breaker Joe f*kn over the American people:
Founded in 2020 in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests, the Black Legacy Project describes itself as "a musical celebration of black history to advance racial solidarity, equity and belonging." It brings together artists of all backgrounds "to record present day interpretations of songs central to the Black American experience and compose originals relevant to the pressing calls for change of our time."
A similar arts group, Nu Art Education Inc., an offshoot of the NorCal School for the Arts, says it is "following the theory of change that utilizing theater arts" can be "a tool to teach and practice conflict resolution in the classroom."
While both outfits share a mission of using the arts to inspire social change, they have something else in common: counterterrorism. Or rather, both have received taxpayer grants through the Department of Homeland Security's "Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention" (TVTP) program. Together, the two groups have received more than $1.4 million since the Biden administration doubled the program's annual budget, to some $20 million per year.
Grants to arts cooperatives and educational initiatives strike some as odd for a department charged with protecting the United States -- including its southern border, now viewed by many as virtually open to illegal migrants. Against that backdrop, FBI Director Christopher Wray recently warned Congress of the heightened threat of terror in the U.S. at a time of wars raging on two continents with America involved on the sidelines.
On Tuesday, Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee the "threat matrix" is "blinking red lights everywhere."
Given such concerns, Andrew Arthur of the Center for Immigration Studies, a critic of Biden policies, said the DHS grants are misplaced. "It's kind of hard to see how all that is going to help stop terrorism," he told RealClearInvestigations.
Now Defending the Homeland: Wokespeak Grants to Arts Groups
Founded in 2020 in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests, the Black Legacy Project describes itself as “a musical celebration of black history to advance racial solidarity, equity and belon
www.realclearinvestigations.com