Activists from the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, Texas Civil Rights Project, Latino Justice and other groups staged the rally before Abbott's State of the State address.
Latest from the Left: You Can Change Your Race Too!
Friday, May 7, 2021 @ 9:51 AM
Most people are familiar with the transgender worldview that has effectively swept the country: If you don’t like your gender, you can change it to whatever you want it to be.
Caitlyn Jenner, a transgender woman, is the literal model for this worldview (Jenner posed for the cover of
Vanity Fair after “transitioning”). Jenner has recently even
announced a bid for governor of California. Formerly Bruce Jenner, this Olympic gold medalist now asserts femininity instead of masculinity.
A worldview like this dictates that you can define your own reality, simply by declaring your new gender.
Race-faker Rachel Dolezal who now goes by African name Nkechi Amare Diallo says she hasn t been able to find a job in SIX years after being exposed
Rachel Dolezal, 43, has claimed she is unable to find a job after it was revealed she is a race faker in 2015
She told Tamron Hall that even after changing her name to Nkechi Amare Diallo in 2017 she is still recognized
The former NAACP leader said it had been really tough to provide for her kids
She said she was forced to create my own job and she now braids hair
Dolezal, who says she still feels black, claimed she wished people could see me more for who I am
A PROMINENT human rights lawyer has admitted that she is not a Latina, after over a decade of pretending to be Puerto Rican and Colombian descent. Natasha
The National Lawyers Guild’s Former First ‘Latina’ President Is a White Woman
Tina Vasquez, Prism, January 7, 2021
For years, prominent human rights attorney Natasha Lycia Ora Bannan has positioned herself as an advocate for Latinx communities, most recently identifying as a Puerto Rican woman from New York determined to aid the island and bring attention to the economic and humanitarian crises produced by colonization. Unbeknownst to many in the Latinx communities she worked alongside and claimed as her own, Bannan is a white woman who grew up in Georgia. Since at least 2006, she has accepted opportunities expressly intended for Latinas and other people of color.