• Re: A Virginia bakery gave BLM lying nigger activists free coffee. Then

    From Burn it down@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 11 02:16:11 2023
    XPost: alt.niggers, sac.politics, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: va.politics

    On 17 Jan 2022, Klaus Schadenfreude <klaus_schadenfreude@null.net>
    posted some news:ss4oap$dal6$3@news.freedyn.de:

    This is sedition! Why does she hate America??


    Brian Noyes and Josephine Gilbert agreed to sit down on March 1 and talk
    it out. Noyes, founder of the celebrated Red Truck Bakery, and Gilbert,
    the leader of a loose coalition that demonstrates under the banner of All
    Lives Matter, wanted to reach an accord before events spun out of control
    in the usually restful town of Warrenton, Va.

    The issue was coffee - and the weekly demonstrations on Courthouse Square
    in downtown Warrenton, where two groups have been trying to poke and prod
    the conscience of the city.

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    Since June 2020, not long after George Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis,
    a handful of organizations have hosted a Black Lives Matter Vigil For
    Action on Saturday mornings when, for 45 minutes, dozens of people quietly
    hold up signs to remind locals about racial injustice and institutional
    racism. The demonstrations eventually led to counterprotests across the
    street, aimed at shutting down the vigils that All Lives Matter activists
    see as destructive to this conservative community in Fauquier County, a traditional Republican stronghold.

    Red Truck got dragged into this drama on the last Saturday in February
    when a relatively new member of the ALM group entered the bakery, camera
    phone in hand. Jennifer Blevins Ragle asked a young employee why the shop
    was giving out free coffee to participants at the BLM vigil, but not
    others on the square. She implied Red Truck was discriminating against
    ALM.

    "I just don't understand giving free coffee to some people, but not
    others. I mean, that makes your store very political," Ragle said to the 17-year-old employee behind the counter. "I'll make sure it gets to the
    paper and everything else."

    Ragle's video was posted on a YouTube channel called Singing Patriot,
    where it gained little traction. But it was also posted on a TikTok
    account, named crossstitch1954, where it has racked up more than 21,000
    views and generated more than 800 comments, many of them calling for
    boycotts of Red Truck. Or worse.

    "Hope this place burns to the ground," wrote one commenter. "Close the
    place down! Let those black lives keep the place open. All the other lives don't matter," wrote another. "Someone please put a pallet of bricks in
    front of that store so we can protest against Red Truck Bakery," added a
    third.

    Negative reviews started appearing on Red Truck's Yelp and Google pages, sometimes from people far from the streets of Warrenton. The bakery began receiving harassing phone calls, too. "Threats of damage and injury,"
    Noyes told The Washington Post.

    One caller said, simply, "we are watching you," Noyes said. "Picture a
    young girl answering the phone at a small bakery and hearing that."

    On Feb. 27, Noyes issued an apology and an explanation to try to defuse
    the situation. The owner wrote that he is not in the Warrenton store often
    - Red Truck's headquarters are in Marshall, Va. - and that when he first encountered the BLM vigil in 2021, he saw no counterprotesters on the
    square. He treated the vigil participants to water and cranberry muffins.
    Noyes then told his staff that BLM members might occasionally wander in
    for water or coffee, which would be on the house.

    "It started as an innocent and spur-of-the-moment neighborly gesture, but
    no good deed goes unpunished, I guess," Noyes wrote. "I don't remember an
    All Lives Matter group being there back then, but if they had ever asked
    me about this, I certainly would have given them the same consideration."

    Before Noyes posted the statement on his social channels, he sent it to Gilbert, as a courtesy. She acknowledged that she received it ahead of
    time and "thought it was fine," she told The Washington Post. They then
    agreed to meet for coffee at Red Truck. They had a favor to ask of each
    other.

    After exchanging pleasantries, Gilbert asked Noyes if he would talk to the
    BLM demonstrators. She hoped Noyes would use his influence in the
    community - earned by hosting fundraisers and events, garnering national acclaim for his baked goods, even getting a shout-out from President
    Barack Obama - to convince the BLM group to stop their weekly gatherings.

    Gilbert had already petitioned others to stop the vigils. She had
    addressed the Warrenton Town Council. She had expressed her concerns to
    the Fauquier County Board of Supervisors. She had even talked to the
    city's chief of police and mayor. "I appreciate you figuring out a way to
    stop this indoctrination," Gilbert told the town council on Sept. 14,
    2021.

    Gilbert clarified her "indoctrination" comment for The Post.

    "When I say 'indoctrination,' what I mean by that is, normalizing this
    type of protest for kids that come by every Saturday morning with their
    parents to the farmers market," she said. "They're not going to change my
    mind or any of the people who are standing with me. They are normalizing behavior that is not right. Warrenton is not racist."

    Like the public officials in Warrenton, Noyes rejected Gilbert's proposal. Noyes told her that he has no control over BLM demonstrators. "That's
    their right to be out there, just like it's your right," he said to her.

    Once rebuffed, Gilbert started to raise her voice. Noyes called her loud
    and animated. Gilbert said she's from Sicily. "As I get passionate about
    this and get excited, my voice automatically goes up," she told The Post.
    She said she apologized to Noyes on the spot after raising her voice.

    The meeting did the exact opposite of what Noyes had hoped. He left it
    feeling "discouraged and realizing that there's no way to work with these people." His employees were worried, too, after hearing the conversation
    turn intense.

    Noyes decided right then he would shut down Red Truck in Warrenton for the weekend, including the Saturday when demonstrators would gather again on Courthouse Square. He said he would pay the staff for those two days. (The closure would stretch into Monday and not just in Warrenton; he also
    closed the Marshall shop that day as he worked to hire security to ease
    his staff's fears.) Noyes even moved his signature red truck, a 1954 Ford
    F-100 that he bought from Tommy Hilfiger, out of an abundance of caution.

    Noyes thought the closures would calm things down - and demonstrators were
    calm that weekend - but Gilbert thought the closings were "ridiculous."

    "Why didn't he just shut down for the two hours that we were going to be
    there" on the square, Gilbert said. "This is just a game that Mr. Noyes is playing. He's a smart man, but like I told him when I left, I'm smart too.
    I'm not stupid. I'm not rolling over."

    Even as the conversation turned noisy, Noyes reminded Gilbert that he
    still had a request. He wanted her to ask Ragle to take down the video.
    Not only was it stirring things up, it was putting a minor in the public
    eye, which was troubling to the girl's parents and to Red Truck's staff. Gilbert said she wouldn't contact Ragle, that Noyes would have to do it.
    She said she didn't believe in taking down the video. She wanted people to
    see it, as further evidence of how BLM demonstrators have divided the
    town, she said.

    What's more, Gilbert didn't think Red Truck's free coffee policy was an
    honest mistake or a misunderstanding, as Noyes alleges. "He got caught,"
    she said. "He told me he didn't want to take sides, but he did take sides
    and now he got busted. And he doesn't want the community to know he took sides." (Noyes, incidentally, has halted the free coffee program.)

    Both Red Truck employees and the minor's mother attempted to track down
    Ragle, but Noyes wasn't sure they ever made contact. Ragle's video remains
    up on both YouTube and TikTok.

    Ragle's behavior has given Red Truck staff cause for concern, Noyes said.
    She refused to turn off her video camera, as requested by an employee, and
    as she exited the bakery, she bumped into a man at the front door. Ragle
    later contacted police and said the man, apparently a BLM demonstrator,
    was blocking her exit. "Our investigation revealed that that did not
    happen," said Timothy Carter, Warrenton's police chief. "It was probably
    just a big misunderstanding."

    Ragle has also posted more videos, including one where she appears to be
    on the opposite side of the street, yelling at BLM demonstrators. Another
    video scrolls through a recent article in the Fauquier Times, with added captions that suggest it was Noyes, not Gilbert, who raised his voice
    during their meeting. (Noyes denied the charge.) "Bryan [sic] Noyes," the caption continues, "backs BLM period!!!" Cage the Elephant's song,
    "Hypocrite," plays in the background.

    According to public records and one newspaper story, Ragle has had
    criminal charges filed against her. She was charged with violating a restraining order in 2013 and trespassing in 2014. The charges in both
    cases were dismissed. In 2016, the Culpeper County Sheriff's Office
    arrested Ragle for assault and battery, according to the Culpeper Times.
    The Post could not immediately find out how the case was resolved.

    The Post left a pair of voice mails to a number connected with Ragle in
    public records. A woman who called back did not identify herself and hung
    up after learning she was talking to a Post reporter. A short time later,
    Ragle posted another video featuring a screenshot of a 2014 news story
    about Red Truck. Ragle superimposed a caption over the story: "Prior
    Washington Post writer, sending out his goons to cover his backing of
    BLM." (Noyes is a former art director for The Post.)

    Ragle's TikTok video has changed the dynamic in Warrenton, said Noyes and Carter, the police chief. It has taken an issue that was rooted in the community and spread it beyond the city's borders. "This video on TikTok
    is just living a life of its own," Noyes said. "It's just bringing in so much... anger from people who don't even know the store. It's just reason
    for them to rally."

    The police chief harbors similar concerns: that someone from outside might "take action kind of in the fog of what's going on," Carter said. "I'm not really concerned about either one of our groups, but what I'm concerned
    about - what we're always concerned about - is someone coming in and just
    using it as a platform to do something else."

    This weekend will be the first one, post TikTok video, when Red Truck is
    open and the demonstrators are back on the square. No one in Warrenton -
    not Noyes, not Carter, not BLM organizer Scott Christian - is sure what to expect. The dueling demonstrations have been generally peaceful,
    especially in recent weeks, said Carter and Christian, though the BLM
    leader has lately seen signs among ALM protesters about freeing the
    prisoners who were convicted of their actions during the Jan. 6 riots.

    Gilbert said ALM has "no intention" of singling out Red Truck this
    weekend. "Our beef is actually with the town for not stopping what's going
    on across the street," she said.

    Del. Michael J. Webert (R-Fauquier) released a statement on Thursday that
    said it was time for the community to put this incident behind them. The coffee, he noted, was given out in good faith. "We are a close-knit
    community that has no need to be angry or mistrust one another," Webert
    said. "Let's remember that we all have a stake in making our community the
    best it can be, and act like the neighbors we are."

    For his part, Noyes is debating just how neighborly to be on Saturday.
    He's contemplating whether to bring muffins to people on both sides of the square, a kind of Red Truck peace offering. But he also wants to see how
    things unfold. He doesn't want to make a wrong move. He's already paid a
    price, both emotionally and financially. He figures he has lost between
    $15,000 to $20,000 because of the bakery closures. He's paying out another $1,000 a day for security.

    "That's a lot of muffins," he deadpanned.

    <https://news.yahoo.com/virginia-bakery-gave-blm-activists-170155230.html>

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