Anonymous ID: 4b23ac Aug. 3, 2020, 2:12 a.m. No.10168005   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8021 >>8051 >>8077 >>8111 >>8131 >>8195

 

BREITBART

Shakedown: BLM Demands Cut of Louisville Business Profits for Protection

 

ROBERT KRAYCHIK2 Aug 20202,741

5:02

Black Lives Matter (BLM) protesters issued “social justice” and “black liberation” demands regarding “diversity” to a restaurant owner in Louisville, KY, including a directive for “donations” to organizations run by non-whites.

 

Listed demands from a BLM affiliate in Louisville include racial quotas for staff and ownership of business suppliers, donations to organizations run by non-whites, and adjustment to dress codes. The posters used the acronym “BIPOC” (“black or indigenous persons of color”) as a euphemism for non-white persons:

 

23% of Staff is BIPOC in Front of House

 

23% of inventory is from BIPOC retailer(s)

 

Regular donations to BIPOC organization

 

Dress code policy does not discriminate against BIPOC patrons of employees.

 

Additional demands issued via the letter included the option to give 1.5 percent of revenues to a local “black nonprofit or organization” in lieu of purchasing a minimum of 23 percent of the business’s inventory from “black retailers,” mandated “diversity and inclusion training” for all employees, and displaying of left-wing messaging to support “reparations.”

 

The posters include a stated commitment to be publicly visible as a public service announcement pending future “inspections” of restaurants and other businesses.

 

Three varieties of posters with the message, “YOU CAN’T STOP THE REVOLUTION,” were directed at restaurants in Louisville’s NuLu neighborhood with the grades A, C, and F according to a “NuLu Social Justice Health and Wellness Code.”

 

Posters with the C-grade declare, “A facility that fails two (2) consecutive regular inspections will be under administrative review.” Those with an F-grade include the following message, “[This] facility has failed to meet minimum requirements of the Nulu Social Justice Health and Wellness Code inspection. This includes [a] failure to create a safe space for black inclusion.”

 

The letter includes neo-Marxist assertions, decrying “gentrification” as a “process [that] has been happening to black, indigenous, and persons of color at the hands of white, heterosexual patriarchy since the inception of this nation we call home. Black folx [sic] can’t ‘have their own space’ when wealthy white folks see an opportunity to make more money.”

 

“Repercussions of non-compliance” are listed in the letter:

 

Reduction in Racial Index Score/bias report to the Better Business Bureau.

Social Media Blast: Notification, via all social media platforms, of non-compliance.

Boycott: Public boycott, coordinated through social media and mail announcements, of yours NuLu establishment AND any other business ventures owned by you.

Protest: Visible, media-covered demonstration/sit-in outside your establishment.

Invasive Reclamation: Placement of booths/tables outside your establishment where competing Black proprietors will offer items comparable to those offered by you.

Fernando Martinez, the owner of La Bodeguita de Mima, a restaurant serving Cuban cuisine, described Black Lives Matter’s demands as a Mafia-style shakedown. He characterized them as “Mafia tactics,” according to Courier-Journal, a Kentucky-based newspaper.

 

PJ Media reported on a public Facebook post from Martinez: “There comes a time in life that you have to make a stand and you have to really prove your convictions and what you believe in. … All good people need to denounce this. How can you [justify] injustice with more injustice?”

 

Local supporters and some from Louisville’s Cuban community held a rally to support Martinez’s restaurant on Sunday, which was vandalized in recent days. They said the restaurant “has been subject to vandalism and extortion in recent days.”

 

The Courier-Journal reported:

 

La Bodeguita de Mima was forced to close July 24 during a [Black Lives Matter] demonstration that shut down East Market Street, at which several protesters presented Martinez with the list of demands and said he “better put the letter on the door so your business is not f*cked with.”

 

The restaurant remained closed the next two days because “management and staff were concerned about safety,” according to the release. “30+ staff members (mostly immigrants) were unable to earn a paycheck.”

 

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Anonymous ID: 4b23ac Aug. 3, 2020, 2:16 a.m. No.10168016   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8021 >>8051 >>8077 >>8131 >>8195

'We're not an enemy of the Black community': Cubans rally to support NuLu business

Sarah Ladd

David J. Kim

Louisville Courier Journal

 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — More than 100 members of Louisville's Cuban community gathered at La Bodeguita de Mima, 735 E. Market St., Sunday to rally in support of the immigrant-owned restaurant.

 

The rally came after a controversial letter from Black Lives Matter protesters laid out demands that aim to improve diversity in NuLu, which is known for its locally owned shops and restaurants.

 

Fernando Martinez, a partner of the Olé Restaurant Group, publicly denounced the letter's demands on Facebook, calling them "mafia tactics" used to intimidate business owners. On Thursday, a small group of protesters gathered outside his restaurant, La Bodeguita de Mima, in protest.

 

For about 10 minutes on Sunday, Martinez gave a passionate speech to the crowd with his mother and relatives standing alongside him.

 

Background:Cuban community plans rally at NuLu restaurant in response to Black Lives Matter demands

 

"La Bodeguita is open to everybody," Martinez said. "If you're gay, this is your home. If you're Black, this is your home. If you're white, this is your home. If you're human, this is your home."

 

He also condemned the criticism his business had received over diversity concerns.

 

"How can I be called a bigot and a racist when my family is Black? When my son is gay?" he asked. "I'm the proud father of a gay son, and I'm gonna fight for him against anybody."

 

Some of the demands requested by Black Lives Matter protesters included that NuLu businesses adequately represent Louisville's Black population by having a minimum of 23% Black staff, purchasing a minimum of 23% inventory from Black retailers or donating 1.5% of net sales to a local Black nonprofit or organization and requiring diversity and inclusion training for all staff members on a bi-annual basis.

 

During a speech that was interrupted several times by roaring applause and honking car horns, Martinez told his story of coming to the United States on a raft when he was 18 years old in search of a new life and hope. He said he didn't envision getting criticized like this.

 

 

"It’s sad that we have to justify who we are as people," he said. "We need to come together as a community. We’re not an enemy of the Black community. We’re all people and we come in all colors."

 

No police or counterprotesters were present, though Sadiqa Reynolds, president and CEO of the Louisville Urban League, voiced her displeasure on Facebook and announced that she will no longer go to El Taco Luchador and La Bodeguita De Mima, two restaurants that Martinez owns.

 

"Rather than respond to demands tendered, even in the negative, and affirm that he is aware of the pain our people are in, instead he chooses to highlight what he believes is his superiority," she wrote. "I'm not sure why any human, other than a racist, would choose this time to tell us how little our lives matter."

 

Several members of the Louisville Revolutionary Black Panther Party attended the rally, with General Ahamara Brewster speaking to the crowd in support of the Cuban community.

 

Some people sat on the steps of La Bodeguita de Mima and held signs that said, "We left Cuba because of socialism. Be careful what you wish for" and "Justice 4 all."

 

Luis David Fuenteswith El Kentubano, a publication for the Latin community of Kentucky, spoke before Martinez, noting that he and the Cuban community "as a minority group and as immigrants" have "fallen in love with this city and nation" and chose Louisville in which "to pursue the American dream."

 

"Although our community has achieved great success in this city," Fuentes said, "we continue to miss our homeland, our neighborhoods we grew up in and our families we left behind. We did not want to leave all of those, but we had to. We had to escape the socialist government that took away our grandparents' private businesses in 1959 and continue to restrict our civil and political rights today."

 

Fuentes went on to say many had risked their lives to pursue "freedom, respect and prosperity," values he said are under attack "because of the diffusion and expansion of Marxist ideas."

 

The community is against "any kind of discrimination, any kind of violence or any kind of extortion," he said.

 

Several members drove from Frankfort and Lexington to show support for Martinez.

 

"Everyone wants justice, but it's not by dividing people," said Lexington resident Mai Diaz said. "It's by uniting people."

 

Reach breaking news reporter Sarah Ladd at sladd@courier-journal.com. Follow her on Twitter at @ladd_sarah. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: courier-journal.com/subscribe.