Annual Ad-Free Subscription… Go ad-free and back the site that defends churches from political intimidation.

Donate… Support the outlet that calls out activist lawfare and holds extremists accountable.

Sign up for our email list… Get the footage, the names, and the follow-ups before they disappear.


Washed-up, fired former CNN personality Don Lemon wants Americans to believe that storming a church in Minnesota was “journalism.” That’s the word he’s using now to run cover for what anyone with common sense can see on video: a coordinated attack on a house of worship, harassment of the congregants, and intimidation by radical left-wing extremists.

READ MORE: Remember this Obama photo? Well, it’s coming back to HAUNT Tampon Tim in a big way…

This is the kind of stuff you’d expect to see from ISIS or the Taliban, not the Democrat Party.

And calling it “journalism” certainly doesn’t make it journalism. Lemon is throwing up a shield, but it falls apart the second you look at what actually happened inside the Cities church.

Front and center in that disruption was Don Lemon, but he wasn’t acting alone. Leading the charge alongside him was Nekima Levy Armstrong, a left-wing lawyer and longtime radical activist.

C3:

Meet Nekima Levy Armstrong… She led the group of Marxists that stormed the Church with Don Lemon. She is a community agitator tied to Leftist orgs. She made $170,000 at a 501(c)(3) called The Wayfinder Foundation. Of course… The Resistance is funded by us. Lock her up!

Ms. Armstrong not only participated in the terror attack, but she also bragged about it afterward.

Erickaaa:

Meet Nekima Levy Armstrong. The purple lipstick wearing, George Floyd civil rights attorney who hijacked a church service in Minneapolis this morning. She called it a “Clandestine Operation Pull-Up.” Racial civil rights seem to be a thing of the past for her and is now working with the 501c3 called “Democracy Now” to resist ICE. They are funded by the usual big giants. What this activist group did in the church today was beyond illegal and must be held accountable.

She also took to Facebook, where she thanked her comrades for the act of terror.

I Meme Therefor I Am:

BREAKING: Social justice activist Nekima Levy Armstrong, in a Facebook post, accused the pastor of Cities Church of being an Acting Field Director for the ICE office and expressed gratitude to the activists who joined her in storming the church this morning. She wrote: “Thank you to all the activists who showed up, as well as independent journalists Georgia Fort, Don Lemon, DawokeFarmer2, and Brixton Hughes. Special thanks to Monique Cullars Doty, Chauntyll Allen, and Satara Strong-Allen for co-organizing this mission with Black Lives Matter Minnesota, Black Lives Matter Twin Cities Metro, and the Racial Justice Network.”

Here’s a closeup of the FB post:

But what Ms. Armstrong and her radical terror buddies fail to understand is that storming a church isn’t about protest or journalism. Churches are not public squares; they’re protected spaces. Busting into a house of worship as a coordinated group on a mission to scare, intimidate, and disrupt raises very real legal questions under federal civil rights statutes like the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act (FACE Act), which protects people from intimidation and obstruction in protected locations.

That’s why Armstrong’s role matters so much. She isn’t some random protester. She’s a lawyer who knows where the legal lines are, and the footage, and her follow-up comments and interviews, show her crossing them anyway.

Look:

https://twitter.com/LeftistsofMN/status/2013050404498485441

But Ms. Armstrong isn’t a rookie; she’s involved in all the hot-button left-wing issues, like No Kings and BLM. As a matter of fact, Oprah honored her radical work during the height of the George Floyd lunacy.

Oprah Daily:

Hours after the judge read the verdict on April 20, Oprah spoke with Nekima Levy Armstrong, one of the Minneapolis-based activists responsible for turning Floyd’s case into a global conversation, on a Zoom call. Armstrong, who is also a civil rights attorney and the founder of the Racial Justice Network, helped organize the first protests in Floyd’s name in May 2020, which eventually evolved into Black Lives Matter marches in every state in the United States, as well as countries around the world.

While listening to the judge say the words “guilty, guilty, guilty,” Armstrong said that tears rolled down her face. “I thought, ‘I can breathe for the first time in a year,'” she told Oprah.

For Armstrong, the moment represents the culmination of a yearlong fight for justice—one that, at some points, seemed “impossible.”

Armstrong first heard of the case last May, when she received a troubling Facebook notification. A member of the Minneapolis community wanted to alert Armstrong, the former president of Minneapolis’s NAACP chapter, to the fact that a local man had been killed by police. Armstrong called the police chief, Medaria Arradondo, to demand answers. Arradondo delivered what was the official story at the time: A man had died from a medical emergency while being taken into custody.

Hours later, Armstrong was tagged in a video of 46-year-old Floyd being killed. In footage taken by teenager Darnella Frazier, Chauvin stares at the camera as he kneels on Floyd’s neck, eventually taking his life.

Armstrong reflected on the moment she first saw that video. “Tears started streaming down my face. I knew that I had witnessed a lynching,” she told Oprah.

But as a community leader and advisor to Minneapolis’s Black Lives Matter chapter, her instinct was to take action. “I said to myself, we need to bring people together as soon as possible.” By the early morning hours of May 26, the day after Floyd was killed, Armstrong and fellow community leaders had organized the first of many protests, beginning the long fight to bring murder charges against Chauvin and the three other officers present.

During their Zoom conversation, Oprah and Armstrong also discussed past victims of police violence, whose names are both known and unknown by the general public. Oprah said her tearful reaction to the verdict was in response to those victims as well.

“I started crying. I didn’t expect to be that emotional about it,” she said. “I was thinking, ‘Don’t let this be another Emmett Till.’ Part of it is relief and releasing for all the people who didn’t get to hear ‘guilty.'”

READ MORE: India media just blew up the student visa scam–now everything changes…

And speaking of lines and journalism, Ms. Armstrong also crossed another line when she led an attack filled with vicious threats at the home of Liz Collin, the senior reporter at Alpha News.

Look:

https://twitter.com/lizcollin/status/2013091304687669645

Now, Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillion is looking into this to see if Ms. Armstrong violated The Face Act:

https://twitter.com/AAGDhillon/status/2013088796238082476

The left has spent years insisting that certain spaces deserve undying respect, privacy, and protection. That rule apparently disappears the second a church doesn’t align with their politics.

READ MORE: Have you caught the horrific new variant spreading across the US?

Now, here we are, standing at the presupposition of yet another left-wing “testing point.” With this latest attack, they want to see how far intimidation can go and whether anyone will stop it when the target is a Christian Church.

If the right drops the ball on this and lets the left walk free, these kinds of radical attacks will only get worse, and churches all across the country will be the next targets.

It’s time for Pam Bondi to make arrests and draw her own very clear line.

Annual Ad-Free Subscription… Go ad-free and back the site that defends churches from political intimidation.

Donate… Support the outlet that calls out activist lawfare and holds extremists accountable.

Sign up for our email list… Get the footage, the names, and the follow-ups before they disappear.

NEWSFEEDFOLLOW ON XGAB — GETTR — TRUTH SOCIALBLUESKY