Posted on 01/06/2015 6:53:54 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Sunday was a bad day to order the egg-white omelet.
Not content with disrupting medal ceremonies for centenarian WWII veterans, the hands up, dont shoot crowd served up its latest concoction: Black Brunch, in which protesters stormed brunch-serving restaurants a.k.a. white spaces in Manhattan and Oakland, Calif., chanting, singing, waving banners and posters, and reading off names of black citizens killed by police.
If that seems hip and edgy to you, then you were probably brunching at Lallisse on Sunday morning. In an interview in Spook magazine, activists Wazi Maret Davis and Brianna Gibson, discussing an earlier Black Brunch event, recounted the reaction of diners at a restaurant in the Rockridge neighborhood in Oakland:
[Spook:] What was the response you had from the white folks who were sitting there in Rockridge, eating their brunch?
Brianna: . . . I think the first place we went I had a few people ask me, What do you want us to do? And I told them, just remain silent and acknowledge that were here. Some people nodded, some people applauded, or showed a fist of solidarity, and there were a few individuals who were crying.
Wazi: Weeping. Weeping is the word.
I think its beautiful, the manager of Oakland restaurant Forge told the Los Angeles Times, responding to Sundays events. Its a message that needs to be heard, and if they have to disrupt business and daily life for a minute, then Im glad we could help. At Oaklands Lungamore, a dozen customers stood in support.
The rhetoric and the reality do not align. Davis says that it is imperative to interrupt . . . communities where theyre surrounded by money, or theyre surrounded by white folks, [and] they dont have to engage with whats going on in Black communities, and they can easily disassociate from that and pretend its not happening. But the communities the Black Brunch crowd inconvenienced were full of dime-a-dozen liberals eager to support their cause. You would be hard-pressed to find someone in midtown Manhattan unwilling to raise a mimosa to a refrain of Justice for Mike Brown is justice for us all!
Left-wingers can be about as flamboyant as they please when protesting in Manhattan or the Bay Area, and they know it. There is a reason they are not staging their performance art at barbecue joints at dinnertime in Fort Worth: namely, they would not make it through the door not because the diners are racist brutes, but because the only dinner-and-show they are interested in is the one they paid for.
And in parts of the country not governed by Oberlin graduates, people are sensible enough to refuse the premise of such spectacles, which is that the racial climate of present-day America is no different than that of 1950s-era Montgomery. But it is. Black Brunch is not a modern-day sit-in, because brunch establishments are not modern-day whites-only diners.
Black Brunch is nothing more than the tactic of a racial-justice movement being steadily reduced to its radical fringe, populated by people such as Gibson, who use phrases like, Were really trying to de-centre whiteness. Marches in Time Square succeeded on the backs of recreational protesters, who, self-satisfied, returned to their NPR podcasts and vegan-smoothie shops. Black Brunch is a grasp at relevance by the hardliners left behind. Who can be surprised that it meets with some approval from the crowd of milquetoast liberals who, for reasons of demography and geography, are the people most likely to frequent brunch service in Manhattan and Oakland? It is one type of leftist talking to another.
And its the left-winger who is most likely to see things through the filter of racial grievance. As one protester tweeted, ATTN WHITE Man, I have no guilt disturbing your brunch. Its [sic] YOU that has no right to be here.
Just as Martin Luther King envisioned: a nation where people are judged not by the color but by the content of their crepe.
Or something.
Ian Tuttle is a William F. Buckley Fellow at the National Review Institute.
The diners look pissed, if you ask me.
The three at the top look very Boojee.
The protesters might storm a brunch, but I bet they won’t try that at a Tea Party.
“It has gotten out of hand.”
Not really.
It’s only still in leftist cities. Just two branches f the same lefty tree annoying the hell out of each other.
These people would never try this nonsense outside of a liberal enclave like Oakland or Manhattan. These aren’t protests, they are “exotic” entertainment for rich liberal idiots.
I suggest setting up a tip jar.
This protestant is out of church at 9 AM. Not sure what you are insinuating there.
ya-think?
that is a very good point. WHY did n’t they get thrown out by the management?
Actually, even paying customers do not have the right to disturb other patrons of the establishment with their speech or behavior. It is commercial private property. And definitely not a public protest, 1st Amendment free speech zone.
However, I understand management may have been caught flat footed this time. I would pay my bill but I would make it very clear when I did that, unless management acted to restore decorum going forward, they would have no further business from me and that I would ensure that all my friends knew about the inhospitable dining environment as well.
As for management, assuming they have the stomach for it, a decision to confront the protestors with a lawyer-prepared demand that they cease their disruptive behavior and depart the premises or face the police on a disturbing the peace complaint call might convince them to go back outside onto the sidewalk where they can protest their little hearts out while being ignored by the rest of society.
The people sitting there don’t get up and get in the punks faces??
Why?
Time to arm the wait staff with electric cattle prods, and give the patrons sharp knives.
why pay your bill?
If they allow disruption and political tomfoolery, they should expect some economic disruption.
RE: The people sitting there dont get up and get in the punks faces??
Why?
__________________
Many people don’t like: 1) Confrontations; 2) Getting involved.
The irony is they cannot do this in their own neighborhoods or during evening meals because the gang bangers will shoot them.
“Many people dont like: 1) Confrontations; 2) Getting involved.”
Totally understand. But my dislike of in your face, leftist punks would make it very hard to stay seated if I was there.
Eating Brunch in Democrat Held Territory can be Hell .LOL
Racists.
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