Sidney T Brown Jr
3K posts

Sidney T Brown Jr
@sidtbrown9
Whom you believe in will determine your success.
Washingon, D.C. Katılım Temmuz 2009
291 Takip Edilen116 Takipçiler

🚨 BREAKING: Donald Trump has decided to withdraw the U.S. from UN-Habitat, UN Women, and 66 other organizations funded by American taxpayers.
He says the UN promotes invasions instead of stopping them, and America will no longer fund its own harm.
Do you support Donald Trump on this decision ?
A. Yes
B. No
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@insidemanifest YES, I CLAIM IT, IN THE MIGHTY NAME OF JESUS CHRIST!!!
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Sidney T Brown Jr retweetledi
Sidney T Brown Jr retweetledi

In 1938, Lloyd Gaines filed a lawsuit after being denied admission to the University of Missouri Law School in 1935 because he was black.
The Court ruled in his favor & required Missouri to admit him or set up a black law school.
He disappeared 3 months later never to be found.
—Lloyd Lionel Gaines was born to the Gaines family in northern Mississippi in 1911. One of eleven children, seven of whom survived illness and accident, he moved with his widowed mother and siblings to St. Louis after the premature death of their father. They found a better, although not easy, life for themselves in Missouri. Gaines excelled in his studies graduating as valedictorian in 1931 from Vashon High School. At Lincoln University in Jefferson City, he graduated with honors and was President of the senior class, while participating in many extra-curricular activities and working to pay for his schooling.
Despite his outstanding scholastic record, the University of Missouri School of Law denied Gaines admittance in 1936 solely on the grounds that Missouri's Constitution called for "separate education of the races." By state law, Missouri would have been required to pay for Gaines to attend the Universities in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska, but Gaines was determined to fight for the right to attend law school in his own state university. He sought legal assistance from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which had been working systematically to overturn the ignominious precedent of "separate but equal" established in Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. Together, they challenged the University of Missouri's admissions policies. In 1938, Gaines won his case before the United States Supreme Court in State of Missouri ex rel Gaines v. Canada, paving the way for a series of cases that would lead to Brown v. Board of Education's outlawing segregation in public education. In March 1939, only three months after his Supreme Court victory, Lloyd Gaines was last seen in Chicago. He disappeared at age 28 with his promise of attending law school in Missouri unfilfilled. Lloyd Gaines was never to be seen or heard from again

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🚨 BREAKING: Secretary of State Marco Rubio is expected to PERMANENTLY CUT OFF U.S. aid to Somalia after the country demolished a warehouse holding 76 TONS of American food, per Daily Wire.
GOOD. Cut off the gravy train.
Rubio said it perfectly. Foreign aid is NOT charity. It is U.S. TAXPAYER MONEY and it must serve the AMERICAN national interest.
Caring about human rights and humanitarian need does not mean writing blank checks to governments that disrespect American generosity and destroy aid meant for starving people.
America comes first. Every dollar must advance OUR foreign policy, OUR security, and OUR interests.
No more endless aid. No more waste. No more disrespect.
Do you firmly support Marco Rubio on this?
A. Huge Yes
B. No
IF Yes, Give me a THUMBS-UP👍!!
MAKE THIS GO VIRAL ON 𝕏. LET’S GO 👏
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Sidney T Brown Jr retweetledi
Sidney T Brown Jr retweetledi

Gov. Andy Beshear has ordered that flags at all state office buildings be lowered to half-staff from sunrise to sunset on Saturday, March 7, in honor of trailblazing civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, who died Feb. 17 at the age of 84.
Read more: tinyurl.com/jj48hwp3

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Sidney T Brown Jr retweetledi

🚨BREAKING: ICE agents shot and killed ANOTHER U.S. citizen… and didn’t disclose the shooting for nearly a year.
The shooting happened March 15, 2025, around 12:40 a.m. on South Padre Island.
According to ICE’s own internal report, Homeland Security Investigations agents were “assisting” local police with traffic control after a crash.
That’s the first red flag.
HSI is a federal investigative arm, they’re not local traffic cops. They were operating under a Border Enforcement Security Task Force umbrella, at night, in a chaotic accident scene… and somehow, that turns into a federal agent firing multiple rounds through a driver’s side window.
Their version?
A blue Ford approaches the controlled area. The driver, 23-year-old Ruben Ray Martinez, “fails to follow instructions.” That leads to agents surround the vehicle, ordering him out, and he accelerates. An agent ends up on the hood, and a supervisor fires multiple shots into the vehicle.
And just like that… another U.S. citizen is dead.
But, let’s break that down…
Agents surrounded the vehicle.
Why?
If this was traffic control, why escalate to ordering him out of his vehicle? Why was deadly force even on the table over a traffic redirection?
Second red flag… the language.
“Failed to follow instructions.”
“Attempted to continue.”
“Accelerated forward.”
We’ve heard this script before with every other DHS shooting.
“Didn’t comply.”
“Boxed in.”
“Officer felt threatened.”
“Vehicle moved.”
Over and over again, DHS frames fleeing, or non-compliant movement, as justification for lethal force.
And here’s the part that should set off all the red flags…
The agent who was allegedly struck?
Was treated for a knee injury, and released.
The U.S. citizen?
Shot multiple times through the window, and died.
So, we’re expected to believe that a vehicle impact, severe enough to justify lethal force, resulted in a minor knee injury… but required unloading rounds into a driver at point-blank range?
Then we have even more red flags…
The FBI isn’t investigating the incident, the local police say they didn’t fire, and the Texas Rangers are “reviewing” it…
And DHS sat on the fact that a federal agent killed a U.S. citizen for nearly a year.
And BOTH men in the vehicle were U.S. citizens.
So, this wasn’t a cartel shootout or a cross-border gun battle, it wasn’t an armed fugitive situation.
It was traffic control at the scene of an accident on South Padre Island.
And if you’ve been paying attention to DHS shootings over the past year, the pattern is impossible to ignore.
Agents escalate first. They SURROUND vehicles, boxing them in, and then issue rapid commands in high-stress situations. The driver then moves, sometimes trying to leave, sometimes confused, sometimes panicked.
Then comes the justification: “He failed to comply.” “We were threatened.” “We were struck.” “We feared for our lives.”
We heard the same language in Renee Good’s case. We heard it in Chicago, in LA…
We keep hearing it whenever ICE or Border Patrol are involved in a shooting.
Movement becomes intent. Noncompliance becomes a deadly threat. Fleeing becomes grounds for lethal force.
Deadly force is supposed to be a last resort, reserved for imminent threats of serious bodily harm. So, why was firing multiple rounds into a driver, the solution during traffic control? Why was the vehicle surrounded in the first place? Why escalate redirection into a confrontation that left someone dead?
And why did it take nearly a year for the public to even know a federal agent killed a U.S. citizen?
If agents can escalate routine encounters into fatal shootings, and rely on the same recycled justifications every time, nothing changes. And if nothing changes, more U.S. citizens will die the same way… surrounded, labeled “noncompliant,” and killed.
Until there are real consequences, there is no reason to believe this will stop.

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