Rapper Trevor Ferguson (Trevor Gerard) was in for a little reality shock when a judge granted a restraining order against the Black Lives Matter activist who harassed Los Angeles Police Commissioner President Matt Johnson at his home and office.
Ironically enough, Johnson was singled out by the BLM protestors for being black. The protestors called him a “houseboy” which is a derogatory term for a black person who is subservient to white people in some way.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Carol Boas Goodson said when granting the order that “any parent would be concerned” after hearing that Ferguson mentioned Johnson’s son at a Police Commission meeting and subsequently visited Johnson’s home
Ferguson, 35, a rap artist and music producer who uses the name Trevor Gerard, who is also African American, is said to have mouthed threats at Police Commission meetings, including that he would beat up Johnson and that he would kill Johnson.
Via LA Times:
“The right to protest has led to tremendous gains for people who look like myself and Mr. Ferguson,” Johnson said. “It’s something I deeply respect. But there is a line, and for me, that line is when you threaten the safety of my family. Like any father, I’m not going to apologize for taking steps to protect the safety of my family.”
According to Ferguson’s attorney, Nana Gyamfi, Johnson’s fear of Ferguson is based on race, even though both men are of the same race. “Matt Johnson showed that he actually is a houseboy,” she told reporters after the hearing. “It’s ridiculous that he used a method and procedure people use to protect themselves from actual violence … to protect himself from embarrassment.” After the hearing, Ferguson said, “Great is Allah,” in response to questions.
The level of ridiculousness that these antics by the BLM movement have risen to is bordering on the insane. I understand that there is or at least was a point when minorities in this country suffered incredible reprehensible injustices. Good hearted people the world over have wept with guilt and shame that one race would ever consider it socially acceptable to rule over another.
My fear is that the formerly injured parties will decide to not only take back their dignity but punish the race that inflicted this pain on their ancestors. The generations who did not receive the injustices or were involved in inflicting the pain will have a tendency to lose sight of the mission of the Civil Rights movement.
If the BLM movement loses sight of their true mission of equality and goes overboard, the same spirit that caused them pain in the past might try to rear it’s ugly head again. The problem with crying wolf is that the wolf might just be waiting till people stop responding when you yell.
(Source: Red State Watcher)