• Re: Fat Fani Willis cloaks herself in God and race to say she's above c

    From Squeal Miss Piggy@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 17 00:01:41 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.adultery, atl.general
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 20 May 2023, benshapiro <nowomr@protonmail.com> posted some news:u4agnj$12r56$4@dont-email.me:



    It’s unfortunately commonplace to see the most powerful people in our government wear the cloak of unaccountability around their shoulders to
    ward off justifiable criticisms.

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis wore this cloak with bravado
    Sunday at Atlanta’s historic black Big Bethel AME Church.

    After accusations against her of impropriety and an affair with the
    married special prosecutor she hired to oversee President Donald Trump’s
    RICO case, Nathan Wade, circulated for a week, Willis spoke for the first
    time, giving a 35-minute sermon to the predominantly black congregation.

    “They only attacked one,” Willis lamented. “First thing they say, ‘Oh,
    she’s gonna play the race card now.’ But no God, isn’t it them that’s
    playing the race card when they only question one?

    “Why are they so surprised that a diverse team that I assembled, your
    child, can accomplish extraordinary things?”

    The affairs accusation came through a court filing made by Trump 2020
    campaign official and co-defendant Michael Roman, who argues that Willis
    should be disqualified from the case and the charges against Roman dropped because “the district attorney chose to appoint her romantic partner, who
    at all times relevant to this prosecution has been a married man.”

    Roman says Wade used the nearly $654,000 in legal fees the Fulton County
    DA’s office paid for his work on the Trump case to take Willis on
    expensive trips to “Napa Valley, California, Florida and the Caribbean.”

    Willis claimed in her sermon that she paid all three of her special
    prosecutors “the same hourly rate.”

    But Monday, court records came out showing she paid John Floyd, the
    state’s top RICO expert, $100 an hour less than Wade, who has no
    experience in RICO law.

    Willis complains about being singled out with constant scrutiny and
    reflexively blames her sex and race as the primary reasons for it without considering the most obvious: She’s prosecuting a former president.

    Outside Fulton County, no one cared to know who she was until she embarked
    on an unprecedented case.

    I don’t doubt she’s received death threats and messages filled with racial epithets and her safety was put at risk, which is abhorrent.

    Yet Willis refuses to delineate among fair critique, politically motivated actions and racially charged attacks because wearing her identity as a
    cloak takes less effort than taking accountability for her faults.

    What’s really unforgivable is she wore the cloak in the house of God while delivering a political sermon at a pulpit.

    Draped in black victimhood, she bemoaned how tough her job is as a black
    female and conjured up her Republican adversary Marjorie Taylor Greene, implying she doesn’t know what it’s like to be constantly harassed — even though MTG has been “swatted” and subject to other attacks.

    Willis used her status and race to stand in front of a congregation of Christians as an elected official to garner political sympathy — and
    worse, church leaders applauded her political rhetoric in God’s house.

    They nodded their heads in agreement and murmured with pleasure as she
    used the pulpit for self-promotion.

    The imagery of Willis figuratively pounding her chest and bragging about Atlanta’s crime rate percentages in comparison with those of other cities
    in America in front of a church congregation makes me sick to my stomach
    as a Christian.

    Her performance was another example of what is wrong with America’s
    churches, especially black churches, as they’re always trying to serve two masters when there is only one.

    They’re too often run by charlatans who care more about currying favor
    with influential figures than influencing others to follow God’s word.

    Atlanta’s church leaders stood by as Willis gave a campaign speech mixed
    with the invocation of God and embraced her after she finished poisoning
    His house with political rhetoric.

    The cloak might work on flawed men, but God sees right through it.

    Adam B. Coleman is the author of “Black Victim to Black Victor” and
    founder of Wrong Speak Publishing. Follow him on Substack: adambcoleman.substack.com.

    https://nypost.com/2024/01/15/opinion/fani-willis-cloaks-herself-in-god- and-race-to-say-shes-above-criticism/

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