The National Archives reports that in an effort to combat “whiteness,” the city of Boulder, Colorado, has brought in Syrian refugees like Ahmad Al-Issa since 2015.
Reports say liberal radicals are frustrated with the city’s “overly white” demographics, and the city council has sought to solve the “white” problem by bringing in Syrian Muslims.
Boulder, Colorado, was recently rocked by a massacre at a local supermarket that claimed the lives of 10 people. Police arrested the suspect, a Syrian named Ahmad Al Issa, who had a history of complaining about “racist whiteness” and cultural indifference.
For nearly a decade, liberal activists have focused on so-called “white” issues in Boulder and have sought to increase diversity in the county by bringing in Syrian immigrants.
In 2015, the Freedom Foundation in Boulder began emphasizing the importance of welcoming Syrian immigrants, congratulating “In 2016, we expect to welcome nearly 2,000 refugees to Colorado, and according to the Trends Report, approximately 419 refugees became permanent legal residents of Boulder between 2003 and 2013.”
Boulder’s then-Mayor Suzanne Jones noted, “We have a desire for inclusion and we are working hard to achieve it.” The Boulder City Council then went on to vote to allow more Syrian refugees to permanently reside in the city in a “Proclamation on the Inclusion of Refugees and Other Disenfranchised Populations.”
Even after the founder of Boulder’s largest Syrian refugee charity pleaded guilty in 2018 to felony charges of embezzling more than $130,000 from his organization, the city continued to push for racial change, expressing frustration at the city’s “crushing white majority population” in reports, and liberal activists expressing alarm at the relatively small percentage of foreign-born residents.
In 2019, residents participated in “anti-racism training” provided by anti-white “Black Lives Matter” radicals.
Recently, University of Colorado Boulder students were invited to participate in a workshop entitled “Tough Conversations: Decoding Whiteness (What It Means to Say the University of Colorado Boulder is “So White”),” which asked, “How can we engage the University of Colorado Boulder in these issues and how white people are represented in our classrooms, our departments and across campus? , our departments and across campus to address and combat white privilege and white supremacy?”
The man who murdered 10 people in a King Soopers supermarket in Boulder this week, Syrian-born Muslim Ahmad Al-Issa, often complained about white people and threatened to file false hate crime charges against those he didn’t like. All of his victims were white.
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