Assata Shakur killed agent Werner Foerster with two shots in the head

An American feminist movement praises a terrorist who murdered a policeman

The Women's March is a feminist coordinator of various organizations that organized last January the first major demonstration against President Donald Trump.

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Many media served as loudspeaker of that march, silencing a large demonstration summoned a few days later, a silencing in which even right-wing media and some media claiming to be Catholic collaborated. The feminist march has already been surrounded by controversy because one of its sponsor groups is linked to Hamas terrorists, who maintain an Islamist dictatorship in the Gaza Strip, where women are subjected to brutal discrimination. On the other hand, one of the promoters of the march, the leftist Muslim Linda Sarsour, had defended sharia (Islamic law). Only a few weeks ago Sarsour became the center of the controversy when she called the Jihad against Trump, and that in the midst of a wave of jihadist attacks in several countries.

A terrorist who killed a policeman with two shots on his head

When the echoes of these controversies lasted, last Sunday the official Twitter of the Women's March published the following message:

In it, the feminist organization congratulates its birthday and pays homage to Assata Shakur. On May 2, 1973, when she was part of the Black Liberation Army, a terrorist organization of Marxist ideology, Assata and two other members of that criminal gang were driving in a vehicle in East Brunswick when two agents of the New Jersey State Police ordered them Stop the car by a light broken and driving with speeding. Assata Shakur pulled out a pistol and fired at Agent James Harper, wounding him in the shoulder, after which he took cover behind the patrol car. A firing began in which one of the terrorists, Zayd Shakur, was killed, and another police officer, Werner Foerster, was wounded. Then, Assata took the police pistol and killed Agent Foerster twice in the head. A cold-blooded murder against a wounded and helpless man.

She found refuge in Cuba, where she became a propagandist of Castroism

Assata was later captured and sentenced to life imprisonment for murder. However, in 1979 three Black Liberation Army armed terrorists helped her escape from a New Jersey women's correctional facility, taking two guards hostage. In 1984 she fled to Cuba, where Fidel Castro's communist dictatorship granted her asylum and even granted her a pension to live on the island. From there she has been working as a propagandist of that dictatorship on Radio Habana Cuba. In 2013 Assata Shakur became the first woman on the list of the most wanted terrorists by the FBI, offering for its capture a reward of 2 million dollars.

Sponsors of Women's March are silent in the face of scandal

At the height of impudence, the Women's March website criticizes "police brutality" in an epigraph dedicated to rejecting violence. On the murder of policemen, the organization says nothing. The political leanings of this feminist movement are well visible in its page of sponsors. Major sponsors are the abortion lobby Planned Parenthood - which made millionaire donations to Hillary Clinton's campaign and has been linked to scandals of illegal sale of aborted baby organs and concealment of child rape - and environmental group NRDC. Other sponsors include another influential abortion lobby, NARAL Pro-Choice, various Democratic Party-affiliated organizations, the US Communist Party and NGOs such as OXFAM. So far, none of these groups has said anything about the controversial message of the feminist movement praising Assata Shakur. As for the politicians who support this movement, three Democratic Party senators who support the Women's March have refused to comment on this clear case of apology for terrorism. Curious concept of democracy that some have.

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(Photo credit: Ruth Fremson / The New York Times)

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