Crime Champagne Socialist Cheers on Rioters... Until They Come to HIS Neighborhood

Hollywood Jack

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Veteran NBA reporter Chris Palmer was called out on Twitter for a pair of tweets he sent within the span of a few days.

Palmer was offering his thoughts on the protests across the United States in the wake of George Floyd's death. On Thursday night, Palmer quote-tweeted a photo of a burning building with the caption, "Burn that s— down. Burn it all down." But shortly after midnight on Sunday, Palmer had a change of tone once protesters showed up closer to where he lived.

The apparent hypocrisy was not lost on Twitter.

Oops pic.twitter.com/cUAYD5BIYj

— Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) May 31, 2020

The photo of a burning building was, according to the Star Tribune, an affordable housing development under construction. The complex had 189 units and was expected to open later this year.


Palmer did delete the first tweet where he said to "burn that s— down," but his tweets since have defended his stance from the second tweet. When one Twitter user called him out the opposing language in his two tweets, he responded in part, "don't talk to me about what you don't know."

I took rubber bullets and tear gas yesterday standing on the front lines. I risked my life trying to get pictures and video. Don't talk to me about what you don't know about little girl. https://t.co/Giwae59OB7

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
In another response, he willingly admitted that he's free to change his stance.

You better damn well believe I can.

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
Palmer, who worked at ESPN for 14 years and Bleacher Report for two years, offered some additional thoughts on the situation. He tweeted, "Tear up your own s—. Don't come to where we live at and tear our neighborhood up. We care about our community. If you don't care about yours I don't give a s—."

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba...rge-floyd-protests/1eefhr1gpdx791oxlllizoun9i



The self-serving hypocrisy of the chattering class never ceases to amaze or amuse me!

{<jordan}
 
I don't know who this person is, and I'm only judging him from what I'm being told he said in the OP. But I have to wonder how anybody could have such a deficit of empathy that they cannot feel the terrible outcome of rioting until it's happening at their house? Was he under the impression that all the property being damaged belonged to bad-guy police officers and other villains? Certainly he understood that good people were losing their livelihood.
 
Minneapolis-riot.jpg


Veteran NBA reporter Chris Palmer was called out on Twitter for a pair of tweets he sent within the span of a few days.

Palmer was offering his thoughts on the protests across the United States in the wake of George Floyd's death. On Thursday night, Palmer quote-tweeted a photo of a burning building with the caption, "Burn that s— down. Burn it all down." But shortly after midnight on Sunday, Palmer had a change of tone once protesters showed up closer to where he lived.

The apparent hypocrisy was not lost on Twitter.

Oops pic.twitter.com/cUAYD5BIYj

— Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) May 31, 2020

The photo of a burning building was, according to the Star Tribune, an affordable housing development under construction. The complex had 189 units and was expected to open later this year.


Palmer did delete the first tweet where he said to "burn that s— down," but his tweets since have defended his stance from the second tweet. When one Twitter user called him out the opposing language in his two tweets, he responded in part, "don't talk to me about what you don't know."

I took rubber bullets and tear gas yesterday standing on the front lines. I risked my life trying to get pictures and video. Don't talk to me about what you don't know about little girl. https://t.co/Giwae59OB7

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
In another response, he willingly admitted that he's free to change his stance.

You better damn well believe I can.

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
Palmer, who worked at ESPN for 14 years and Bleacher Report for two years, offered some additional thoughts on the situation. He tweeted, "Tear up your own s—. Don't come to where we live at and tear our neighborhood up. We care about our community. If you don't care about yours I don't give a s—."

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba...rge-floyd-protests/1eefhr1gpdx791oxlllizoun9i



The self-serving hypocrisy of the chattering class never ceases to amaze or amuse me!

{<jordan}


You should have just told us that he worked for Bleacher Report in your very first sentence.
Instead you made us wait for it.
 
Tim “Center-left” Pool?

cmon Jackie
He wasn't the main source, just a companion video for people to watch. The tweets are real, his mentality is real. I don't like Tim Pool either, but it is what it is.

Edit: Just realized I have exactly 69 likes right now... nice...
 
Minneapolis-riot.jpg


Veteran NBA reporter Chris Palmer was called out on Twitter for a pair of tweets he sent within the span of a few days.

Palmer was offering his thoughts on the protests across the United States in the wake of George Floyd's death. On Thursday night, Palmer quote-tweeted a photo of a burning building with the caption, "Burn that s— down. Burn it all down." But shortly after midnight on Sunday, Palmer had a change of tone once protesters showed up closer to where he lived.

The apparent hypocrisy was not lost on Twitter.

Oops pic.twitter.com/cUAYD5BIYj

— Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) May 31, 2020

The photo of a burning building was, according to the Star Tribune, an affordable housing development under construction. The complex had 189 units and was expected to open later this year.


Palmer did delete the first tweet where he said to "burn that s— down," but his tweets since have defended his stance from the second tweet. When one Twitter user called him out the opposing language in his two tweets, he responded in part, "don't talk to me about what you don't know."

I took rubber bullets and tear gas yesterday standing on the front lines. I risked my life trying to get pictures and video. Don't talk to me about what you don't know about little girl. https://t.co/Giwae59OB7

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
In another response, he willingly admitted that he's free to change his stance.

You better damn well believe I can.

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
Palmer, who worked at ESPN for 14 years and Bleacher Report for two years, offered some additional thoughts on the situation. He tweeted, "Tear up your own s—. Don't come to where we live at and tear our neighborhood up. We care about our community. If you don't care about yours I don't give a s—."

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba...rge-floyd-protests/1eefhr1gpdx791oxlllizoun9i



The self-serving hypocrisy of the chattering class never ceases to amaze or amuse me!

{<jordan}


On this episode of "When keeping it real goes wrong."
 
I don't know who this person is, and I'm only judging him from what I'm being told he said in the OP. But I have to wonder how anybody could have such a deficit of empathy that they cannot feel the terrible outcome of rioting until it's happening at their house? Was he under the impression that all the property being damaged belonged to bad-guy police officers and other villains? Certainly he understood that good people were losing their livelihood.
Like.

Unfortunately a lot of narcissistic people work in the media and help fuel this type of narcissism and self-serving hypocrisy and empty virtue signaling. Sad!
 
That sums up a lot of people who are cheering on the violence. They fine widdit as long as it's black owned businesses in another neighborhood far from their own. Classic leftist "unintended consequences". I love that their seemingly unlimited hypocrisy is being exposed though.
 
He wasn't the main source, just a companion video for people to watch. The tweets are real, his mentality is real. I don't like Tim Pool either, but it is what it is.

Edit: Just realized I have exactly 69 likes right now... nice...
Oh I don’t doubt the story at all. The guy sound like a typical milquetoast liberal just funny Tim Pool vid to really rile up the alt right loons

Problem is leftists criticizing and purity testing themselves.

Why don’t right wingers cover or post videos/yt vids criticizing the white nationalists joining the looting, national guard shooting people outside their homes, police running citizens over, or the hypocrisy of mask ordinance protestors too cowardly to join the anti-police state protestors?

Because it shows weakness and also just distracts from the message
 
Minneapolis-riot.jpg


Veteran NBA reporter Chris Palmer was called out on Twitter for a pair of tweets he sent within the span of a few days.

Palmer was offering his thoughts on the protests across the United States in the wake of George Floyd's death. On Thursday night, Palmer quote-tweeted a photo of a burning building with the caption, "Burn that s— down. Burn it all down." But shortly after midnight on Sunday, Palmer had a change of tone once protesters showed up closer to where he lived.

The apparent hypocrisy was not lost on Twitter.

Oops pic.twitter.com/cUAYD5BIYj

— Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) May 31, 2020

The photo of a burning building was, according to the Star Tribune, an affordable housing development under construction. The complex had 189 units and was expected to open later this year.


Palmer did delete the first tweet where he said to "burn that s— down," but his tweets since have defended his stance from the second tweet. When one Twitter user called him out the opposing language in his two tweets, he responded in part, "don't talk to me about what you don't know."

I took rubber bullets and tear gas yesterday standing on the front lines. I risked my life trying to get pictures and video. Don't talk to me about what you don't know about little girl. https://t.co/Giwae59OB7

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
In another response, he willingly admitted that he's free to change his stance.

You better damn well believe I can.

— Chris Martin Palmer (@ChrisPalmerNBA) May 31, 2020
Palmer, who worked at ESPN for 14 years and Bleacher Report for two years, offered some additional thoughts on the situation. He tweeted, "Tear up your own s—. Don't come to where we live at and tear our neighborhood up. We care about our community. If you don't care about yours I don't give a s—."

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba...rge-floyd-protests/1eefhr1gpdx791oxlllizoun9i



The self-serving hypocrisy of the chattering class never ceases to amaze or amuse me!

{<jordan}


Typical leftist. As I always say, they have no values and they have no truth. Only narrative.
 
Is he alt-right now?

He's center-left imo.
Tim Pool is a literal Nazi. That fence-sitting, beanie fascist would make Richard Spencer blush.
@xcvbn was referring to his audience rather than Pool himself. If you look at the comments section of his videos from his fans, it skews heavily hard right. Whether you want to call it alt-right, alt-lite, far-right, hard right, etc. it is what it is. All Tim Pool does these days is shit on the left, he never makes videos from a left-wing perspective or criticizes Trump or anyone on the right. He's a grifter, just like Dave Rubin. I don't hate the guy and he has a point every now and then and I used to be a fan, but it's pretty obvious what he's doing. If you want an example of a real left-wing person who's willing to criticize the left and tells it like it is, look up Kyle Kulinski or Jimmy Dore.
 
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