Birds gotta fly, fish gotta swim, and Nazis gotta nazi.
You may remember Cameron “C-Grimey” Williams from his book-burning tour.
A former Chattanooga Public Library (CPL) employee, Cameron “C-Grimey” Williams, was fired after removing weeded library books by conservative authors in early December 2020. A video of the books being burned was posted on Williams’s Instagram account shortly after they were removed from the library, though the post has since been taken down. Williams stated that his supervisor told him that he could take the books in question, and that he was never informed of library policy to the contrary. However, a hearing on February 5 determined that Williams “violated City and Library policies by improperly removing items from the Library’s collections.”
The media, as usual, went into full cheerleading and cover-up mode for Grimey. Meanwhile, conservatives who merely tore down BLM signs were immediately fired from their jobs after being doxxed by the media.
But these days there’s apparently a bigger burning question for Grimey.
A Chattanooga activist and city council candidate admitted in a Facebook live post Friday morning that she removed and burned a Hamilton County flag from in front of the Hamilton County Jail Thursday night.
Marie Mott belongs to the group “I Can’t Breath CHA.” The group posted video of Mott removing the flag from the jail and burning it at Miller Park as a story on its Instagram page late Thursday night.
The video shows another activist, Cameron Williams, pouring an accelerant on the flag to make it ignite.
She also said it was in response to the announcement on Thursday from Chattanooga Police Chief David Roddy that Chattanooga Police officers would not be handing out citations for violations of Hamilton County’s new mask mandate, which went into effect on Friday.
Mott said it was hypocritical for “white people in church” to be allowed to wear masks with no consequences during the mandate while her fellow activists had been arrested and charged while protesting police brutality and calling for justice and reform at the CPD and the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office.
These fiery, but peaceful protests were only missing some torches.
HCSO’s investigator Brevin Cameron testified about the flag burning incident from a few months later. He played surveillance footage from Miller Park, which showed Marie Mott holding the flag before putting it on the ground. Others poured accelerant on the flag and then lit it on fire. Video showed Ms. Mott and Williams pouring a liquid accelerant on the flag after it was burning.
“It was not their property. They can burn their own property,” investigator Cameron said, noting that burning the flag would not have been an issue if it had been Ms. Mott’s or Williams’ own flag.
You’re not gonna sell lefties on the moral authority of private property. Either something must be burned or may not be burned. Ideology matters, property rights don’t.
Leave a Reply