Charlottesville, Virginia Mayor Nikuyah Walker recently ran afoul of the Facebook community standards with a vulgar post where she compared the city that she represents to a violent “rape.”
The local CBS 19 news station referred to the post as “causing a stir” and they shared a screenshot where they blurred out the words that “some people may find offensive.”
In the post, Walker said, “Charlottesville: The beautiful-ugly it is. It rapes you, comforts you in its c– stained sheet and tells you to keep its secrets.”
Walker later shared a screenshot of the post removal with a word partially covered and accused someone of having “friends at FB.”
The photo showed that Facebook took the post down because it goes against their standards “on adult sexual exploitation” and the penalty, they said, was that she couldn’t go live or advertise for 30 days.
Walker then made another post where she again compared the city to a “rape” and this time invoked the signer of the Declaration of Independence and 3rd President Thomas Jefferson.
Jefferson is “still cleverly using his whip to whip the current inhabitants into submissiveness,” Walker claimed.
Monticello, the site of Jefferson’s primary home, overlooks the city nearby. Jefferson’s legacy is closely intertwined with the city.
Charlottesville was also the site of the 2017 deadly “Unite the Right” rally, which has been considered a “white supremacist” rally.
- Kayleigh McEnany Marvels At Donald Trump McDonald’s Campaign Stop, ‘The Best Retail Politics I Have Ever Seen’ - October 21, 2024
- Kayleigh McEnany Scorches ABC Anchors For Choosing to Be ‘Partisan Activists’ Rather Than Debate Moderators - September 11, 2024
- Tim Kaine Provides Cover For Joe Biden on the Border Crisis, Blames Lack of a ‘Robust Work Visa Program’ for ‘Some of the Chaos at the Border’ - March 27, 2024