Walton And Johnson

Walton And Johnson

The legacy of the Walton & Johnson show continues after 4 decades as Steve Johnson hosts with longtime producer Kenny Webster. The show is a mix of...Full Bio

 

Portland now has an Antifa summer camp for kids

Here's a rare example of kids who would clearly be better off living in a foster care facility.

A Portland Antifa group called "Budding Roses" will be hosting an "Antifascist" social justice summer camp beginning July 25, where kids ages 10 to 14 will be participating in activities that include learning about police abolition, how to donate to bail funds, and what to do if they come in contact with tear gas during protests.
The City of Portland awarded Budding Roses with a Spirit of Portland Award and selected the left-wing extremist group as Nonprofit Initiative of the Year in 2018, according to their website.
The young campers will be learning curriculum from a book titled Tear Gas for Portlanders, which emphasizes the importance of "mutual aid" and teaches campers how to donate to bail funds if their comrades get arrested by police. They will also be taught how to proceed if police deploy crowd control munitions, such as tear gas.
The kids that are as young as 10 will also be able to reflect on "white supremacy" by watching an animated video called "Understanding White Supremacy (And How to Defeat It)." The video shows "colonizers" shooting cannonballs from a ship at BIPOC kids standing on a beach, Libs of TikTok reports.
In addition, Budding Roses will be teaching the young campers anti-police and government chants that they can use during demonstrations, according to Daily Citizen.
According to their website, "Budding Roses was founded as a project of Black Rose/Rosa Negra Anarchist Foundation, inspired by global examples of mutual aid and popular education projects like the Paideia Free School in Spain and the Black Panther's Free Breakfast Programs, and Paolo Friere's Pedagogy of the Oppressed."
The goal of the anarchist social justice summer camp is to cultivate "free, safe, and empowering spaces for youth to learn, express themselves, and engage critically with the social justice issues that impact them."

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