November 11, 2024
“We had 75 people downstairs that watched that play and out of that 75, there were 50 or 60 of them that were afraid to leave this building," Brite said. "We had to escort them to their cars. No one in America should feel like that.”
Source: WXYZ.com
November 7, 2024
In the days following Donald Trump's re-election to the United States presidency, many people of color, particularly black men and women, college students and even as young as high school, began receiving text messages stating that they had been selected to "pick cutton (sic) at the nearest plantation."
As last as the week following, authorities are still unaware of the source of the text messages.
Source: NBC News
November 6, 2024
The day following Donald Trump's victory reclaiming the White House, placards went up at Texas State University proclaiming "Women are property" and "Types of property: Women, Slaves, Animals, Cars, Land, Etc."
Texas State University declined action on grounds that they are required by law to uphold all speech in accordance with the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, regardless of its capacity for offense.
Source: Newsweek
November 5, 2024
Originally appearing as early as 2014 on message board 4chan as part of a discussion on male circumcision, and later, vaccines; this was popularized by anti-Semite and white supremacist Nick Fuentes in the wake of the re-election of Donald Trump to the U.S. Presidency in November of 2024. In both a livestream posted to social media site Rumble as well as posted on X, formerly Twitter, Fuentes stated the following:
TFW you're totally not pressed. TFW we control your bodies. Hey bitch, we control your bodies. Guess what, guys win again, okay. Men win again, yes. We control your bodies. Hi! I'm your Republican Congressman. It's your body, my choice. And men win again. There will never ever be a female President. It's over. Glass ceiling? It's a ceiling made of f------ bricks."
Within 24 hours, women began receiving a flurry of harassment messages across social media using this phrase, as well as in-person by students as young as high school age, according to reports out of Pinckney, Michigan and others.
Sources/Further Reading: Know Your Meme, Vanity Fair