In a shocking decision yesterday, Obama appointed U. S. District Judge Brian Jackson ruled that Black Lives Matter enjoys the sames protections as the civil rights movement or the Tea Party, and as such, cannot be sued. despite their violent tactics, the group will not incur any liability for the damage they cause. The ruling was handed down in a lawsuit that alleged DeRay Mckesson and BLM unlawfully injured a police officer in Baton Rouge during a “protest” last year.

Mckesson is a Baltimore man and former Minnesota school teacher turned full time activist. He travels the county stirring up racial hate and tension. He was in Baton Rouge leading a riot over the fatal shooting of a criminal by two officers. Because the person was black and the officers white, leftists used the incident to generate and justify violence.

An anonymous police officer filed the suit after a “protester” hurled a rock at his face at the supposed instigation of Mckesson. He and about 100 others were arrested during the staged event, but later the city chose not to charge them.

Judge Jackson said that BLM is a social movement that cannot be sued. However, if that’s the case, how did the former president meet with its “leader” and specifically Mckesson? This ruling seems very politically motivated.

Jackson was appointed by Obama. Obama met with the rioting thugs at the White House, thus lending credence to their militant tactics and irrational anger. research shows that the so-called police brutality against blacks is a myth.

Previously there was a petition to label BLM a domestic terrorist organization sent to the White House. Although it received over 140,000 signatures, the president couldn’t deliver the designation.

These BLM “protesters” take to the streets without real information. It doesn’t matter if a person is the lowest, low-life who ever lived, if he or she was black and killed by a police officer, according to BLM, that gives all black people the right to beat others, steal, and basically run amok.

The violence in Baton Rouge started when police were called out to a convenience store to investigate a man with a gun. Arthur Reed captured part of the altercation that ended the life of Alton Sterling, and the footage triggered activists all over the country. Riots and death followed.

Reed’s video doesn’t show the events leading up to the fatal shooting, but another video does demonstrate that Sterling resisted arrest. The same attorney who filed this case against Black Lives Matter, Donna Grodner, also filed one on behalf of another officer who was wounded in the aftermath of the riots.

When an Islamist marine decided to take matters into his own hands and gunned down three Baton Rouge police officers, other were injured. He apparently hunted them and staked out the store where Sterling was killed. The murderer Gavin Long was one of the unfortunates who believed the lie about police brutality. Basically, if someone doesn’t resist arrest or try to pull their gun, the police don’t have to apply deadly force in an arrest.

Long murdered Montrell Jackson, Matthew Gerald and Brad Garafola and injured three others before he was killed by return fire. Grodner’s suit against BLM and Mckesson received a blow with this first ruling, which threw out all claims.

Although she argued that BLM has members and meetings, and that they solicit money and have national chapters, Judge Jackson said that BLM was not an “unincorporated association” like the lawsuit claimed.

“Although many entities have utilized the phrase ‘black lives matter’ in their titles or business designations, ‘Black Lives Matter’ itself is not an entity of any sort,” Jackson wrote in the 24-page decision.

He said that Mckesson “solely engaged in protected speech” and as such, couldn’t be responsible for the violence that occurred. Basically, the ruling ensures that the BLM group will be able to cause all sorts of damage without incurring legal responsibility. Hopefully, Gordner will appeal and bring the matter before real judges who will interpret the actions of violent agitators as they should be.