BLM activists troll 9/11 remembrances with #AllBuildingsMatter, call 9/11 a 'white' tragedy

On the 19th anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks, Black Lives Matter activists taunt grieving Americans with #AllBuildingsMatter mockery and call 9/11 an exclusive "white tragedy" for "racists."

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On the 19th anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks, Black Lives Matter activists taunt grieving Americans with #AllBuildingsMatter mockery and call 9/11 an exclusive "white tragedy" for "racists."

Twitter describes the trend with over 130,000 tweets in the United States as "as a point of comparison for the ‘all lives matter’ crowd."

Social justice crusaders decided to link the tragic day when 2,977 lives were lost at the hands of radical Islamists "to the numerous deaths of Black men and women at the hands of police."

"To drive the point home, saying 'all lives matter' when another Black person is killed by police feels akin to saying 'all building matter' in response to the destruction of the World Trade Center," Twitter admins wrote for the hashtag's abstract.

Bishop Talbert Swan, NAACP president of Greater Springfield, Massachusetts, criticized those seeking unity on 9/11.

"So, we should be united in opposing Muslim terrorists killing white people, but not against white cops and white supremacist terrorists killing Black people?" Swan tweeted.

The New York Times op-ed columnist Paul Krugman attested that "Americans took 9/11 pretty calmly" and it's "hard to remember now how large the terrorist attack loomed in our national psyche." The number of COVID-19 related casualties are "already the equivalent of 60 9/11s," the economist cited.

TV personality Swaggy C hypothesized that if someone tweeted #AllBuildingsMatter on 9/11, they would be ridiculed and labeled "insensitive, disrespectful, and an a**hole."

"I hope every single one of you remember that the next time you tweet #AllLivesMatter when a black man is killed unjustly," the game show contestant stated. "ITS STUPID AND DISRESPECTFUL TO US."

One user's tweet has been recirculated every 9/11 since 2015, claiming that white people laugh off slavery but are outraged over crude cracks at the commemorative day.

Another purported that the public pushes for African Americans to "get over slavery" that was abolished a century-and-a-half ago but to "never forget" the massacre that occurred just two decades prior.

"September 11th is an awful day because it’s the day all the sh*theads like to use a tragedy that happened 19 years ago to justify the other tragedies that have been perpetrated by our government and toxic white dudes ever since," posted a toxic white dude who runs an anti-police account.

A Mexican immigrant downplayed the "nearly 20yr old national tragedy" as a "jump off point for pretty overt xenophobia and racism."

"Just say you only like white Christian people from northern and Western Europe and go," she declared.

In response to conservative YouTuber Paul Joseph Watson who clapped back at "BLM's latest genius optics move," a Twitter user argued that more victims die from the flu each year, failing to acknowledge the incalculable fatalities that have spawned since Sept. 11, 2001.

"Is it the worst because a lot of white people died? He doesn't even try to hide his racism," the Twitter user wrote.

11 unborn children are acknowledged among the nearly 3,000 names inscribed in bronze around the footprints of the Twin Towers.

Survivors inhaled the layer of dust and debris that coated Manhattan and stained New York City's cloudy air, composed of carcinogens and fatal chemical such as fiberglass, mercury, and benzene. The Natural Resources Defense Council estimates that 300 to 400 tons of asbestos fibers were used to construct the World Trade Center.

In 2002, Dr. David Prezant, a pulmonary disease specialist of the New York City Fire Department, coined the term "World Trade Center cough" after first responders developed chronic respiratory illnesses.

The federal government established the Victim Compensation Fund for all those who suffered in the aftermath. A decade later, Congress reactivated the fund through the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act—the namesake of a New York Police Department officer who died of respiratory disease. 50 different types of cancer have since been to the list of diseases eligible for retribution.

In the Department of Justice's 2001 investigative crime report, the Federal Bureau of Investigation did not even include data associated with the events on that fateful fall day.

"The number of deaths is so great that combining it with the traditional crime statistics will have an outlier effect that falsely skews all types of measurements in the Program’s analyses," federal officials wrote.

A self-described marxist and communications director for United Left asserted that 9/11 is used as "anti-Muslim propaganda."

"It’s pushed as the biggest tragedy in the world when literally just from VIOLENT deaths in IRAQ alone we have have to have 95 more 9/11 to even be close to casualties," she told her 24,000 Twitter followers.

The September 11th attacks are cited as the deadliest terrorist act in world history and the most devastating foreign attack on United States soil since Pearl Harbor in 1941. A majority of non-state terrorist strikes with over 50 individuals killed point to Islamic extremism as the motive.

Coupled with #AllBuildingsMatter and #NeverForget in a post that highlighted race-related massacres of the early 20th century, Context Media's editor-in-chief Torraine Walker listed the Atlanta Riot of 1906 that killed dozens of black Georgians, the East Saint Louis Riot of 1917 that murdered 40 black and eight white civilians, Tulsa's Black Wall Street of 1921 that left hundreds of black residents dead, and Rosewood of 1923 that rang a death toll of at least six black and two white citizens.

A BLM page asked: "How often do you remember any other tragedy?" Then he questioned if a "remember the [H]olocaust day" exists, which it does—International Holocaust Remembrance Day is even advocated by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the #WeRemember hashtag.

Then the black man prompted for a day to remember when Belgian king Leopold II killed 10 million Africans in 1885 during European colonial times.

"White people have done more harm to people of color in this world so stfu about a day that has nothing to do with you," he wrote to another black Twitter user.

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