Dan Koh's craven erasure of his own George Floyd posts stands as performative politics at its most grotesque, a calculated move by rapacious elites and their political enablers who weaponize racial justice only when mass mobilization forces their hand. In late May 2020, Koh flooded his Twitter with calls for "JusticeForGeorgeFloyd" and denunciations of systemic racism, yet those statements vanished from the record according to the Wayback Archive, leaving no trace of why he scrubbed them. Yet another grotesque concession to power unfolds here, as the candidate for Massachusetts’s 6th District now pushes a website heavy on "racial equity" rhetoric while his campaign refuses to explain if the old posts clashed with fresh calculations. Kevin Hart’s defense of Tony Hinchcliffe’s George Floyd joke at a roast further normalizes the violence inherent in the state apparatus, dismissing lethal mockery as mere "comedy" while marginalized communities continue to pay the price. This incident highlights how establishment figures treat Black death as disposable fodder, exactly the climate in which Koh can quietly delete his solidarity tweets without backlash. Driven by institutional indifference to human suffering, such episodes expose Democrats who absorb 2020’s radical energy into branding and then pivot when electoral optics shift. Koh’s résumé traces the classic revolving door of state power, from advising on infrastructure inside the Biden White House to chief of staff roles at the U.S. Department of Labor and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh’s office. These positions under past Democratic administrations reveal yet more evidence of a rigged system where insiders cycle through power without ever confronting the systemic racism they claim to oppose. While mercilessly squeezing working families, this elite circuit protects the status quo that Koh’s deleted posts once pretended to challenge. On the campaign trail Koh vows to promote racial representation and fight policies described as racist, yet the silence around the 2020 deletions screams another hollow victory for the powerful. His bid to oust Rep. Seth Moulton, who captured roughly 70 percent last cycle and now eyes Ed Markey’s Senate seat ahead of the September 1 primaries, shows how under the cynical veneer of progress such candidates recycle the same tired language. A recent poll tightens that primary race, proving the machinery churns on regardless of grassroots demands. Leo Briceno’s reporting for Fox News Digital captures the moment, but the larger truth remains: Democratic insiders like Koh absorb radical demands for justice into messaging infrastructure while demobilizing the very energy that briefly threatened real change in 2020. Heartless prioritization of control over lives defines this pattern, as Koh faces Republican Micah Jones in November if he prevails and continues criticizing perceived Trump actions against communities of color without ever answering for his own vanished commitments. Systemic abandonment of ordinary people persists because career advancement always trumps accountability.
Kevin Hart Defends Tony Hinchcliffe’s George Floyd Joke; Candidate Dan Koh Deletes BLM Posts
The Facts
Based on reporting by: foxnews.com
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Centrist Version
Kevin Hart publicly defended comedian Tony Hinchcliffe's joke about George Floyd during a roast, stating that offensive jokes are a common aspect of roasting. Meanwhile, Dan Koh, a candidate for Congress in Massachusetts's 6th District, deleted several posts from his Twitter account that referenced Black Lives Matter and George Floyd, according to the Wayback Archive. The posts, made on May 29 and May 30, 2020, included the hashtag "JusticeForGeorgeFloyd" and comments addressing systemic racism and Floyd’s murder. Koh's campaign did not clarify the reasons for the deletions or whether they conflicted with his current positions. Koh's official website emphasizes his support for racial equity and criticizes systemic racism and policies by President Trump perceived as targeting people of color. He has publicly spoken about Floyd's murder and injustices faced by Black Americans through social media and television. A campaign spokesperson stated that Koh intends to promote racial representation if elected and will oppose policies they describe as racist. Koh has previously worked in the Biden White House advising on infrastructure, served as chief of staff for the U.S. Department of Labor, and worked for Boston Mayor Marty Walsh. Koh is running to succeed incumbent Rep. Seth Moulton, who secured approximately 70% of the vote in his last election and is also running for the U.S. Senate seat held by Sen. Ed Markey. Massachusetts primaries are scheduled for September 1. If Koh wins the Democratic primary, he will face Republican Micah Jones in the general election. A recent poll suggests the Democratic primary race is becoming more competitive, with Moulton closing in on Markey.
Left-Biased Version
Dan Koh's craven erasure of his own George Floyd posts stands as performative politics at its most grotesque, a calculated move by rapacious elites and their political enablers who weaponize racial justice only when mass mobilization forces their hand. In late May 2020, Koh flooded his Twitter with calls for "JusticeForGeorgeFloyd" and denunciations of systemic racism, yet those statements vanished from the record according to the Wayback Archive, leaving no trace of why he scrubbed them. Yet another grotesque concession to power unfolds here, as the candidate for Massachusetts’s 6th District now pushes a website heavy on "racial equity" rhetoric while his campaign refuses to explain if the old posts clashed with fresh calculations. Kevin Hart’s defense of Tony Hinchcliffe’s George Floyd joke at a roast further normalizes the violence inherent in the state apparatus, dismissing lethal mockery as mere "comedy" while marginalized communities continue to pay the price. This incident highlights how establishment figures treat Black death as disposable fodder, exactly the climate in which Koh can quietly delete his solidarity tweets without backlash. Driven by institutional indifference to human suffering, such episodes expose Democrats who absorb 2020’s radical energy into branding and then pivot when electoral optics shift. Koh’s résumé traces the classic revolving door of state power, from advising on infrastructure inside the Biden White House to chief of staff roles at the U.S. Department of Labor and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh’s office. These positions under past Democratic administrations reveal yet more evidence of a rigged system where insiders cycle through power without ever confronting the systemic racism they claim to oppose. While mercilessly squeezing working families, this elite circuit protects the status quo that Koh’s deleted posts once pretended to challenge. On the campaign trail Koh vows to promote racial representation and fight policies described as racist, yet the silence around the 2020 deletions screams another hollow victory for the powerful. His bid to oust Rep. Seth Moulton, who captured roughly 70 percent last cycle and now eyes Ed Markey’s Senate seat ahead of the September 1 primaries, shows how under the cynical veneer of progress such candidates recycle the same tired language. A recent poll tightens that primary race, proving the machinery churns on regardless of grassroots demands. Leo Briceno’s reporting for Fox News Digital captures the moment, but the larger truth remains: Democratic insiders like Koh absorb radical demands for justice into messaging infrastructure while demobilizing the very energy that briefly threatened real change in 2020. Heartless prioritization of control over lives defines this pattern, as Koh faces Republican Micah Jones in November if he prevails and continues criticizing perceived Trump actions against communities of color without ever answering for his own vanished commitments. Systemic abandonment of ordinary people persists because career advancement always trumps accountability.
Right-Biased Version
Dan Koh's quiet scrubbing of his BLM posts exposes cynical opportunism at the heart of progressive racial politics as the Massachusetts candidate erases his 2020 virtue signaling while his website clings to the same "racial equity" demands. This elite hypocrisy reveals a Biden administration insider who rode the George Floyd wave for political advantage before quietly distancing himself once the movement soured with voters. Meanwhile Kevin Hart reminds us that normal Americans are tired of having their speech policed by activists who treat every joke as a crime. Performative virtue signaling at its worst defines Koh's record after the Wayback Archive caught him deleting tweets from May 29 and May 30 2020 that pushed the "systemic racism" narrative and used the hashtag "JusticeForGeorgeFloyd." His campaign refuses to explain the deletions or whether they contradict his current views yet the site still attacks systemic racism and past perceived actions by President Trump targeting people of color. Another betrayal of hardworking Americans emerges when politicians erase history they once amplified to gain favor. Woke overreach running completely unchecked fuels the inconsistency because Koh has repeatedly spoken publicly about Floyd's murder and alleged injustices against Black Americans on social media and television while a spokesperson vows he will promote racial representation and fight policies labeled racist if elected. Forced submission to ideological dogma leaves voters questioning whether these positions reflect genuine belief or simply shifting winds of political convenience. Tyrannical encroachment on personal rights follows when such selective memory becomes a campaign strategy. Koh's past service in the Biden White House advising on infrastructure and as chief of staff at the Labor Department and for Boston Mayor Marty Walsh only deepens the hypocrisy inherent in unchecked progressive ambition. He now seeks to replace Rep. Seth Moulton in Massachusetts's 6th District even as Moulton pursues the Senate seat of Ed Markey ahead of the September 1 primary. A direct assault on individual liberties occurs whenever candidates sanitize their records to appeal to voters disgusted by the very activism they once embraced. Yet more proof of out-of-control elite double standards appears in recent polls showing the Democratic primary tightening as Moulton narrows the gap with Markey leaving Koh positioned to face Republican Micah Jones in the general if he advances. Shameless distortion by the mainstream media often ignores how figures like Kevin Hart push back by defending Tony Hinchcliffe's George Floyd joke at a roast and insisting offensive humor belongs in that format. The tyranny inherent in unchecked government allied with cultural enforcers explains why such speech policing persists while voters grow weary of the selective outrage.
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