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George Perry Floyd Jr. (October 14, 1973 – May 25, 2020) was a black American man killed during an arrest in Minneapolis, Minnesota, after allegedly using counterfeit money to buy cigarettes. Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, knelt on his neck for nearly eight minutes as he lay handcuffed on the ground. After his death, protests against police violence toward black people quickly spread across the United States and internationally.
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Reporter links Fuentes supporter to LUCA protest at Galileo

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dallasvoice.com

Nick Fuentes supporter and white supremacist Ali Jamal, right, participated in a Latinos United for Conservative Action protest outside Galileo Church in Fort Worth on Oct.

8. LUCA officials have issued a statement denouncing white supremacy and Nazi ideology, and said they have no knowledge of Jamal or “his associations,” even though he is pictured here with LUCA’s Advocacy Director Carlos Turcios.

LUCA also declined to denounce anti-LGBTQ comments Turcios has made. (Photo via Steven Monacelli) Steven Monacelli, a reporter for Texas Observer who covered the Black Lives Matter protests for Dallas Voice in the wake of the George Floyd murder in 2020, reported Oct.

10 that even though officials with Latinos United for Conservative Action (LUCA) have issued a statement denouncing Nazism, one of the men participating in LUCA’s Oct.

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dubia, or questions regarding Catholic Church doctrine, submitted by Brazilian Bishop Jose Negri of Santo Amaro, inquiring about LGBTQ people and their participation in holy sacraments.The church’s Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith said that transgender people may be baptized, under certain conditions, and as long as there is “no risk of causing a public scandal or disorientation among the faithful.”The doctrinal office also said that “transsexuals,” as it refers to transgender people, could serve as godparents at a baptism at the discretion of a local priest, or as witnesses at a Church wedding — noting that there is no prohibition in current canonical legislation — but warned that diocesan priests should exercise “pastoral prudence” in allowing this participation.The answers to the dubia were signed by the department’s head, Argentine Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, and approved by Pope Francis on Oct. 31, according to Reuters.
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