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Mayor: BLM mural outside Trump Tower ‘liberates 5th Ave.’

In your face, Trump!

Mayor de Blasio, First Lady Chirlane McCray and Reverend Al Sharpton joined city workers in painting “Black Lives Matter” in giant yellow letters on Fifth Ave. outside Trump Tower on Thursday.

Also with them was Iesha Sekou, C.E.O. of Street Corner Resources, who helped inspire the idea of painting Black Lives Matters murals on streets all around town.

A man lay on the freshly painted mural as a woman knelt on his neck. They were reenacting how George Floyd was killed when a Minneapolis cop did this to him for nearly nine minutes. (Photo by Q. Sakamaki)

Last week, however, Trump had angrily blasted the scheme in back-to-back tweets, claiming it would “denigrate the luxury of Fifth Avenue.”

“NYC is cutting Police $’s by ONE BILLION DOLLARS, and yet the @NYCMayor is going to paint a big, expensive, yellow Black Lives Matter sign on Fifth Avenue, denigrating this luxury Avenue,” the tweeter in chief wrote. “This will further antagonize New York’s Finest, who LOVE New York & vividly remember the….

“….horrible BLM chant, ‘Pigs In A Blanket, Fry ‘Em Like Bacon’. Maybe our GREAT Police, who have been neutralized and scorned by a mayor who hates & disrespects them, won’t let this symbol of hate be affixed to New York’s greatest street. Spend this money fighting crime instead!”

Feelin’ it — Black Lives Matter. Young women touched the mural in a moment of reverence for victims of police violence. (Photo by Q. Sakamaki)

De Blasio responded with a tweet of his own on July 1, calling Trump’s tweets racist.

At his press conference this Friday, de Blasio again fired back at the president, saying that rolling out the street mural was emotionally powerful.

“It was very, very moving for all of us,” he said, “because — I just want to say this personally — I think all of us have gone through such a difficult journey these last four months, and in a different way, we’ve gone through a very difficult journey in this nation over the last three or four years, where the notion of love, the notion of healing, the notion of mutual respect seems to be torn apart in so many ways.

A police officer — with a Trump Tower doorman behind him — kept a watchful eye on things as the BLM mural was being painted. Some pro-Trump counterprotesters reportedly did show up. (Photo by Q. Sakamaki)
Umm…maybe not necessarily with all this going on right now. (Photo by Q. Sakamaki)

“And yesterday, to me, was a response to that,” de Blasio declared, “a response to the notion that the most powerful voices and platforms in this land have turned to hatred, not to peace and respect and love. And it was important to not just have the Black Lives Matter murals in other parts of the city, other crucial locations, which have also been very emotional and powerful, but this one had a particular meaning, because we had to send a message to the seat of power.

(Photo by Q. Sakamaki)

“We have to send a message to the president of the United States that Black lives matter and he cannot do anything to stop that,” de Blasio stressed. “That all of the hatred that he propagates, all the efforts that he has created to try and take us backwards — they just won’t work. It’s too late, we’re moving forward.”

As opposed to Trump, de Blasio called Black Lives Matter a “positive, forward-looking message of righting a wrong and creating a true respect for people’s value.

“And when the president tweeted a few days ago that this mural…would ‘denigrate the luxury of Fifth Avenue,’ that was one of the purest statements of racism I’ve ever heard,” the mayor accused. “And the last place you’d want to hear that statement of racism is from the person who’s supposed to represent all of us.

(Photo by Q. Sakamaki)

“But, in fact, I think that mural liberates Fifth Avenue,” he said. “I think that mural ennobles Fifth Avenue. I think it enlightens Fifth Avenue to have those words that really suggest what America was supposed to be about all along, but never was — that really talk about equality and valuing each human being. Those were supposed to be our founding principles. They were not realized. Now, we’re saying we must realize them.”

Among others praising the Fifth Ave. BLM mural was Mia Farrow, who called it “so right!”

One Comment

  1. Gerry valen Gerry valen July 13, 2020

    Expensive publicity stunt for deblasio.

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