‘The Round Rev’ waddles off into the sunset

 

*We’ve grown to LOVE him over the years.*  

Those menacing, glaring eyes.  The screaming, growling diatribes.  (The funding from George Soros.)  The name-calling targeting all those Republicans.  Championing all that stuff that had very little to do with “advancement of colored people.” 

The drivebys are sad.  Big Bill Barber is saying ‘adios’ to his current paying gig at the NC NAACP and heading off to bigger and better things.  (Reportedly, he’s going to head up an effort to FEED OTHER PEOPLE.  I, for one, feel really, really bad for anyone trying to get something to eat while he’s in the vicinity.)

The taxpayer-subsidized drivebys at NPR are leading the mourning: 

North Carolina NAACP President William Barber, a liberal force against the state’s attempts to limit voting rights and ban gay marriage, will step down from the organization next month.

Barber, who was elected to the position in 2005, organized weekly “Moral Mondays” protests, calling on supporters to take a moral stand for a wide range of issues including voting rights, higher wages, gun control and President Trump’s immigration ban.

The protests grew to draw thousands of progressive supporters and led to arrests from time to time.[…]

Hundreds upon thousands of OTHER pastors, like Franklin Graham for instance, and their flocks are out there every day quietly putting in sweat equity to do good works for people in need.  And THIS GUY is out there talking people into getting arrested while promoting the extreme leftist agenda.

Here Barber is providing lip service to “Repairers of the Breach” — a national organization aimed at getting that nasty conservatism OUT of organized religion.  *Sounds like, um, FUN.*

MORE: 

[…] He also fought the state’s controversial bill to prohibit transgender people from using the bathroom that fit their gender identity.

Last summer, Barber took the stage at the Democratic National Convention with a rousing speech calling for issues to be looked at not as “left vs. right or liberal vs. conservative” but “right vs. wrong.”

“We are being called like our forefathers and foremothers to be the moral defibrillators of our time,” he said, bringing much of the audience to its feet. “We must shock this nation with the power of love. We must shock this nation with the power of mercy … we can’t give up on the heart of our democracy. Not now, not ever.”

He has recently spoken out against President Trump, telling NPR in January he was “deeply troubled by the moral inconsistency and the moral trouble that we have in this country.”

Barber plans to join the leadership of New Poor People’s Campaign, 50 years after Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Poor People’s Campaign.

“Fifty years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King called for a radical ‘revolution of values’ inviting a divided nation to stand against the evils of militarism, racism, and economic injustice,” Barber said in a statement. “In the spirit of the Poor People’s Campaign of 1967/68, we are calling for a national moral revival and for fusion coalitions in every state to come together and advance a moral agenda.”[…]

*What A Sweetheart.*