© 2024 Blaze Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Black Lives Matter protesters in Seattle demand white residents 'give up' their homes
Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images

Black Lives Matter protesters in Seattle demand white residents 'give up' their homes

'Now do something about it!'

Shocking video shows Black Lives Matter protesters walking through a Seattle neighborhood this week demanding that white residents "give up" their homes.

The video shows demonstrators shouting "Black Lives Matter" as they march through a historically black neighborhood they claim has been gentrified by white residents.

"Do you know that before your white a** came here this was all black people?" a man in the video said, screaming at residents in the neighborhood. "Do you know people like you came in here and basically bought all the land from the black people for less than what it was worth, kicked them out so you could live here?"

"Do you know that? Cause if you don't, now you f**king do. Now do something about it!" the man continued.

A woman with a megaphone is later heard telling residents to "open your wallet."

"Give black people back their homes!" the woman screamed. "You're sitting there comfortably — comfortable as f**k as if they didn't help gentrify this neighborhood! I used to live in this neighborhood, and my family was pushed out, and you're sitting up there having a good time with your other white friends!"

Seattle is the third-most gentrified major U.S. city, trailing Washington, D.C., and Portland, a study conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found.

But, according to the Seattle Times, gentrification — the process of changing neighborhood demographics by moving in affluent residents and businesses — "may do more good than harm."

From the Times:

That runs counter to the common perception of gentrification, a trend seen in many American cities in recent years. As young professionals, empty-nesters and other more affluent people rediscovered the appeal of city living, they've moved into the urban core. That new wealth rapidly changes city neighborhoods, many of which had suffered from decades of blight and population loss.

But there's a detrimental side to gentrification. As property values and rents rise, original residents — poorer and often people of color — can be pushed out of the neighborhood.

As the New York Post reported, another clip of Black Lives Matter protesters in Seattle from Wednesday showed the demonstrators telling white residents to "get the f**k out."

Want to leave a tip?

We answer to you. Help keep our content free of advertisers and big tech censorship by leaving a tip today.
Want to join the conversation?
Already a subscriber?