DailyKenn.com — A thin blue line painted on a New Jersey highway has been vilified as a "symbol of hate."
The observation was made in a post by Pat Droney in lawenforcementtoday.com; one of DailyKenn's 100 top conservative websites.
New Jersey communities have been using the highway line for years, long before Black Lives Matter began painting gaudy murals on big-city streets.
Excerpted from lawenforcementtoday.com ▼
In New Jersey, the town of Holmdel is one of a number of New Jersey communities that painted a “thin blue line” on a local street in order to honor police officers.
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However now, the town’s Human Relations Committee (HRC) has recommended that it be removed because—it’s a symbol of “hate.”
That’s right, the thin blue line, used to commemorate police who are the sentinels between good and evil is now considered a hate symbol, just like say a swastika. Why?
According to the HRC, because the blue line has allegedly been “appropriated by white supremacist groups,” the blue line painted on a small portion of a local roadway, about a quarter-mile makes “residents feel unwelcome and even threatened.”