Kellogg Foundation Supported Racially Divisive Open Borders Group
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by LEE STRANAHAN8 Dec 2016586
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the namesake nonprofit arm of the Kellogg Company, has given $310,000 to the California-based community organizing group Causa Justa :: Just Cause, an open border pro-illegal immigration group. Causa Justa :: Just Cause also has connections to a group called
the Freedom Road Socialist Organization
that promotes breaking the United States up into race-based nation states.
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation gave $10,000 to Causa Justa :: Just Cause in 2010-2011 to “enable the organization to achieve its mission by providing general operating support.”
A basic search of Causa Justa :: Just Cause’s history makes clear the sort of “mission” to which the W.K. Kellogg’s Foundation’s grant was providing “operating support.”
In 2011, Causa Justa :: Just Cause partnered with the radical Oakland chapter of the Occupy Wall Street movement to protest and “occupy” houses. As David Bacon wrote at LaborPress.org in 2011:
Activists from Causa Justa :: Just Cause and Occupy Oakland protested foreclosures, and demanded that banks stop foreclosures and allow families to move into foreclosed and vacant homes in Oakland. The action was one of over two dozen carried out by Occupy activists and supporters across the country to protest foreclosures and the refusal of banks to renegotiate loans.
After a march, people occupied a home owned by Fannie Mae, and announced they would make it a community center, as part of an effort to force Fannie Mae to allow people to live in the many vacant homes it owns as a result of foreclosures. In front of the occupied home, poets recited, activists made speeches, and neighbors poured through the gates.
Causa Justa :: Just Cause also worked to expand San Francisco’s “Sanctuary City” law in the wake of the death of Kate Steinle, a young woman killed in July 2015 by five-time deportee illegal alien Francisco López-Sánchez.