No Way Adam Schiff Used That Phrase to Describe the Narco-Terrorists We're Blowing...
Jasmine Crockett Just Made a Huge Move–How Will It Pan Out?
State Attorney General Pressures City to Cancel Christmas-Themed Drag Show
Indiana University Sanctions Lecturer for Claiming MAGA Is White Supremacy
Rest in Peace, Chronicles of Narnia
Democrats Just Proposed Legislation to Make Plane Tickets More Expensive
Man of the People Mamdani to Move Into Swanky Gracie Mansion
President Trump Announces $12B in Farm Subsidies
Greenpeace Seeks to Undermine US Law in a Dutch Court
New Jersey City Buckles Under After Lawsuit Challenging Illegal Gun Confiscation
Some Cultures Shouldn't Be Welcomed in the US
Tim Walz's Daughter Melts Down on TikTok After Trump and Others Call Their...
Tom Homan Destroys Dana Bash After She Accuses ICE of Racial Profiling in...
Seattle to Host LGBTQ+ Pride Match For FIFA World Cup Featuring Egypt and...
Supreme Court Signals Support for Trump Admin in Landmark FTC Firing Case
Tipsheet

Disabled Woman In Minneapolis Provides a First-Hand Account of Friday Night's Riots

Residents in Minneapolis are feeling the impacts of the riots that are taking place in their community. While those who are taking part in the riots say they are doing it in protest of the death of George Floyd, the people who actually live and work in Minneapolis say otherwise. 

Advertisement

Stephanie Wilford, a disabled woman that lives in a high-rise apartment complex near the 5th Precinct, told KSTP-TV that Friday night was "scary."

"I live in the high-rise right back here," the woman said, pointing to the building behind her. "And I seen them as they came down Lake Street but then they turned and started coming over here. And I'm sitting here looking out my window and they went straight to Office Max, [inaudible] the store and every other store around here that I go to."

"I have nowhere to go now. I have no way to get there now because the buses aren't running," Wilford said through tears. "These people did this for no reason. It's not going to bring George back here. George is in a better place than we are. And last night – I'm going to be honest – I wish I was where George was because this is ridiculous. These people are tearing up our livelihoods."

"This is the only place I could go to shop and now I don't have anywhere to go," she said. "I don't have anyway to get there."

The woman said that when the National Guard showed up the rioters attempted to flock into the high-rise apartment building she lives in.

"They couldn't get in because there was security there and I'm glad they were there," she said taking a deep breath. "Because there's no telling if they would have gotten in that building where they would have headed to stay safe and mess with us inside the building because we're handicapped."

Advertisement

Stephanie made it clear she didn't want people to feel sorry for her because she's handicap, but there are "certain things" she can't do.

"For them to do what they did was just stupid. It was ignorant," she explained. "Now what are you going to do? Where you going to shop at? Half the people probably don't live in Minnesota. They don't care."

People like Stephanie are going to suffer at the hands of people who are burning down businesses and killing people's livelihoods. We're in the middle of a pandemic and people are already struggling to make ends meet. These riots do nothing but compound the toll the coronavirus has taken on people. 


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement