

“Look at the sh-t-eating grins on all those young white slugs’ faces. It will die out with this younger generation!” he continued. “I don’t know what it says about me but I’ve truly lost the ability to articulate the hysterical rage, nausea, and heartache this makes me feel,” wrote Abriss.

Though he worked in post-production at INE Entertainment, TheWrap reported that he is also a contributor to New York Media’s pop culture site Vulture. Therefore, as of January 21, 2019, we have severed ties with Abriss.” “While we appreciated his work, it is clear that he is no longer aligned with our company’s core values of respect and tolerance. He worked with the company in our post-production department and never as a writer,” the company said in a statement that was published by TheWrap on Monday. “We were surprised and upset to see the inflammatory and offensive rhetoric used on Erik Abriss’ Twitter account this weekend. Following the mainstream media (MSM)-generated controversy involving a “racist confrontation” between a group of Catholic high school students and a Native American poser and provocateur following last weekend’s Walk for Life in Washington, D.C., one journalist has been fired for physically threatening the teens.Īs reported by PJ Media’s Megan Fox, digital media company INE Entertainment fired Erik Abriss after he publicly ‘wished’ for the deaths of the Covington Catholic High School teens and their parents after buying into the false reports that the kids were bullying Native American activist Nathan Phillips, though video of the encounter clearly shows him walking over to them and banging a drum in the face of one of the students.
