Last week, a flight attendant from an American Airlines flight kicked off a passenger after she refused to take off her “offensive mask,” which bore a hateful message against the police.

According to a Fox News report, the woman who was identified as Arlinda Johns, a South Florida activist, boarded a flight to Illinois from South Florida. To show her support for the increasing anti-police sentiments, Johns chose to wear a mask that said: “FK 12” derogatory slang for the phrase “Fk the Police.” Johns also wore a “Black Lives Matter T-shirt” to complete her anti-police ensemble.

John’s mask and shirt caught the attention of an airline flight attendant. The attendant went on to politely ask Johns to cover her mask as it was considered offensive. In an interview, Johns said, “Everything she asked me to do, I did.”

Then, she continued that the flight attendant went back to her seat afterward. Johns said that the attendant stood over her saying,”‘I’d better not see that other mask,” to which John refused and demanded her to leave her alone.

Just as the plane was about to take off, the attendant then went to the front. The plane then made a U-turn, and when she returned, Johns was asked to get off the flight. As proof, she recorded the entire incident in a Facebook Live video as officers asked her to leave.

Johns eventually had to drive off hundreds of miles to get to her destination. She concluded, “I think I got taken off the plane because I’m black,” said Johns. “My mask said ‘[F***] 12’ and my shirt said, ‘Black Lives Matter.’”

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As radical left-wing supporters continued to demand their local state government to “defund the police,” Vice President Mike Pence was having none of it. In a Pennsylvania bus tour, Pence expressed his solidarity with “back the blue movement.” Speaking to a crowd of 300 people, Pence addressed the increasing anti-police sentiments.

“Under this president and this administration, we are not going to defund the police. Not now, not ever,” he vowed. However, the Vice President did not turn a blind eye to the injustice of George Floyd’s death under the Minneapolis Police custody. Pence said that the Trump administration does not need to choose between supporting the country’s law enforcement officers, as well as protecting African American families. “We can do both,” Pence concluded.