'Don't Make the Black Kids Angry': The hoax of black victimization and those who enable it.

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'Don't Make the Black Kids Angry': The hoax of black victimization and those who enable it. Page 28

by Colin Flaherty


  For the violent, black criminal element that was bred downtown, this side of town is a playground for them. There are tons of white people to harass, rob, beat up, steal from, and sometimes rape or kill. One group of thugs who targeted white victims admitted that they targeted white people because the only thing white victims do is call the police.

  They said black victims will posse up their family members and seek revenge, but white people only call the police. I believe they were telling the truth for the most part. Not just any white victim will do either. They usually have to be drunk, weak, or even handicapped.

  One group of black youth attacked a white kid who was obviously mentally retarded and took his wallet.

  When you see videos of black mob violence, think about all the incidents that aren’t caught on tape. Also think about all the black mob harassment that doesn’t reach the level of violent crime because black mobs don’t always necessarily lead to violence. Black mob harassment is daily and they destroy neighborhoods.

  They get together, sometimes organized on Facebook or by arrangements made at school and just hang out within a couple of city blocks, usually at bigger intersections for an audience. Often, they are just nuisances: urinating in people’s yards, playing loud music, rapping loudly, soliciting sex from women and young girls, playing dice, drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, etc. but when these meetings occur, anything can happen. Often, they fight among themselves which of course leads to shootings and sometimes death.

  Lately, dismissal from a high school even requires extra police presence. As students merely leave school to go home, some can’t make it three blocks before having to assault or harass someone undoubtedly minding his or her own business.

  So why would all this make good officers want to quit? As a conscientious officer who feels it my duty to allow peaceful people to live in peace, I feel helpless. The police agencies, detention facilities, and courtrooms have been desensitized to black crowd violence and nuisance.

  I feel like the institution I am a part of has no real plan to address the black mob and black crime epidemic and my role is only to maintain just enough peace to keep the status quo of a permissible level of black violence in order. But no level of violence should be permissible and maintaining this status quo is a disservice.

  There is no good fight to fight. Hell, we haven’t even identified black violence as a problem. We go to community meetings and everyone pulls their hair out trying to figure out what is wrong when all they have to do is say what is wrong. White people in these meetings are in tears telling us how bad their quality of life is, but never have the courage to say what the problem is.

  They never mention race. I’ll never understand that.

  I can’t say it because I would be on the national news that night, but why can’t they say it? Don’t they know that loud voices are the only voices that are heard anymore? Black people hint towards a riot and the whole nation listens. If you can’t even say how you feel in a community meeting with a few dozen like-minded people, what chance do you have?

  So nothing changes and they get frustrated. Who do they get frustrated with? The police. They put the problem on us. They don’t understand why we can’t just arrest every punk that walks down the street, and it’s our fault large groups of poorly parented youth get together and harass people. They won’t admit it is a cultural problem. The miscommunication is heartbreaking and is no way to make a living.

  An inactive or indifferent cop won’t feel the same way. He doesn’t see it the same way I do. The burden of black on white violence is only the burden of having to make yet another robbery or assault report. Good cops want the opportunity to help people, bring justice on those who hurt people, and want to see results.

  A once proud, peaceful neighborhood that is getting more violent every year, causing the good people to hide further beneath their bed is hard to witness. As police work gets more hazardous and the problems more blurred, the indifferent cops are the ones who will fill the ranks in your local police agency. Conscientious officers will find other matters to tend to.

  Boston Black Mob Violence:

  Now it takes two reporters to ignore it

  In April 2014, we learned that groups of “teenagers” have been taunting, harassing and beating white people in the historic heart of Boston. The Boston Commons.

  This time it was 20 black people. Here is something else we learn from the Boston Globe: It now takes two Boston Globe reporters to ignore the fact that the assailants are black.

  A few quotes: “Boston police rushed around the city’s downtown Wednesday night, responding to calls for help after a group of up to 20 males and females launched at least six unprovoked attacks on people on Boston Common and in the neighborhood.”[565]

  Police tracked the predators to a nearby 7-11, where one of them attacked police. He “was released on personal recognizance after a judge declined to revoke his bail on a pending larceny case.” They arrested a few more black people for robbery and assault.

  “Advertising copywriter Joseph McNamara apparently witnessed one of the last attacks.

  “McNamara said he was walking on Arch Street around 8:30 p.m. Wednesday when he saw a group of about 10 people attacking a man who looked like an office worker from one of the downtown buildings.

  “They were really coming down on this one guy,’’McNamara said in a telephone interview. He said one person, a teenager with short-cropped hair and red sweatshirt, was the most aggressive attacker.“I didn’t really realize what was going on until I was in the middle of it.’’

  “When the victim got up and tried to break away from his attackers, McNamara said, the assailants followed him as he crossed back and forth across Arch Street in search of a safe place to stop. He described the flow of attackers as“like a swarm. It actually enveloped me at one point.’

  The reporters did go out of their way to identify the attackers as being from Mattapan. Which no one outside of Boston has ever heard about. But which the locals know is a black neighborhood -- with a very high crime rate, even memorialized in several rap songs.

  Which we learn in Wikipedia is the fault of white and Jewish people who did something in 1967 to make it all inevitable.[566]

  But as for other cases of similar black mob violence and the Knockout Game around the same time in other Boston area neighborhoods including Cambridge[567], Worcester[568], and Endicott College, not a word.[569]

  I was in Boston in 2013 for a local show that featured Asians. My topic: Black mob violence against Asians is at epidemic levels. Later, the host of the show called a black minister to ask about the black mob violence. He said it had nothing to do with race.

  Soon after, a group of black people stopped a bus in the Boston area and attacked the driver -- from in and outside of the bus.

  An NBC affiliate unearthed a psychologist who said the fact that 99 percent of the attackers are black is irrelevant. Here’s the real problem:

  “People with Type T personalities, which characterizes risk-takers and thrill-seekers, are motivated to commit violent acts, like smacking strangers in public, according to Professor of Educational Psychology Frank Farley.”[570]

  The show, by the way, never aired. We are past silence now. Way past silence. We are now at deceit.

  Happy Memorial Day 2014

  Let the racial violence begin.

  Black Beach Week used to get all the glory: Every Memorial Day weekend for more than a decade, 300,000 black people gathered in Miami Beach to get their freak on. And also create a tsunami of violence, robbery, shootings, carjackings, vandalism, mayhem, noise and trash.

  Always mountains of trash. None of it in trash cans.

  But in 2014, many party-goers complained that Black Beach Week -- only reporters call it “Urban Beach Week” -- just wasn’t as much fun any more: Too many cops, too many tactical vehicles, too many helicopters, too many lights, too many towers, too many cameras, too much suspicion. Not enough chaos.

 
; And there is no doubt that art deco capital of America was at least temporarily turned into an armed camp for Black Beach Week. Not to worry: The rest of the country picked up the slack. Black mob violence over the holiday weekend was reported in more than a dozen cities around the country. Some fatal. Some comical. All relentless.

  Let’s take a tour, starting with Cincinnati: Four days after scattered reports of black mob violence during the Memorial Day Taste of Cincinnati event, local police and media figured out just how violent their annual holiday event was.[571] “General mayhem,” said one police Captain.

  One of the first victims was the son of the local district attorney. He and his girlfriend were helping his sister back her car out of tight parking space when a group of black people punched him, knocked him to the ground and kicked him. He had a concussion. When his girl friend suggested that was not a good idea, they beat her too. [572]

  Police caught the aftermath on video.

  The local CBS affiliate was the first to get the inkling something was wrong, very wrong. They started reporting Wednesday night that the DA’s son was just the tip of the iceberg.

  “There were other victims that night. David Manz was catching a bus near the courthouse to get to his night shift at Dunkin Donuts. He says about 20 black teenage girls attacked him and were in on the punching, kicking and stomping. He suffered bruises, scrapes and broken ribs.” [573]

  A member of a gay country western dance group reported that members of his club were also victims of racial violence.

  “Three of our CRW friends were also attacked and assaulted on Sunday May 25th 2014 @ 10:00 PM.,” said Tim of the Cincinnati Rivertown Wranglers.“They were jumped and thrown out into the street at Central Pkwy and Walnut. The violence against them was also unprovoked and seemed to be racially motivated as the black teenagers were selecting white victims as people passed by.”

  But black mob violence was just getting started then. Before it was over, there would be a shooting, robbings, numerous assaults and even “teens” throwing rocks at police.[574]

  Curiously, the station that first reported the racial violence did not want much to do with the story: “By most accounts, it was a successful weekend for the city of Cincinnati,” said the CBS affiliate news anchor, introducing the first report of the chaos.

  Other than that, the play was just fine, Mrs. Lincoln.

  We could linger on Cincinnati, with lots more details of racial violence over the Memorial Day weekend. But we have a lot more to cover. Before we move on, let’s just say this: The most difficult part of reporting racial violence in Cincinnati -- and lots of other places -- is looking into the camera and trying to pretend this is not a regular feature of life there. Because it is.

  Next stop Chicago. There was almost nothing in the local press about it, but the popular police blog, Second City Cop, is reporting black mob violence all over the city’s downtown over the weekend.

  “If anyone listened to zone 4 last night they would have heard that the boyfriend of a young couple was hospitalized after getting the shit beat out of him at Van Buren and State by a couple "urban" youths,” reported the blog.“That multiple car and store windows on North Michigan Ave were smashed by "urban youths". That there was a massive fight between "urban youths" on the Red Line platform at State and Lake that shut down the line. That there were multiple thefts of purses, laptops, phones, etc. by groups of "urban youths" celebrating the holiday.”[575]

  For you out-of-towners, Michigan Avenue is the site of the so-called Gold Coast: The uber-upscale shopping district that is the site of regular and frequent and violent and destructive black mob violence.

  Steve Chapman is an editor at the Chicago Tribune who does not like it when people like Second City Cop complain his paper “embargoes” news about racial violence. “Why do you care so much about the attackers’ race?” he wrote. “If you fear or dislike blacks, I suppose it would confirm your prejudice. But otherwise, it tells you nothing useful.” [576]

  Now you know.

  More Memorial Day 2014.

  And Indy and Memphis and on and on. On and on. On and on.

  Next stop: Cleveland. Some local media reported that 200 people were celebrating at a block party. But the real story is that 200 black people were in a “massive” fight that took 30 police officers to quell. But not before three people were shot, one fatally.[577]

  Insert here all the requisite promises from local activists that this will never happen again -- as long as they get more free stuff.

  Let’s head over to Indianapolis: For a good chunk of middle America, Memorial Day means the Indy 500 -- the world’s largest sporting event. It also used to be the safest, until this year when one person died and others were hurt in several cases of black mob violence.[578]

  Racial violence is a regular feature of life in Indianapolis. From the Indiana Black Expo every summer, to regular groups of black people rampaging through downtown and suburban shopping malls, dozens of videos leave little doubt of that.

  There is also little doubt that the local newspaper is loathe to cover it -- other than to call it random and pretend that the mob violence is somehow not limited to one racial group.

  Aamidor already straightened us out on that.

  But the Indy 500 was largely separated from that, until 2014. The event itself was unremarkable. But in the two days leading up to the race, black mob violence broke out in the parking lots where fans camp and gather for the race.[579]

  One person was shot and killed. Others were beaten and robbed. One woman described the scene of the killing as fights all over -- the “most dangerous” thing she had ever seen in her entire life.

  “It’s the same idiots who cause all the trouble downtown and at the malls,” said one cop via email.

  One local lawyer belled the cat on racial violence in this once bucolic city: “Indianapolis, you have a problem,” said Abdul Hakim-Shabazz, writing in Indiana Barrister magazine. “Your problem is young black men who are out of control.”

  Let’s head on down to Memphis for some more holiday violence. No one knows why Tequila Benton stabbed Steven Wright to death. But after it happened, a large fight broke out, and WREG caught the entire melee on camera.[580]

  No one else died in this rolling riot. Though a grey haired grandmother did get knocked down. But at least one person said they were fighting because they were not happy the police did not stop the earlier violence.[581]

  There are reporters in this country to whom that makes sense: Create violence because they were unhappy about violence.

  Maybe Jennifer could help us understand.

  In Baltimore, they know the drill: Minimize any discussion of frequent episodes of black mob violence in and around the upscale Inner Harbor area downtown. And if anyone notices, criticize them.

  That is what state legislator Pat McDonough discovered in 2012 when he and his wife were sitting at a stop light in downtown Baltimore and they witnessed hundreds of black people rampaging, fighting and creating mayhem.

  With nary a cop in sight.

  Soon after, McDonough asked the governor to declare the downtown a “No Go” zone until city officials made the area safe from “black people” who were “terrorizing” the area.

  Democrats from all over the region lined up to take their shots at McDonough. As did the Baltimore Sun in an editorial. The same day that newspaper was on the streets, so were three more episodes of black mob violence downtown. All in the middle of the day.

  Since then, downtown violence has become so bad -- and so visible on so many videotapes -- that the largest employer there, T. Rowe Price, threatened to move out if it does not improve.

  One year after making that threat, T. Rowe Price is still there. And so is black mob violence. On Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, the Baltimore Sun stayed true to form: Hundreds of black people were on the streets, fighting, robbing and creating mayhem. Here’s how the paper described it: “A large group of teens … assaulted people with b
ricks and sticks and robbed at least one battered person of a phone.”[582]

  At least the paper allowed comments, however heavily moderated.

  And the Mayor was true to her word as well: Only two were arrested.

  A ray of light in Baltimore: A white woman recently wrote a story where she complained about crime and violence. She said she constantly felt like “a target.” She lived.

  At least the folks at the downtown Union Memorial Hospital can feel safer: They just added two K-9 dogs to their 60-person security team. Said one of the dog handlers: "We have experienced that when a patient is upset, their attitude changes as soon as we bring the K-9’s in."

  They could have used a few at a Baltimore High School graduation on Memorial Day where the students ended their year with a brawl. Or a riot. Or whatever you call it when 20-30 people start fighting and kicking and ripping each other’s clothes off and hair out. [583]

  So many more stories, so little space. So let’s just skip large-scale episodes of black mob violence during the Memorial Day Weekend in Erie, Buffalo, Rochester, Providence, Michigan and several other places. But check them out at the footnote here:

  [584]

  But before we do, let’s just acknowledge one thing from many of the articles: Oh yeah, it’s been happening here a long time.

  We still have to return to Florida, where it all began. But not before a stop over in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Home of Black Bike Week.[585]

  Like Black Beach Week, local reporters give this gathering another name that no one uses -- Atlantic Festival or some such thing. But the 300,000 black people on motorcycles who descend on this beach town every Memorial Day would probably not recognize that name.

 

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