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

Home > Other > 'Don't Make the Black Kids Angry': The hoax of black victimization and those who enable it. > Page 41
'Don't Make the Black Kids Angry': The hoax of black victimization and those who enable it. Page 41

by Colin Flaherty


  Critical Race Theory says three things: One, white racism is everywhere. Two, white racism is permanent. Three, white racism explain everything.

  Including crime. Especially crime.

  Which, in a way, makes a lot of sense: Even liberals were getting tired of talking about the same old stuff for 50 years. Stuff that just made everything so bad even they were starting to notice. You know what I’m talking about: family, illegitimacy, crime, education, jobs, income, drugs, welfare, entitlements and blah, blah, blah.

  That’s all off the table now. Today it is all about Critical Race Theory.

  Many of these books on Critical Race Theory are published at Temple University Press and used in Temple University classrooms. I’ve read several of them.

  That’s why I’m not overly concerned about some 81-year old white dude who claims he got slapped around a bit. Maybe he was trying to sell his assailant crack. That’s what the black guys said when the killed Gilbert “Shorty” Denton in Seattle.

  Anyway, Critical Race Theory says the only reason the white dude was getting slapped and the black dude was doing the slapping is because of white privilege that allowed the old white dude to occupy the cushy professor’s office in the first place.

  The same theory explains that Temple University failed to provide the alleged robber with the recreational, professional, familial, educational, financial and legal assistance to get him a cushy teaching job at Temple.

  That’s how the blood got on the doorknob and the black guy got on all the grainy police photos.

  If we lived in a just society, we’d have white dudes slapping around old black professors.

  I don’t want to say the professor had it coming. But let’s face it, without white privilege, he never would have been there. So whose fault is that? Now do you finally know what the President meant when he said “he didn’t build that?”

  Cool.

  I don’t have anything against old white dudes. Even when they are Asian. But let’s keep it real: Sometimes they deserve it. Just ask Philadelphia lawyer and family court judge Wayne Bennett.

  Bennett was quite unhappy with Thomas Sowell for writing a glowing review of this crazy-ass book called White Girl Bleed a Lot.

  Sowell liked it so much he wrote three columns about it. Allen West liked it enough to post it on Facebook for 660,000 of his closest friends.

  The crazy author of White Girl Bleed a Lot says there is a lot of that going around: Black people beating up old white people. And reporters are pretending it never happens.

  Judge Bennett explains it all in just about the best summation of Critical Race Theory you can find in Philadelphia in or out of Temple University. All on his blog, The Field Negro. Which is quite famous in the black blogosphere: Quoth Judge Bennett: [828]

  “No matter how violent some young black punks act and wild out towards groups of white people--or a single white individual, it will never make up for all the violence that was practiced against people of color throughout this nation's history.”

  White people deserve it.

  Got it?

  More Indy.

  It does not stop here, does it?

  Finally, an explanation from Indianapolis.

  When a mom and daughter were kidnapped, forced to withdraw money from an ATM, raped, then shot in October 2013, the Indianapolis Star played it by the book: Do not mention the suspects are black.

  Police now believe the same crew of four or five is responsible for a similar home invasion, one week before.[829]

  To be fair, Indianapolis is not remarkably different from Kansas City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Chicago, Baltimore, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Greensboro, Rochester, Richmond, Miami Beach, Fresno, Louisville, Memphis, Greensboro, and more than 100 other centers of regular and intense black mob violence: The papers in those towns are loathe to report it as well. They say they are colorblind.

  These are the same papers that every day run stories about black caucuses, black churches, black colleges, black TV stations, black expos, black radio, black newspapers, black blogs, and on and on.

  But black mob violence? Not a thing.

  More and more people in Indianapolis are wondering why: They question why the paper is so heavily invested in refusing to let their readers know that black mob violence exists exponentially out of proportion in their town.

  Daniel Lee is just one of dozens who left comments at the IndyStar.com and other web sites about these home invasions:

  The Star won't publish the suspects' race unless it's part of a "detailed" description including clothes, hairstyle, Italian or German-style boots, hoop or stud earrings, buttons, snaps or hook-and-eye fasteners, plaid or paisley, earth-tones or vibrant joyful colors, full description of every visible tattoo, etc.

  It's their way of avoiding what they consider the racism of calling black suspects "black."

  Johnny West piled on:

  It is completely irresponsible for the Star to not have a description of the suspects included in this story.

  This story is useless to the community without a timely description. If police did not release a description, that should be noted in the story.

  OK: You’ve had your vegetables. Now here is the dessert: One of the editors of the Indy Star is going to explain it all to us. He is Alvie Lindsay, the “News and Investigations Director.” And you are not. Love this quote:

  Lots of questions here about descriptions of suspects. We are working to update the story.

  If and when we have a detailed description of the suspects -- and not merely race and gender, but something that could reasonably help the public identify individuals -- that information will be included.

  Bill, our reporter, just talked to the IMPD spokesman who said there are no other such details at this point. It's actually not clear, he said, how many suspects were involved. No age range has been provided, either.

  This is pure poetry, i.e. fictional.

  After reading the story, several commentators mistakenly came to believe that these details were not available. Or that the victims were not aware of the racial identity of the suspects.

  Said Barbara Grasher Howard: “Did you not read the article? It clearly said the victims weren't able to recall details. Police are hoping they're more able to do so once the trauma is somewhat past.”

  FAIL. Not true.

  The distinguished Mr. Alvie Lindsay knew. Everyone knew except the people who relied on the Indy Star for information.

  They just did not want to tell you.

  Aamidor, Seiler, Jennifer, and others have a new friend: Alvie Lindsey.

  Late Night Black Mob Violence: Let Out Fights.

  No cover charge.

  They call them “Let Out Fights:” The black mob violence that is a regular feature of life at nightclubs, coast to coast, especially at closing time. All the time.

  Sometimes the fighting is just a few people. Other times as many as 500. Gunfire is common. So is video. So are attacks on police.

  Arrests are not.

  Some recent examples from November 2013:

  In Portland over the Halloween weekend, a “riot” and triple shooting left one man dead and two wounded outside of a black night club -- so dangerous even its own bouncers recently had to call police because they feared for their lives during an after-hours party.

  Local media report that early Saturday morning, hundreds of people were fighting and shooting in the streets of North East Portland -- a euphemism for the black part of town.

  KGW TV news reported the attacks on police as well. Everything except the black part:[830]

  “Very hostile crowd -- people saying things like, you know,‘shoot the cops,’ and they were trying to secure the scene so they called for a city-wide Code 3 response, which means every available car in the city should respond to that area,” said Sgt. Pete Simpson with the Portland Police Bureau.”

  The Portland Oregonian was careful not to report these fights and shootings were
part of a pattern of racial violence.

  After issuing a customary warning to its readers not to talk about black mob violence, one comment did sneak through:

  Nobody wants to say it, and nobody ever admits it, but at some time in the future, when it gets So Bad that something has to be done to put a stop to all this political correctness.... something may be solved.

  There is a large segment of the African-American community, here in Portland and in many other major Metro Urban cities, that just do not know, nor care to, get along with other people without the use of violence, intimidation tactics, race-baiting, and blaming "the Man" or "racist white society" for any and all problems in their lives.

  Other readers insisted the racial violence was “isolated.” Wrong on two counts: One, the state liquor agency shut down the club soon after the shootings and attacks on police after documenting that several episodes of recent violence and mayhem at the club created “serious and persistent problems.”

  And two, the problem is not isolated to Portland. In Statesboro, Georgia, the headline from over the same weekend tells the same story: “2 nightclubs, 2 shootings, 1 death.”

  In Newburgh, New York, witnesses testified about black mob violence last summer outside of a black nightclub. The Times-Herald Record reports some of the testimony:[831]

  Larry Gantt is charged with intentionally slashing the throat of police Officer Eric Henderson during the melee. Gantt's lawyer contends Gantt had been jumped and stomped by a large group of attackers and thought that the person grabbing him was an assailant renewing the assault.

  Senior Assistant District Attorney Michael Milza started with police witnesses, including Officer Kevin Lahar, who was first on the scene after the report of a large fight. Lahar described the hectic scene: 80 to 100 people on the sidewalks and streets, some arguing or pushing, at least one group engaged in "violent and tumultuous" actions.

  Starting to notice that violence against police is an integral part of the let out fights? Good, you have been paying attention.

  Also over the weekend in Brockton, Massachusetts, The Enterprise News tells us 15 police officers saw:[832]

  Large groups of people fighting outside two downtown establishments.

  One man was being brutally kicked in the head, said Sgt. James Baroud, one of two police officers who used a Taser, or electronic stun gun, to try and subdue the suspects early Sunday morning.

  “It was crazy. It was just an extremely chaotic scene, “Baroud said Sunday. “Punches were being thrown all over the place.”

  Everyone fighting, and the three people arrested were black.

  In Syracuse over the same weekend, a triple stabbing during a large Let Out Fight left one man in critical condition. According to the CNY Central, “there've been several fights and stabbing at the bar in the past several months … some neighbors ... say the violence is unusual, while others say it comes with the city's reputation.”[833]

  In Waterloo, Iowa, city officials have declared a black nightclub downtown to be a “chronic nuisance” after repeated fighting, stabbings and a recent riot.[834]

  In early November, 60 black people were fighting after the club closed. According to KCRG TV news in Waterloo:

  This comes after a handful of situations such as disorderly conduct, a fight and a stabbing that required police response.

  At around 1:50 Sunday morning, Waterloo police had their hands full.

  “All of a sudden, in essence, one officer described it as a riot,” said Waterloo Police Chief Dan Trelka. Chief Trelka said a fight involving more than 60 people took place near the club.

  In Chicago, cops are “cracking down on urban parties”[835] at urban night clubs because of “nasty, violent outbreaks.” Which every single person in Chicago knows really means black nightclubs. After one particularly violent week in August 2014 that featured shootings, murders, beatings, and other mayhem, many after closing, city officials started to pressure the owners to close the black clubs.

  “All the events were shut down yesterday,” said a club owner to the local CBS affiliate. “There was not one African-American event in the downtown area.”[836]

  In Rochester, the owner of the Main Street Armory stopped promoting hip-hop events because too many fights, too much violence, too many gunshots after the shows. From black people.[837]

  In Minneapolis, the let out fights at the same time are going full steam ahead. Even a local football star got caught up in one, by accident.[838] Let’s go to the Star-Tribune: “A crowded downtown Minneapolis club erupted in gunfire shortly before closing time early Saturday, the sudden hail of bullets wounding nine people, including a member of the Minnesota Vikings.”

  He lived. And oh yeah, that has been happening there a long time.

  This is a long list, with lots of videos, that also includes recent black mob violence during Let Out Fights in Rochester (two stabbed), New Haven (repeated gun shots), Saginaw (gunshots), Miamisburg, Ohio, Tallahassee, Myrtle Beach, Cleveland, Washington, D.C., York, Pa. Asbury Park, Piscataway, Elk Grove, Westfield, and on and on.

  Hundreds. I’ll post links to many of them at WhiteGirlBleedaLot.com: [839]

  Iowa?

  Again?

  Sure enough.

  Let’s finish with two let out fights during Christmas, 2014. Both involved violence against police.

  Near Houston, a police officer responding to reports of fighting and gunfire at a black nightclub – promoting Hood Night on Christmas Day -- shot and killed a partier after he refused to drop his gun. The crowd stopped fighting each other and attacked the police.[840]

  In Pawtucket, Rhode Island, police encountered a similar situation, minus the gun. But the black crowd was even rowdier, attacking three police, including a woman.[841]

  Chattanooga Story Backfires:

  What are 32 pictures worth?

  The reporters thought they were the good guys: Chattanooga is one of the most dangerous cities in America, and their series for The Times Free Press was creating pressure for local officials to do something about it.[842]

  They even offered a solution that was getting some results: Focus on the high value targets: The criminals doing the most damage. And that is what the city did.

  So by December of 2013, the paper was bragging about the initial results of its Speak No Evil series: Police arrested “32 of the worst of the worst” in this city of 176,000 and the newspaper obliged by putting their pictures on the front page.[843]

  Sniff, sniff: The smell of Pulitzer was in the air.

  Except for one thing: Everyone arrested, everyone in the pictures, was black.

  Dang.

  The pictures and story of the worst of the worst marked the end of the first phase of the paper’s anti-crime push: Recognize that “most violent crime comes from a very small pocket” of people. Then tell them to stop. Or move. Or get arrested.

  Two weeks later, the paper was ready for the next step: Organize a meeting to convince residents in high-crime neighborhoods (now they have me speaking in euphemisms) to give up the code of silence and start calling police when they see a crime.

  But the largely black crowd of 200 wanted something altogether different: To its credit, the Times Free Press reported that too: The forum, on video, [844]

  quickly turned into a diatribe about prejudice and racism in Chattanooga. A number of comments revealed a strong belief that the black community has been treated unfairly by whites. Several speakers referred specifically to the November arrest of 32 black men that police called the "worst of the worst" criminals in Chattanooga.

  "Don't just single out our kids," one black man said, speaking into the microphone. "Are they the only ones that commit crime?" he asked to cheers and hollers.

  The focus of the forum was the so-called High Point initiative, named after a North Carolina town where the approach reduced crime.

  That did not matter to Concerned Citizens for Justice. Members of the group believe that white racism is behind the pove
rty and injustice that creates so much violent crime. And that white people often commit similar crimes, but the police ignore them.

  Just like our buddy John Conyers said a few pages into this book.

  Members of the group packed the meeting and they were in no mood to listen to the newspaper’s facts: “Of the 122 shooting victims in Chattanooga from Jan. 1 through Nov. 21 of that year, 114 were black, six were white and two were Hispanic, according to figures provided by police. Of the 63 known suspects, only one was white.”

  The paper patiently reported that “Kevin Muhammad, a Nation of Islam youth worker, said the white community also has a code of silence. He also compared the High Point Initiative to the days when police would round up slaves. When he did, much of the crowd cheered.”

  The Concerned Citizens for Justice posted comments live from the forum at its FaceBook page: “CCJ member, Janelle Jackson, bringing up the history of "no snitch culture" and that race is a part of this conversation because we know that regardless of what has been told to us, the "worst of the worst" in this city are NOT 32 black men.”

  The CCJ rejected the idea that the Code of Silence had anything to do with crime. Or that the disproportionate amount of black people involved in violent crime has anything to with it either: Other than the fact that black people are victims of relentless white racism.[845]

  We find it very troubling that the “War on Drugs,” racial sentencing and arrest disparities, police brutality, income and access inequality—racism and poverty— were scarcely addressed while the bulk of investigation and blame fall on the community’s “code of silence.”

  The NAACP joined in with a lukewarm statement, agreeing that crime is a problem, but so is racism, poverty and racial disparities on arrests and crime and imprisonment.

  The paper recognized that fighting crime might not be as easy as finding criminals and locking them up: “The hurt and anger that echoed through the auditorium suggested that Mayor Andy Berke's new violence reduction initiative faces an uphill battle among the very people it's intended to help.”

 

‹ Prev