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A Different Drummer

Alleged Black-on-White Attack
A Big Misunderstanding

By Nicholas Stix
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A Different Drummer

April 28, 2005

Mislabeling

A great many misconceptions have been spread regarding an alleged incident that allegedly occurred in Marine Park, Brooklyn, allegedly on March 30. That was when 20-30 African-American young people allegedly attacked four white females, allegedly shouting “black power,” “white crackers,” and “Martin Luther King.” Many people across the country have used terms like “racist,” “hate crime,” and “bias attack” to describe the alleged incident. Such terms are obviously false. As progressive thinkers have long taught us, it is impossible for anyone Black to be guilty of racism. On the other hand, as progressives have explained, it is almost impossible for anyone white NOT to be guilty of racism. Hate crime legislation was enacted, in order to help people of color against caucasians.

NYPD Deputy Inspector Kevin McGinn, the commanding officer of the 63rd Precinct, had the right attitude, when he said, “This is not being looked at as a bias crime.” However, Inspector McGinn was overruled by the racist city corporation counsel.

New York Post reporters Angelina Cappiello and Patrick Gallahue also had the right attitude, in suggesting that only white supremacists could be angry at the African victims.

Selective Enforcement

Every day in New York, indeed, across Amerikkka, African-Americans of all ages must confront white racial insensitivity. For example, the alleged attackers had requested that the alleged victims (and how do we know they didn’t fake their so-called injuries?!?) let them use the basketball court. By the caucasians’ own admission, they refused to hand over the court to the Africans! How much does a young African-American have to take in this country, before she loses her mind, and just goes off?! And why should these proud, young Black women be prosecuted? Other proud African-Americans confront racist whites every day, without being prosecuted.

The Need for Education

Instead of being criminalized, the alleged attackers need counseling. Caring, committed, African-American professionals need to explain to these young women that they should avoid confrontations with european-american females attending Catholic school, as the latter tend to have racist relatives on the police force and in the fire department, who have not yet been neutralized. Tell the young sisters to bide their time in such cases. Eventually, the uniformed services will be cleansed of such stains.

The professionals need to emphasize to the sisters that it is safest to confront racist, white males, if you’ll pardon the redundancy. African-American women virtually never go to jail for confronting racist, white males.

The Real Criminals

As New York Post reporter Leonard Greene, a truly righteous brother, explained, the publisher of the Brooklyn Skyline newspaper is guilty of a “hate crime.” The Skyline published a “one-sided” story that made the African sisters look guilty, and published angry letters by a bunch of racist, white crackers. As Brother Greene suggested, as with any hate crime, the authorities need to arrest the publisher of the Skyline, the newspaper’s entire staff, and the letter writers. The government needs further to shut down every Web site that has spread this defamation against the African race. The First Amendment does not exist to spread hate. The spreading of such insensitivity cannot and will not be tolerated. No tolerance for intolerance! Where are Sonny Carson and Khalid Muhammad, when you really need them?!

Ultimately, one must ask how any African can be prosecuted in America. The white man’s law doesn’t apply to Africans.

Peace!






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A Different Drummer is the New York-based web-samizdat of Nicholas Stix. An award-winning journalist, Stix provides news and commentary on the realities of race, education, and urban life that are censored by the mainstream media and education elites. His work has appeared in the (New York) Daily News, New York Post, Washington Times, Newsday, the American Enterprise, weekly standard, Insight, Chronicles, Ideas on Liberty, Middle American News, Front Page Magazine, Academic Questions, CampusReports, and countless other publications. Read Stix' weekly column in Mens' News Daily, and at other fine Web sites. E-Mail him your comments and feedback at [email protected]




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Copyright 2005 by Nicholas Stix. All rights reserved.
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