Posted on 05/30/2014 1:06:31 AM PDT by ComputerGuy
Black Beach Week used to get all the glory: Every Memorial Day weekend, 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.
snip...
Last year, a local radio personality said all the ruckus was just one big misunderstanding. She could speak for all of those who still refuse to believe that black mob violence exists out of proportion on Memorial Day. And every other day: "You had many more people up that way than previous years," said Jill Tracey. "You have that many young black people together at any one time, it frightens white people."
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
“And everyone but a brave few are too cowed to speak out about these roving black gangs, both male and female. “
It’s odd, but I distinctly remember you and I having a bit of a go over the wisdom, or lack thereof, of electing unprincipled RINOs, just for the sake of winning.
I would point out that your statement above, while true, is what one gets when one places the need to ‘win’ over principle. One ‘wins’ nothing.
Excellent question.
I’d like to see the answer, also.
The media didn't say anything about the Clearwater Beach shootings on Memorial Day.
It is sad and terrifying. It is only a short step before having something like the machete massacres that happened in Africa.
The animus towards Obama and his patent incompetency goes far beyond his racial heritage, and I believe will eventually extend to most of the black community.
Burying theses stories is like trying to put out some hot coal by covering them with straw.
He is every negative stereotype of blacks. He is lazy, belligerent, a drunkard, not very smart, lives off of affirmative action, wasteful, over concerned with sports, and a decisive racist.
Those who say that opposition against Obama is because he is black don’t seem to understand that he embodies many of the negative stereotypes of blacks under a smoothly enunciated persona. It’s because of how he acts and what he stands for.
“.....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. “.........
Street Rats just doing what they do? Supposed to be a nice weekend in Chicago, please stand by..........
There is an organized "gathering," so the area has many more people than usual.
I'm not buying the "widespread" adjective. The organized events are concentrated in just a few cities.
Subconsciously they probably do, but their suppressed racism comes out in projectionism.
Newark is a toilet, but they spare no expense in police protection for the small downtown (at least between 9 and 5). Everyone else in NJ knows it is an unsafe area, so the media blackout on crime doesn’t help them. They just had their minor league baseball team fold after probably a dozen years in business; at the time it opened they pretended it would keep white people on the welfare reservation spending money, but it really was a third-rate product (unaffiliated nobodies).
“Burying theses stories is like trying to put out some hot coal by covering them with straw.”
Here in northern NJ everyone knows what Newark NJ is because of problems with savages raiding along the frontier of the welfare reservation; the problem is when visitors arrive who don’t know better. Burying these stories endangers lives.
I was a young man then (26) and coming from a Southern city, I had never seen bars on residential windows before. I just could not imagine myself living in that kind of environment.
I had come from Birmingham, which in my childhood and youth, was a very safe city, thanks to the infamous Bull Connor, the Police Commissioner. You could literally go downtown to the skidrow section in the wee hours of the morning and be perfectly safe. The Birmingham cops were that good; the bad guys greatly feared them—and for good reason.
I understand; the bars are there because there are no armed residents inside. At this point people living in most parts of Newark are simply prisoners on a welfare reservation.
At times I am so immensely grateful for being who I am and being where I am. Life could have made one enormous turn for the worst for me and I could be living in a hellhole. And believe me, I know that New Jersey is not the only place here in the USA where life is definitely not good.
New Jersey was a great place to grow up, but it is definitely a dying state now. The only young Americans staying are those on the gubmint employment gravy train.
It really got bad only in the last twenty years or so; before that, NJ had a lot of opportunities and didn’t have to import Asians and Hispanics to fill the housing & schools.
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