Pages

Thursday, June 25, 2015

YOU WON’T HEAR ABOUT THIS: Racist Guns Down Three People In Atlanta

atlanta
by Kenn Daily
Clash Daily Contributor
Remember this?
Probably you don’t.
Nkosi Thandiwe, an African migrant, gunned down three women in Atlanta because they were white.
One of the victims was killed, another was paralyzed, and a third was injured.
The racist attacks occurred in 2011. Thandiwe was convicted and sentenced to life in prison two years later.
The attack received sparse coverage outside Atalanta.

There was no media circus, no Geraldo feigning to be outraged; no Glenn Beck making a trek to Atlanta to demonstrate his anti-racism.
The was no wall-to-wall coverage on CNN, MSNBC, or Fox News.
There was no statement from Barack Obama blaming guns for the crime. The Confederate flag was not dragged into the conversation, and there was no nationwide sentiment of guilt over black racism.
Thandiwe’s hatred for white people was made apparent by his own words. He claimed to have formed his anti-white perspective while enrolled at the University of West Georgia.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Thandiwe’s hatred for whites:n

“I was trying to prove a point that Europeans had colonized the world, and as a result of that, we see a lot of evil today,” he said.
“In terms of slavery, it was something that needed to be answered for. I was trying to spread the message of making white people mend.”
He said the night before the shooting, he attended a so-called “Peace Party” intended to address his concerns about helping the black community find equal footing, but two white people were there.
“I was upset,” Thandiwe said. “I was still upset Friday. I took the gun to work because I was still upset from Thursday night.”
He even admitted to earlier that day getting angry enough on the job to shoot his supervisor. “What my boss said to me …,” he told the jury, “that rage almost made me pull out my gun on him.”
There was no national outrage over the perennial flood of hate propaganda flowing into the minds of students at America’s colleges and universities.
There was no memorial built at the site of the murder commemorating the life of Thandiwe’s victim, Brittney Watts; nor will there ever be.
There were no writers hustling screen plays in Hollywood hoping to capitalize on the hate.
There is a reason.
The tragic episode in Atlanta simply does not fit the cultural Marxism narrative that white people are the oppressing bourgeois and non-white are the perennially oppressed proletariat. Consequently, the racist attack never gained media traction and has subsequently been forgotten as just another footnote in America’s criminal history.

No comments:

Post a Comment