A large segment of black culture is a total mess; just listen to Rap "music" 
some time

and you will learn all you need to know.  But this class of people, my best 
estimate

is 30% to 40% of African Americans, cannot bring themselves to admit the 
obvious,

especially since our illustrious mass media is beholden to the Left wing of the 
Democratic Party,

and reflexively blames those 'evil white people' for all of their ills.


When will this garbage end?  Answer: It will take clinically honest reporting

and education to the facts to do so, and we aren't about to see any such thing

as long as the current political system prevails. And it sure in hell will not 
end

as long as a libertarian mindset prevails within the Republican Party with its

laissez faire attitude toward just about everything. As if a doctor was to tell 
you,

"don't do anything, your tumor will take care of itself if you give the free 
market

the opportunity to work things out."


We cannot solve any problems at all when people rely on dysfunctional ideologies

to guide them in making decisions.



B.






__________________________________________


Spectator


Black lives matter, until they’re ended by black people
Andy Ngo and Wael 
Taji<https://spectator.us/author/dummy_vndmhcnkbh6saztne08h3ipgd6vkmsexample-com/>
[https://3h7pwd17k2h42n17eg2j7vdq-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/jazmine.jpg?auto=compress,enhance,format&crop=faces,entropy,edges&fit=crop&w=717&h=477]
A poster for a Justice for Jazmine rally in Houston

Andy Ngo and Wael 
Taji<https://spectator.us/author/dummy_vndmhcnkbh6saztne08h3ipgd6vkmsexample-com/>

11 January 2019

11:10 AM

  *   
<https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=https://spectator.us/jazmine-barnes-black-lives-matter/&text=Black%20lives%20matter,%20until%20they’re%20ended%20by%20black%20people>
  *   
<https://facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://spectator.us/jazmine-barnes-black-lives-matter/>
  *   
<https://linkedin.com/shareArticle?mini=true&url=https://spectator.us/jazmine-barnes-black-lives-matter/>
  *   
<mailto:?subject=Black%20lives%20matter,%20until%20they’re%20ended%20by%20black%20people&body=Read%20Black%20lives%20matter,%20until%20they’re%20ended%20by%20black%20people%20-%20https://spectator.us/jazmine-barnes-black-lives-matter/>

On December 30, seven-year-old Jazmine Barnes was killed in a brazen drive-by 
shooting in Houston while in her family car, driven by her mother. Barnes’s 
teenage sister provided the sole description of the shooter to media and 
police: ‘He was white and had blue 
eyes.<https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/We-re-missing-a-piece-to-our-puzzle-13507443.php?smid=nytcore-ios-share>’
 In interviews, the family expressed fears that they had been targeted because 
of their race. The response was immediate: national media, celebrities, 
politicians, and activists launched a crusade to find the racist white killer.

Within days, activist Shaun King and his attorney Lee Merritt used social media 
to raise $100,000 as reward money for information leading to an arrest. Houston 
Texans star wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins committed one of his paychecks to the 
Barnes family. Shaquille O’Neal pledged to pay for the funeral. A GoFundMe page 
raised over $82,000 — far surpassing its initial goal of $6,500. On Twitter, 
celebrities and racial justice activists tweeted about the murder using the 
hashtag #JusticeforJazmine and #SayHerName.

The public outcry had an impact. Over the weekend, Harris County police 
announced a major breakthrough in the case: two men had been arrested — one 
charged — on suspicion of murder. Yet neither have blue eyes, nor white skin. 
Both are black. Whereas the family believed they were victims of a hate crime, 
suspect Eric Black Jr. admitted before investigators that mistaken 
identity<https://www.khou.com/article/news/crime/suspect-fight-at-club-led-to-mistaken-identity-shooting-of-jazmine-barnes/285-626756963>
 was to blame. What’s more, in the wake of this surprising turn of events, 
those who made the loudest cries for justice became conspicuously quiet. Others 
maintained their outrage by resorting to a conspiratorial 
tone<https://twitter.com/shaunking/status/1082105686782369793>, sometimes 
questioning<https://twitter.com/tony_1079/status/1082058506482737152> the 
police’s sequence of events.


It’s clear why the narrative around Jazmine’s murder should attract so much 
furor. The life of a black child being taken by a racist in a post-Charleston, 
post-Pittsburgh<https://spectator.us/robert-bowers-disturbing-messages/> 
America should anger us. Yet it’s less clear why this furor should suddenly 
desist upon the revelation that the suspected killer is not white, but black. 
Black lives do matter — but the backlog of ignored tragedies in Houston similar 
to Jazmine’s case suggests that attention given to black lives by some within 
the activist movement is more selective than it seems.

In February 2017, eight-year-old De’Maree 
Adkins<https://abc13.com/news/gunman-opens-fire-on-car-after-crash-kills-8-year-old/1772628/>
 was killed by bullets that struck her while she slept in the backseat of her 
mother’s car. In June 2017, Messiah 
Marshall<https://abc13.com/news/man-charged-in-death-of-10-month-old-boy-denied-bond/2131802/>,
 a 10-month-old baby, died in his father’s arms after being shot outside his 
family’s apartment complex. The next month, 14-year-old O’Cyrus 
Breaux<https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Prosecutors-expected-to-outline-case-against-11303416.php>
 was shot and killed at his own birthday party. Within days, he was joined by 
14-year-old Jaquan Neal. Then in January 2018, 16-year-old Stephen Verdell 
Jr.<https://abc13.com/sketch-released-in-deadly-shooting-of-teen-at-bus-stop/3076728/>
 was shot and killed after leaving the Victory Prep Academy. In March, 
eight-year-old Tristian 
Hutchins<https://cw39.com/2018/03/29/watch-live-hpd-chief-acevedo-speaks-after-passing-of-8-year-old-drive-by-shooting-victim-tristian-hutchins/>
 became the victim of a drive by shooting while sitting in a car with his 
sister. She survived with a bullet injury in the leg, but Tristian died after a 
month-long battle at Memorial Hermann Hospital.


Though all similar to Jasmine’s case and in proximity to one another, these 
murders garnered a different response — if there was a response at all. 
National media didn’t provide blanket coverage. They were never mentioned by Mr 
King. Their names didn’t trend on Twitter. Activists didn’t crowdsource 
investigations. And their families didn’t receive any donations from 
celebrities. Why don’t these black children matter to ‘racial justice’ 
activists? Because without exception, their killers are also known or believed 
to be black.

Racial violence is a fact American society contends with, and over recent 
decades the media has made strides in responsibly reporting on cases involving 
historically marginalized groups. Yet, in today’s share-first-read-later world 
of social media, this interest toward racial issues has produced a perverse 
incentive. It is race, not our common humanity, that now plays a central role 
in galvanizing outrage over tragedies. Thus with black suspects in custody and 
the ‘white-on-black crime’ aspect gone, there’s nothing left to care about — 
leaving public interest to quickly evaporate.


It is bad enough that those with influence only stood by Jazmine as long as the 
racial narrative seemed true. It is worse still that this failure is 
perpetuated repeatedly throughout an informational ecosystem that exploits our 
issue-centric concerns and short attention spans. The easiness — and 
profitability — of manipulating our fears over racist violence has serious 
consequences for social tensions, particularly in a nation so bitterly divided 
as America in 2019.


This has been manifestly true for Jazmine’s case, where discussions of the 
murder frequently carried a tone of racially charged aggravation. A Salon 
<https://www.salon.com/2019/01/04/if-young-jazmine-barnes-is-a-victim-of-domestic-terror-is-white-america-ready-to-own-it/>
 column by University of Baltimore Professor D. Watkins called for ‘white 
America’ to accept responsibility for the ‘terrorist murder’ that took 
Jazmine’s life. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D., Texas) urged the public 
to treat the killing as a ‘hate crime’ before any motive was established. 
Meanwhile, relatives of a white man misidentified by Mr King as a possible 
suspect were left in fear for their lives after being 
threatened<https://abc13.com/family-of-wrongfully-accused-man-receiving-violent-threats/5032056/>
 on Facebook: ‘Someone is going to rape, torture, and murder the women and 
children in your family.’ Although racialized reporting may be good for clicks, 
it has dangerous consequences for those caught by the backlash.


There is a balance to be struck between standing forthrightly by victims of 
racism, and proceeding cautiously when coverage can have serious social 
implications. It’s not just the facts that are at stake, but our social fabric 
too.


Andy Ngo is an editor at Quillette. Wael Taji is a graduate student at Peking 
University.

-- 
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