That
almost goes hand-in-hand with a really interesting aspect of BLM and police protests and shit in general. It's not
quite in the same ballpark, but it's close enough to remind me that I forgot to bring it up. Have you ever noticed that regardless of what area of the country you're in, all the cops on the police force will be proportionately "matched" to the demographics of that location? Social Justice-y types like to say that blacks are under-represented in the police force because the police force will be like, 10-20% black in most towns, but that's because most towns have about a 10-20% black population. If 50% of the police force was black in a town with a black population that made up 5% of the total,
that'd be weird.
What
isn't proportional are the prosecutors. Prosecutors are overwhelmingly white in most any jurisdictions, but that's never an issue, is it? When was the last time anyone saw someone even
mention the prosecutors? Police have
very little to do with the black prison population, for example. Yeah, they can go out and make all the arrests that they want, but it's up to the prosecutors to decide what to do with them afterwards, and the prosecutors are the ones throwing these people into jail and throwing the key away. The cops aren't locking up black men for inordinately long periods of time,
that's not their job.
So when you lean back and
really look at the big picture, what's happening during these riots? Because I see a bunch of white prosecutors going
way out of their way to keep letting white rioters rotate through the system as quickly as possible, so they can get right back onto the streets to burn down black neighborhoods.
Strip out all of the P.R. and all of the slogans and really look at what's going on:
- Black-owned businesses and neighborhoods are being smashed and burned to the ground.
- The overwhelmingly-white people responsible for this have the support of the local politicians and the local prosecutors, who are also overwhelmingly white, because they're let out of their jail cells almost as soon as the police can throw them in.
- Any black person who tries to stop them or speaks out against what they're doing is beaten, stabbed, shot, or even outright murdered.
- All-the-while, they're screaming about overtly pro-segregation policies.
Did I just describe Antifa, or the KKK? One of the biggest strengths that the KKK had at the time is the same one that Antifa benefits from every time that they go out and riot: All of the local politicians and prosecutors were on their side, so no matter how much they smashed and burned and ransacked, the prosecutors would slam their stamp down on the release papers and right back out they'd go, no matter how many times the cops rounded them up.
If this wasn't plastered in BLM stickers from one wall to the next, people would be looking at this and rightfully calling it white supremacy. One of the best skills that you can ever learn is to stop paying attention to what people
say and start paying attention to what people
do. If you strip out the slogans, strip out all of the Black Lives Matter and just look at what Antifa
is and what they're
doing, you start to see Antifa much more clearly.
If you go purely by their actions, it's painfully obvious that they're not here to help black people, and they don't think their lives matter. The reason that Trump had to designate Antifa as a terrorist organization and deputize the local police and National Guard is the same reason that the KKK had to have special laws written specifically go to after them:
The local prosecutorial and political bodies were on their side.