╌>

Ten Times Progressive Racists Staged Hate Crimes Driving the narrative one race hoax at a time.

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  xxjefferson51  •  8 years ago  •  1 comments

Ten Times Progressive Racists Staged Hate Crimes Driving the narrative one race hoax at a time.
In a post-Black Lives Matter America, where anyone white is inherently privileged and therefore racist, hate crimes are on the rise. But in reality, the racially charged movement is responsible for much of the increase. Their secret crimes are driving the narrative of a racist, white America one hoax at a time.

Of course, this is nothing new. Black Lives Matter is simply carrying the torch for those that came before them, like Al Sharpton, who is well known for perpetrating his own hate crime hoaxes. That's how he has made his career. Just remember Sharpton's defense of black teenager Tawana Brawley, who wrongly accused white officers of rape. Or more recently, his backing of the black prostitute/stripper who falsely accused three white Duke University lacrosse players of rape. That woman is now serving time after fatally stabbing her boyfriend. Isn't it curious how Sharpton always sides with the actual criminal?

But that is the same spirit behind these race hoaxes and so we at TruthRevolt believe it's important to expose the charade. Below are at least 10 instances of the more egregious race hoaxes over the last few years. It should be no surprise that most of these occurred on college campuses.


1. Stick Figure Racism on College Campuses

Last month at Salisbury University in Maryland, a drawing of a hanged stick figure was found on a dry-erase board in the library. The word "nigger" and the hashtag "#WhitePower" were added for extra effect. The university quickly jumped into action to denounce this act of intolerance and launched an investigation, which then discovered that black students were responsible for the drawing.

Similarly in 2013, a hate crime was reported at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York when a student from the school's Bias Incident Response Team reported finding "F*** N*ggers" spray painted on student residences. Turns out it was the same student on the Bias Incident Response Team who reported it.


2. Black Lives Matter and Bomb Threats

In December of 2015, Kayla-Simone McKelvey, a black alumna of Kean University in New Jersey, attended a Black Lives Matter protest at her alma mater but apparently things were just too peaceful for her, so she ducked out midway through to shake things up a bit. She used the library's computer to create an anonymous racist Twitter account in order to send out a bomb threat and a shooting threat: "i will kill every black male and female at kean university," it read. She returned to the rally and started spreading the Twitter message among the crowd and through her personal Twitter page. The university condemned her actions saying, "We wholeheartedly respect and support activism, however, no cause or issue gives anyone the right to threaten the safety of others." As a student, McKelvey also made up a racism claim against the student organization and a professor.

3. Profiting from Fake Racism

In 2014, a black waitress at a Tennessee Red Lobster restaurant accused her white take-out customer of writing "nigger" on the total line of the bill. She posted a photo of it to Facebook and said: "This is what I got as a tip last night...so happy to live in the proud southern states...God Bless America, land of the free and home of the low class racists of Tennessee." Days after the photo went viral, the progressive blog Addicting Info started an online fundraiser and raised over $10,000 for the waitress. The accused man denied writing the racial slur and even hired a handwriting expert who concluded the writing didn't match. The waitress said she now believes he didn't write it either, but that was after she cashed the check!

4. Hallucinations of Racism

In 2015, the University of Missouri was a hotbed for Black Lives Matter protests. The round-the-clock protests and voluntary starvation must have caused some of the students to begin seeing things. A message was sent out on Twitter by the black student body president warning students to "take precautions" and "stay away from the windows in residence halls." The reason? "The KKK has been confirmed to be sighted on campus"; they were throwing bricks and the National Guard and state troopers had been called in. Mass hysteria ensued and more rumors of bricks being thrown spread. The story crumbled after campus police debunked the entire thing, saying no incidents of bricks thrown or a KKK presence could be confirmed. In addition to the mythical men in white robes, the National Guard was also never on Mizzou's campus.

In another moment of "seeing what you want to believe," the metal frames of three paper lanterns were found hanging from a tree on the campus of the University of Delaware in 2015 and somehow were misconstrued as nooses. Campus police informed the entire campus that they were investigating this "hate crime." University President Nancy Targett sent out a message on Twitter, encouraging students to "stand together against intolerance." Targett believed the "nooses" were placed in the tree as payback for BLM protesters interrupting a conservative speech on campus. But as it turns out, the lantern frames had been hanging in the tree for over a week and time and weather had disintegrated the paper. The president never apologized for her overreaction but instead organized a meeting to "continue the dialogue" on what the school has learned about racism... from an incident that wasn't racist.

5. Faked Racial Assault

Three black female students at the University of Albany reported being victims of a racial assault by a group of white men and women inside a bus in early 2016. The campus, of course, erupted in protest and created a media frenzy. Even Hillary Clinton sent out a solidarity tweet for the "victims." Yet, video evidence, from multiple sources and angles, proved that it was in fact the three women that were the aggressors and showed them assaulting a 19-year-old white woman. The white men they accused were actually trying to break up the fight.

6. Black Church Arson Hoax

Shortly after the Charleston, South Carolina church murders, America entered into a renewed pursuit of erasing any vestige of the South. The war on the Confederacy had begun once again. And with that, the media began reporting on an "uptick" in attacks against black churches in the South. Report after report of black churches being burned to the ground was regular fodder on the nightly news and in print and online publications. Instead of finding out the cause, though, the sensationalist headlines linked all of the churches together as if caused by white arsonists. The media finally quieted on this "breaking news" as it became apparent that the fires were most likely accidental, due to electrical faults and lightning strikes, NOT criminal intent.

In Houston, Texas that year, a mosque was burned to the ground and Islamophobia was blamed. It seemed like an open-and-shut case, as the media regularly churn out accusations of right-wing hate against Muslims. But surprise, surprise -- a member of the mosque, a devout Muslim man, was found to be the arsonist. So much for reporting the truth. http://www.truthrevolt.org/news/ten-times-progressive-racists-staged-hate-crimes

Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
link   seeder  XXJefferson51    8 years ago

This all begs the question: If inherent, systemic racism is indeed the epidemic in the United States they say it is, why is there ever a need to create it out of thin air like these and so many other examples?  

 
 

Who is online


devangelical
Gsquared
Gazoo


86 visitors