Diversity vs. Safety And Honesty
(contd.): The Charlottesville Hate Crimes Reach the Establishment Ideological
Converter
By
Sam Francis
Nothing more clearly reveals the hypocrisy of the
whole concept of "hate crimes" than the contortions of
the police and city government of Charlottesville,
Virginia, in trying to avoid charging 10 blacks accused
of assaulting and beating
several whites with racial
hatred—unless it's the contortion of the press in trying
to
avoid seeing hate where the press doesn't want to
see it.
In Charlottesville the 10 blacks—all but one
adolescents—are accused of beating and in at least one
case robbing the whites, who are students at the
University of Virginia and include males and
females, in incidents between last September and January
of this year. As will appear shortly, the crimes were
almost certainly motivated by black animosity toward whites—hate
crimes—but that's not how either the local powerbrokers
nor the national media want to see it—or
want you to see it. The attacks are a big issue in
Charlottesville, but not so big for the Washington
Post, which managed to ignore them entirely for
nearly a month.
When the Post did alert the Northern Virginia
region it covers, it also managed to distort what
happened and why. The Post's coverage of the
Charlottesville attacks was dumped in the Metro section,
[College
Town Confronts Issues of Race, Washington Post,
February 27, 2002Page B01], which immediately tells us
that "hate" (racial animosity) is not the issue. If hate
were the issue, the story would be on the front page—at
least so it was when a black, James Byrd, was murdered
by whites in Jasper, Texas in 1998, and the Post
wouldn't follow a double standard, would it?
The Post started off its account of what it
called the "sometimes-brutal assaults" (sometimes, you
see, attacking people and beating them up isn't brutal,
so not all these attacks are really very serious anyway)
by telling us that "police believe" the victims were
beaten up "just for the thrill of it." (One would think
that beating people up "just for the thrill of it" is by
definition always-brutal, but let it pass.) In fact the
Post is wrong.
Police do not "believe" the victims were beaten up
"just for the thrill of it." As the Post later
admits, "a police investigator [originally] announced
that three of the suspects said they had chosen targets
because they looked different." Well, better, but still
not exactly. What Charlottesville police Lt. J.W. Gibson
actually
told Media General News Service in a Feb. 3
interview was that "assailants did say the victims were
chosen on the basis of race."
Leave aside also that "looking different" and race
are not the same thing. Lt. Gibson was citing what the
suspects themselves had said—not leaping to a conclusion
or inferring from evidence—so it seemed pretty clear
that Charlottesville had a hate crime on its hands. But
as the Post also explains, "the police chief
hurried to say that the investigation was continuing,
that more students could be charged as accessories and
that it is premature to assign motive." Why was that, do
you think? Have the black suspects recanted their
admission of racial motivation? No one says so.
What happened was that the NAACP and the usual
squadron of black clergymen descended on the
mayor's office to explain to everyone that race just
couldn't be the motivation. The Rev. Alvin Edwards, who
had three of the suspects in his congregation, says "class,
not race, lies at the root of the assaults." How he
could know that is never clear, but no one really seems
to care. "We know they don't hate white people," a black
teenager told the Post. Do they hate rich people,
then?
Of course the evidence, as Lt. Gibson originally
presented it, shows clearly that the suspects themselves
admitted that racial animosity was their motive, but
neither the Post nor the police nor the city
government nor (are you kidding?) the NAACP or local
blacks are willing to accept that. The conclusion on
which they insist, formulated entirely apart from the
evidence and the facts, is that race had nothing to do
with it. It was "thrills"; it was robbery; it was
"class"; it wasn't really brutal anyway, and it's
premature to say what the motive was, and it certainly
wasn't hate, because today the racial-political
dogma, enforced by
all authorities from the White House down to City
Hall [send
Charlottesville Mayor Blake Caravati email],
is that blacks cannot be motivated by racial hatred and
cannot commit hate crimes. Only whites can commit hate
crimes.
That is precisely why the Charlottesville attacks
expose the lies and racial-political power agenda behind
the whole concept of "hate crimes" so clearly - the lie
that only whites are driven by racial hate and that only
non-whites can be victims of it.
And that is also why you haven't heard of the
Charlottesville crimes—and probably won't hear about
them much more.
Sam Francis webpage
COPYRIGHT 2001 CREATORS
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March 04, 2002