The “Racism” Bubble

Now more than ever White advocates must continue to spread the good word, that it’s okay to be proud to be White, that it’s okay to work toward racial longevity and to secure the upward path of European Americans.

Does anyone who isn’t in the business of hurling accusations of “Racist!” take such charges seriously anymore? When the people who cry “racism” for a living are more racially bigoted than the people who individually and collectively stand accused, the term’s primary function becomes the perpetuation of a grand farce—one that White Americans are increasingly recognizing and rejecting.

The media-fueled racial hysteria over a mixed-race Florida Hispanic’s self-defense shooting of a young black troublemaker named Trayvon may go down as the moment when “racism” officially jumped the shark. The racial grievance industry injected the pre-packaged narrative of pervasive White Racism to stir up a national Civil Rights crusade over the 7 percent of black gunfire deaths that are caused by non-black gunmen.

The manufactured cause célèbre climaxed in political surrealism when Barack Obama addressed the nation. The half-White U.S. president, who seems to identify exclusively with his Black half, said following the acquittal of George Zimmerman that “Trayvon Martin could have been me.”

In his “Trayvon” lecture, Obama admitted that higher rates of violence persist within America’s African community. But he implied they were attributable to “a history” (of White oppression) “that doesn’t go away.” Apparently, Obama didn’t learn much actual history while on an Affirmative-Action ride at college thanks to his Black half. Fact: Young-Black-male crime rates were lower (and the presence of Black fathers was much higher) before it became politically popular to demonize Whites as “racists” and bestow blacks with legislated racial entitlements.

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2013-08-02