Friday, April 23, 2021

Anti-Semitic, Fake Jewish Webzine, the forward, Has Gone All in on black Nazism, Hired Two AA, black supremacist columnists, and is Celebrating the Show Trial Conviction of White Officer Derek Chauvin for the Drug Overdose Death of Violent Felon, George Floyd

By Nicholas Stix

I fisked the following “thing,” by a Tema Smith, and posted an essay-length comment at the end of it. But the gauleiter at the forward not only will not publish my comment, but based on their censorious guidelines, they will likely permablock me.

Note that for Smith, all charges against black malefactors are mere “allegations,” but any charge against a White is automatically true.

1. Opinion
“Tzedek, tzedek tirdof”: The Derek Chauvin verdict isn’t justice, but it’s a start By Tema Smith
April 20, 2021

In 2014, the murder [sic] of Eric Garner at the hands of a police officer was caught on camera, barely 10 minutes away from where my family lives on Staten Island.

In the bystander-caught video, you can hear Garner gasping, “I can’t breathe” 11 times as he lies with his face pressed into the sun-baked concrete. He lay unconscious on that sidewalk for seven minutes as police officers, and eventually EMTs, stood by.

[N.S.: His speaking meant he could breathe. Criminals say that all the time. The thing is, Tema Smith wants to get as many White cops as possible murdered by blacks. Doesn't she know that blacks constantly engage in "code-switching," and always lie to Whites? Let her deny the reality of "code-switching," and I'll get back to her.]

His alleged [sic] crime? Selling loose cigarettes.

Want real police reform after the Chauvin trial? Start with how they’re trained.
Robin Washington
April 21, 2021

In 2015, I cast my ballot in a special election for my congressional representation. The man who went on to win the seat, Daniel M. Donovan, Jr., was the same district attorney who failed to secure an indictment from the grand jury for Pantaleo. Garner’s killing, in a place so familiar to me — the place where my father grew up, my own congressional district — hit close to home. His final words, “I can’t breathe,” haunt me to this day.

Almost six years after Garner uttered those words, another unarmed Black man would be murdered over a thousand miles away, in Minneapolis, face pressed into the pavement with a knee on his neck.

His crime? Allegedly [sic] passing a fake $20 bill at the corner store.

His last words? Like Garner: “I can’t breathe.”

George Floyd’s murder [sic] led to an outpouring of anger and grief, with Americans of all races taking to the streets. Mass protests [sic] rocked the country. And Minnesota’s governor handed over the prosecution of Derek Chauvin, the police officer who knelt on Floyd’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds as bystanders begged him to stop, to Attorney General Keith Ellison, citing Minneapolis’s state representatives’ lack of confidence in county-level prosecutors.

<[Now, it’s nine minutes and 29 seconds; before that, it was eight minutes and 46 seconds. What’s next? Ten minutes and 20 seconds?]

The name George Floyd would become synonymous with a societal awakening [sic] about police brutality. His death became the catalyst for the most ambitious legislation tackling policing reform in my lifetime, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.

As the verdict was announced in that Minneapolis courtroom, I broke down in tears. [N.S.: Shame on her. Some “journalist.” Then again, black supremacists, like other members of the racial-socialist alliance, revel in their lack of professionalism.] It should have been a foregone conclusion that Derek Chauvin, who was fired from the police force shortly after Floyd’s death, would be found guilty on all charges. After all, we all saw the video of him kneeling on Floyd’s neck as Floyd’s life drained out of him.

[N.S.: The video. Tema Smith is such a pathetic, racist liar that she would never address the toxicological evidence, or the fact that Officer Chauvin was simply following his Police Academy training. Facts mean nothing to her. That’s why she immediately called for the railroading of the hero White cop in Ohio.]

But the verdict wasn’t foregone at all.

Accountability for state and extrajudicial vigilante violence against black people has not come easily in America. Lynching has not yet ceased to be part of the fabric of the black experience. [N.S.: Racist liar.] How often it happens, we do not know — no comprehensive statistics exist. But we do know that even where graphic proof has existed, criminal charges, much less convictions, have been nearly impossible to attain.

the same talk black parents have with their kids must end now by the Forward

In 1955, 14-year-old Emmett Till was abducted from his great-uncle’s house and lynched after allegedly [sic] sexually harassing a married white woman in a Mississippi store. The woman’s husband, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Wilam [sic], beat, tortured [sic] and mutilated [sic] the teen before eventually shooting him in the head and sinking his body in the Tallahatchie River. Decades later, Till’s accuser recanted.

[N.S.: Liar.]

At Till’s funeral in his hometown of Chicago, his mother, Mamie Till Bradley, insisted on an open casket. “I think everybody needed to know what had happened to Emmett Till,” she told PBS.

[N.S.: There have been thousands of White Emmett Tills, and the world needs to know what happened to them.]

Yet a jury would acquit Till’s murderers, who months later were paid a handsome sum of money to publish their graphic confessions in Look Magazine. The jury, for their part, claimed that they would have returned a “not guilty” verdict even faster had they not stopped their deliberations for a soda break.

65 years later, we watched as another verdict was returned quickly. But this time, it was a resounding “guilty on all charges.”

Derek Chauvin’s bail was summarily revoked and he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs. This time, everybody knew what had happened to George Floyd — and the man responsible [sic] was held accountable.

But the verdict was not justice. It was just a collective scream of enough.

Gianna Floyd, Floyd’s 6-year-old daughter, famously [?] said while participating in the protests in the wake of her father’s death last summer: “Daddy changed the world.” This change is only just starting to unfold.

Tzedek, tzedek tirdof” — “Justice, justice shall you pursue,” the famous words from Deuteronomy, has become something of a rallying cry of Jewish [sic] activism. The verse in full reads: “Justice, justice shall you pursue, that you may thrive and occupy the land that the LORD your God is giving you.”

[N.S.: They’re counterfeit Jews. They’re anti-Semitic communists who use Judaism as a front.]

The pursuit of justice isn’t a choice. It is the condition of moving beyond mere survival into thriving. Justice is on the horizon and every last one of us is called forward to improve material circumstances not just for ourselves, but for everyone who lives among us.

[N.S.: Then why do you celebrate a show trial?]

Chauvin’s conviction is not the end of the pursuit. Rather, it must be seen as just another beginning. Since George Floyd’s murder [sic], 181 black people have been killed by police in America. Just as the verdict was being handed down in the Chauvin trial, Makiyah Bryant, a 15-year-old black girl in Columbus, Ohio, was shot dead in the street by the police. [N.S.: newsweek asserted that, according to the Census Bureau, America is 78% White. newsweek lied. The Census Bureau says that, including Hispanic Whites, America is 72.0% White.

In reality, America has a much lower White percentage than that, because of 20-million-30 million odd non-White illegal aliens that the Census Bureau won’t officially count, until they are amnestied.

As for Makiyah Bryant, she was killed while attempting to murder another girl, but neither truth nor morality matter to Tema Smith.]

On Thursday, Duante Wright, shot last week during a traffic stop miles away from where Chauvin was sitting trial, will be buried. George Floyd’s girlfriend Courteney Ross knew Wright — she was a dean in his high school. [N.S.: And how is this relevant?] The officer who pulled the trigger has been charged with manslaughter. The police chief has resigned.

Chauvin’s conviction may represent a turning point in holding police accountable for the deaths of so many black people, which the prompt laying of charges against the officer who shot Wright suggests. That officer will face a trial. Evidence will be presented. A jury will deliberate. And perhaps, like in the Chauvin trial, a guilty verdict will be returned. But once again, this is hardly a foregone conclusion. Accountability in the extrajudicial killings of black men never has never been guaranteed.

[N.S.: The only extrajudicial killing of a black “man” Tema Smith has cited, was that of Emmitt Till, which had nothing to do with the police. She simply assumes that each White policeman has a duty to die, at the hands of black criminals, and that each black criminal has a license to kill White policemen. (By the way, that was my title—“A License to Kill, a Duty to Die”—for an article on the George Zimmerman case eight or nine years ago for VDARE, but an editor stole it for one of his own essays under a different pseudonym elsewhere. Because he was using yet a different pen name, I didn’t stumble across the theft until several years later.)]

But even if she is found guilty, holding police accountable will never be synonymous with justice. Nothing short of addressing the material conditions of black Americans that have led to these violent encounters can ever be.

[N.S.: But since the 1950s, tens of trillions of dollars have been confiscated from Whites, and continue to be confiscated from them, and given to undeserving blacks. Tema Smith will never address this fact, because she’s a lying, genocidal, black supremacist.]

And so as we breathe a collective sigh of relief over the Chauvin verdict, let us gird ourselves for the fight ahead against systemic racism in all of its dimensions.

[N.S. English translation: Let us gird ourselves for the fight ahead to kill all Whites.]

Tema Smith is a contributing columnist for the Forward and the Director of Professional Development at 18Doors.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

Author
Tema Smith
Derek Chauvin verdict isn’t justice, but it’s a start

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nicholasstix • 2 minutes ago Hold on, this is waiting to be approved by The Forward.

Tema Smith’s “thing” is a black supremacist, blood libel. Nobody murdered Eric Garner or George Floyd.

She had to reach back 66 years to Emmett Till, in order to find a case of a real White-on-black murder. But she even lied about the Till case! It wasn’t a lynching, because Till’s killers had not planned on murdering him, and there was no mob involved. They’d planned on beating him to a pulp, for what he had done to Mrs. Carolyn Bryant. When Till persisted in refusing to apologize, Roy Bryant and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, shot him dead, and threw him in the Tallahatchie River.

It is unlikely that Bryant or Milam “mutilated” Till. That was likely the fishes’ doing. However, it has been fashionable since at least William Styron’s novel, Sophie’s Choice, to embellish on what Till’s killers did to him. (As if the facts weren’t bad enough!) In any event, lynching or no, Bryant and Milam were guilty of kidnapping, assault, and murder, and thus should have hanged. Carolyn Bryant never “recanted.” Her husband and brother-in-law hadn’t murdered Till, because of something she’d told them. She and her sister-in-law, Juanita Milam, had deliberately refrained from breathing a word to them, for fear of what they might do to the boy, whom she had taken for a man (his uncle, Moses “Preacher” Wright, said Till “looked like a man”). They had learned of Till putting his hands on Mrs. Bryant from witnesses, all of whom were black.

The “recantation” was a hoax invented by a White, fake historian from Duke, Timothy Tyson, who had also supported the Duke Rape Hoax.

All Tema Smith seems to know how to do is lie.

blacks lynch Whites all the time, not generations ago, but Tema Smith will never write about such cases. Just two weeks ago, Phillip Adams slaughtered six Whites.

The criminal justice system railroaded an innocent White policeman in a show trial, but that’s not “justice” for Tema Smith. No fewer than eight members of Officer Chauvin’s own department, including its racist, black chief, committed perjury, in order to railroad Chauvin, but that’s still not enough for Tema Smith.

You could slaughter every White in the world, and Smith would still scream about “the legacy of White racism.”

Excepting the White communists, who seek to annihilate their own race, White people aren’t the problem. There is such a thing as “systemic racism,” but its victims are Whites and Asians. Sources:

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/till-killers-confession/

https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2018/08/21/emmett-till-carolyn-bryant-donham-recant-quote-missing/1017876002/

 

1 comment:

  1. Want real police reform?You can't have it--because what blacks want is the stripping of authority which police have to enforce the law on them.They also want a sort of immunity from arrest and prosecution for the entire gamut of crimes--including murder;blacks believe that all crime is justified.Most murder is justified and can be punished(if necessary)by themselves--WITHOUT White law interfering.

    In otherwords,"justice" is what blacks decide it will be(not Whites) and that means zero "on the record" law enforcement,with no arrests or prison time.
    --GRA

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