Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Why do they call it “White collar” crime? Maybe we should change the phrase to black collar crime?

By Jerry PDX
tuesday, cctober 15, 2024 at 12:29:00 a.m. edt

Oh, those negroes and White collar crime, here’s yet another example from the progressive paradise of pdx:

https://www.oregonlive.com/crime/2024/04/florida-woman-charged-in-alleged-wire-fraud-scam-that-siphoned-15m-from-portland-house-bureau.html

It’s hard to find an article with her photo. When I searched her name in google, a video came up that showed her face but it disappeared when I went into the article. While the story did get some play in the media when it first appeared a couple years ago, her photo was not being published in any of the articles I read. That name Chantail Williams gives her race away; it sure ain’t a White name.

I remember when this happened a couple years ago but forgot about it until there was a recent followup about the lenient sentence she received. Five years probation, 30 days served and restitution:

[N.S.:? “Restitution”? Ha! Black and hispanic criminals never make restitution. That part of a sentence is just for show.]

https://www.kptv.com/2024/10/15/florida-woman-avoids-added-jail-time-fraud-case-that-cost-city-portland-15-million/

I have a question: Why do they call it “White” collar crime anyways? Like all crime categories, blacks are responsible for a disproportionate amount of “White collar” crime but that doesn’t stop people from believing that White collar crime is exclusively practiced by White people. It’s a progressive’s comeback when you cite the highly disproportionate amount of crime practiced by the negro, they say: What about White collar crime? That’s all White people!

No, not true, if you look at the fbi crime stats, table 43, you notice that blacks offend at 2-3 times the rate (per capita) as Whites in White collar crime categories, just like they do in all the other crime categories. Anecdotally, there sure does seem to be a lot of negroes involved in these government corruption stories reported in the media.

Maybe we should start calling it black collar crime.



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

black "collards" crime is more like it.

--GRA