Colin Flaherty on the “Knock Out Game”
November 27, 2013
IN AN interview at Breitbart, Colin Flaherty, author of White Girl Bleed A Lot, talks about the refusal of the mainstream press to disclose the full nature of black crime:
The author said that for years he was seeing such crimes dismissed as “kids blowing off steam,” but when he began seeing regular Americans talking about these crimes more and more on social media and Youtube he knew it was time to speak out about his [sic] the media is refusing to report the truth.
“These are the same reporters that created this racial paradigm that made us the most race conscious country in the world, where every day we read about black caucuses, black churches, black schools, black TV, black radio, black newspapers and then we get stories by the National Association of Black Journalists. Then you look at the epidemic of black violence and they go, ‘Carl, we’re color blind.’ So, there’s a lot of denial out there and that’s what my focus was to show people THIS… IS… HAPPENING… NOW.”
But if the media isn’t properly reporting on this crime wave, how does he know it is going on?
“What is most interesting is the comments sections on these stories on the Internet where people are telling their own stories. But what happens is that the editors in the news rooms strip out the central organizing characteristic of the crimes saying that they can’t say for sure it was racially motivated. Well, they are right and they are wrong.”
“Every individual crime is insignificant, but when you string them together then you see this pattern that is exponentially out of proportion, And the editors would like every crime to be nice and neat and have a person muttering racial expletives in front of witnesses or sending out a press release saying they are racist. But that’s not the way it works. So that vastly understates the amount of racial violence that’s happening in this country.”
— Comments —
Kevin writes:
Colin and I grew up blocks apart in the 1960s, and it’s no coincidence he’s written this book. All of us from that time and space back in the old neighborhood saw and experienced street intimidation, humiliations, robberies, bricks through our windows, and beatings. What we experienced was “The Great Migration” and the subsequent ethnic cleansing as the city became unsafe. What we experienced was a slow motion race riot. When us old Wilmingtonians gather we talk of these episodes and the truth of diversity as we lived it always shocks the young and those from out-of-state. We are bitter. We lost our city and our homes. In a sick twist, those of us who left the city and it’s rising tide are criticized for leaving. Liberal whites sometimes say we should have stayed and “fought.” I always wonder what that means? Blacks, upon learning one is a suburbanite or rural dweller, narrow their eyes as they assess you as a stone-cold racist. Such is the tissue of lies that we live under. Meanwhile Wilmington is near the top of the list of cities its size in terms of shootings and murders.