Posted on 04/03/2014 1:08:54 PM PDT by IChing
Two years ago, Barack Obama infamously emphasized skin color above all other factors in his remarks about a boiling controversy, saying, my main message is to the parents of Trayvon Martin. You know, if I had a son, hed look like Trayvon.
Obama did the same thing again over a year later, immediately after the jury found George Zimmerman not guilty in that casebarging in front of the cameras for the explicit purpose of emphasizing skin color (instead of character and conduct) regarding issues of crime, justice, and public safety, Obama self-righteously prattled on for over 17 minutes in a rambling monologue centered around how he personally identified with Trayvon Martin ( Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago.), again based primarily on skin color.
Martin Luther King had two sons, and aside from any surface resemblance to Barack Obama, Trayvon Martin, or anyone else, one wonders by what ingredient their children are to be judged in an era when a major news network gives Al Sharpton his own show in prime-time.
In case you missed it, NBA star Kobe Bryant (who just happens to look like he could be Barack Obamas son) recently stunned many by straying from the all-too-common racial script during an interview in The New Yorker magazine. To the seething mobs, Bryant committed the contemporary cultural sin of emphasizing character over skin color when it came to the death of Trayvon Martin. To the dismay of race-hustlers, Bryant sounded like a troublesome throwback to the politically-jettisoned dream of MLK himself.
The interviewer, Ben McGrath, had asked L.A. Laker star Bryant about the racially-oriented activism by the Miami Heat basketball team two years ago, in late March of 2012, during the height of the controversy over the George Zimmerman/Trayvon Martin incident: Lebron James and the entire roster of Heat players put on dark gray hoodies, lowered their heads, and posed for a dramatically staged group picture as part of their overt demonstration of racial alignment with the medias (and the Obama administrations) shamefully distorted narrative which falsely depicted Trayvon as an innocent, small black child whod been stalked and murdered in cold blood by a burly, viciously racist, overzealous white hispanic neighborhood watch volunteer.
Referring to the Miami Heat hoodie stunt, McGrath asked Bryant, Is that the kind of thing you could see yourself doing?
To his credit, Bryant replied to the question with dignified superiority:
I wont react to something just because Im supposed to, because Im an African-American. That argument doesnt make any sense to me. So we want to advance as a society and as a culture, but, say, if something happens to an African-American, we immediately come to his defense? Yet you want to talk about how far weve progressed as a society? Well, if weve progressed as a society, then you dont jump to somebodys defense just because theyre African-American. You sit and you listen to the facts just like you would in any other situation, right? So I wont assert myself.
Pretty refreshing, eh? Exactly as Martin Luther King hoped; that there would come a day when his four little children would live in a nation where theyd be judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
Unlike the most prominent black voices of today in the fields of politics, punditry, and entertainment (and their more rabidly tribal followers), who cravenly and dishonestly emphasize skin color as a shield against any and all accountability, Bryant refused to reflexively support the Martin camp merely because he shares Trayvons epidermal hue, and he remarked that the merits of the case itself should determine whether anyone sided with the prosecution or the defense.
Kobe went on, articulating a perfectly sane and rational, responsible approach:
I wont say, O.K., Im going to vote for Obama just because hes an African-American, Im not going to do that in a million years. You got to sit and take everything as equal and pick the best candidate for the job. Thats it.
Bravo to Bryant. However, the moment of clarity, class, and character was short-lived. Over the last few days, Bryant has suffered a sudden, massive, vicious onslaught of racial backlash. Viral blowback from armies of outspoken race-baiters exploded in Bryants face. Noted black figures, from NFL Hall of Famer Jim Brown to commentator Roland Martin, black radio hosts and bloggers, have piled on with the Kobe-bashing, claiming that because of his upbringing, Bryant really cannot relate to the American black experience, and that he is calling for a color-blind America which simply cannot exist. Yet.
Now that hes been publicly cyber-horsewhipped, sent backpedaling and skulking back to the plantation, Kobe has posted a conciliatory Tweet, saying:
Trayvon was wronged THATS(sic) my opinion and thats what I believe the FACTS showed. The system did not work
Of course, its Bryants penitent way of showing the black lynch mobs that hes down for the struggle after all, and that hes back inside the sanctioned perimeter of the tribalistic victimhood mentality, despite all the evidence.
The overwhelming evidence says that Trayvon Martin would probably be alive today if hed been in a supervised facility, where he belonged, if not for the politically-correct school district policy of giving suspensions to young black criminals, and officially covering up their felonies (such as the burglary in which Trayvon was involved) instead of putting them through the courts and sending them to a detention facility. That policy is designed to try to falsely reduce the statistical disparity of crimes done by blacks compared with white kids, who commit far fewer offenses.
Freedom of Information Act documentation, obtained by researchers at The Conservative Treehouse website, revealed that that is exactly what happened; the Miami-Dade school police and administration didnt want the racial disparity numbers to look even worse than they already were, so they merely suspended the violent criminal thug Trayvon instead of formally having him charged with actual crimes based on his various repeat offenses. Then, once he was sent away to Sanford by his mother who couldnt handle him, Trayvon stalked and almost murdered Zimmerman for daring to interrupt his casing of his next burglary target.
The police were called to the Retreat at Twin Lakes over 400 times in the 13 months leading up to the night Zimmerman interrupted Trayvon, and the fact is that the community was under siege from young black criminals. But Trayvon shouldnt have even been there. He should have been locked up, for his own good at the least, it turned out.
As for the Kobe Bryant controversy, weve seen this instant replay too many times before. Someone of any race says something factually true yet controversial regarding a non-white and/or non-whites (especially when its about blacks), then virtually overnight they are forced to issue a mea culpa and eat crow, even resign, quite often under boycotts and even death threats.
Bryant merely took the honorable position that character is what is supposed to count, not color. His attackers, unfortunately, seem to have lashed him back onto the damn the dream ship of fools, of slavish identification with a culture of criminalitybecause, in an era where Sharpton is deemed worthy of prime-time, its the black thing to do, not the right thing to do.
Kobe learned that he has free speech, but not freedom of thought!
Is this the first time this was published?
Police there once a day?
Kind of puts this in perspective.
The residences were under constant assault, and Zimmerman was on patrol.
It’s not the first time that information has been published, but of course the mainstream media basically squashed it.
The Miami Herald’s Frances Robles had it first, to my knowledge—she went to the actual police blotters:
“The answer may lie in police records, which show that 50 suspicious-person reports were called in to police in the past year at Twin Lakes. There were eight burglaries, nine thefts and one other shooting in the year prior to Trayvons death.
“In all, police had been called to the 260-unit complex 402 times from Jan. 1, 2011 to Feb. 26, 2012.”
http://archive.is/JR5OR#selection-2831.0-2835.100
Left wing fascism again
Up until this week Kobe thought he was free.
So where did you first hear or read about this?
Or do you claim to have discovered it yourself?
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