[From article]
Black mob violence and denial are getting easier to find – and harder to believe.
Let's start in Baltimore, an epicenter for practitioners of black violence and the public personalities who ignore, deny, condone, excuse, encourage, and even lie about it. Sometimes all at once.
In December, the BBC wanted to know why "so many young African-American men [were] being gunned down by the state."
So naturally, it asked the white conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop. Her former mentor, the radical chic conductor Leonard Bernstein, could not have put it any sillier:
[. . .]
It's really just a listening problem, Alsop explained to the Sun. Black people had to resort to violence because white people were just not paying attention.
Alsop's comments echoed Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, who last year said black rioters needed "space to destroy." The next day she said she had not said it. Then she said she did not mean it. Then she said she did not want to talk about it anymore with white racists who were just trying to make her look bad.

[. . .]
Even with all this explaining from Alsop, a recipient of a MacArthur "genius grant," there is still so much left to understand. For example, why did a large group of black people beat Peter Marvit to death after he left a Baltimore symphony practice in 2012? Was that required?
He was just a dancer. Ironically enough, he was also a nationally recognized researcher on hearing.
And the night before the riots, a large group of black people in Baltimore beat almost to death some old white guy who did not want them fighting on his lawn and damaging his car. Was that required?
A year before the riots, Maryland state legislator Pat McDonough asked the governor to put a travel ban on downtown Baltimore because black people were "terrorizing" the Inner Harbor. City officials did not say it was required; they just denied it was happening.
[. . .]
Black writers in Baltimore say expectations of safety in public places are nothing more than "white privilege." That goes for patrons and police as well. Even those who pull down a million dollars a year for waving a stick in the air, as Alsop does. Now that is some white privilege.
[. . .]
In north Texas, a white college student was returning from a New Year's Eve party with her friends when an SUV with six black people pulled up next to them. Soon, Sara Wynette Mutschlechner was dead, with a bullet in her head.
In Ontario, California, a black man beat an old white woman during a home invasion robbery. Then he raped her. Maybe she was not listening. Nevertheless, police took a suspect into custody.
[. . .]
Also on video – also in the last few days – a large group of black people surrounded a pregnant white teenager and cheered as one of their number threatened her, beat her, and kicked her in the stomach.
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2016/01/black_mob_violence_easier_to_find_harder_to_believe.html
January 4, 2016
Black Mob Violence: Easier to Find. Harder to Believe.
By Colin Flaherty





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