Pro murderer rally

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the pro Lovelle Mixon event last night had sixty participants.

Good, it was only a tiny group then. That produces a much less alarming impression than the e-mail posted yesterday from a law enforcement person in the Bay Area:

There were massive parties all over Oakland celebrating the shooting that night. During the interviews on TV there were 20 or 30 people in the background screaming “F*** the police!” and “They got what they deserved!” It was everything the officers could do to restrain themselves.

It would appear that while many blacks had a spontaneous outburst of joy at the murder of four white police officers, they didn’t want to join a formal demonstration of solidarity with the killer.

Bottom line: how widespread is the pro-murderer sentiment among Bay Area blacks, we don’t know. Obviously it exists, and is more than minimal. Furthermore, when we remember the universal joy of blacks at O.J. Simpson’s acquittal for murdering two whites, a joy that was affirmed and defended by many black intellectuals, we must assume that similar feelings are entertained by more than the sixty blacks who participated in last night’s Mixon vigil.

- end of initial entry -

March 27

Adela G. writes:

You write:

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the pro Lovelle Mixon event last night had sixty participants.

Good, it was only a tiny group then. That produces a much less alarming impression than the e-mail posted yesterday from a law enforcement person in the Bay Area.

What’s good about its being only a tiny group? I think most here at VFR would agree that virulent anti-white sentiment is far more widespread among blacks than most whites realize. The sooner those clueless whites get a clue, the better off we’ll be.

As for a tiny group being “much less alarming,” I don’t see your point. I’d rather see large, numerous symptoms of a disease or disorder than a few small ones, so that the condition may be treated quickly and thoroughly. If Natasha Richardson had lost consciousness immediately after her fall, instead of being asymptomatic for a short while, she might well still be alive today.

And how you reconcile your view of this with your oft-expressed wish that Obama be elected over McCain? You wrote that the election of the former would revitalize the conservative movement. Would not a realization of the depth and breadth of anti-white sentiment among blacks do the same?

I was glad to see footage of the pro murder rally, not by the fact that so much anti-white sentiment exists but that it was noticeably on display, to the point that even the MSM covered it (albeit briefly and neutrally). The rallying blacks clearly thought of Mixon as at least a victim, if not a hero. More whites need to be aware that more blacks indulge in this irrational and uncivilized thinking that most white Americans realize.

You may be sure that many white people who were already disaffected and alienated from the multicultural mainstream saw this as proof positive that blacks and whites cannot peacefully coexist in large numbers, not even because one side is right and the other wrong, but because their very thought processes are, for the most part, grounded in irreconcilable differences.

LA replies:

As I’ve discussed before, I do not say, like a Leninist, the worse the better. I do not actively wish for the bad, in order for there to be a good. I think it’s wrong to wish for something bad to happen. But if the bad is to come, or if it has come, and if it may have some positive effects, then let us hope for those positive effects.

It was not as though, looking at a blank slate prior to the presidential campaign, I said, “I would like there to be a nonwhite messiah who runs for president and gets elected and whose presidency will unleash black racialism and help wake up whites to the reality of blacks.” In fact, even when it was down to three contenders for several months last year, I vastly preferred Hillary Clinton over the others, regarding both the other two as totally unacceptable. It was only when it was down to a choice between Obama and McCain that, comparing these two total unacceptables, I began to think of the possible positive aspects of an Obama presidency.

Adela replies:

I’m sorry if I seemed critical about your stance last fall regarding a possible Obama presidency. I wasn’t, I was merely puzzled by the apparent difference between your reasoning then and your reasoning now.

I understand why you thought there were advantages to having Obama defeat McCain. But I don’t understand how you can then be glad the pro murder rally had only a few people. It seems to me that if an Obama presidency makes whites aware of black racialism, then surely the sight of blacks openly celebrating the murders of whites by a black would make whites even more aware of black racialism. In other words, if the former is advantageous to whites as an eye-opener, surely the latter is even more so. We cannot begin to address a problem until we recognize it as a problem.

Yet your tone in the entry on the pro murder rally was one of relief that it wasn’t as big as previously reported.

LA replies

I don’t wish for people to be evil. And I don’t want to put myself in the position where I seem to be wishing for people to be evil. If people are evil, then we make the best of it.

Adela replies:

I agree with you completely and never meant to suggest otherwise.

I hope in turn that you don’t think I wish for people to be evil, either. Much as I wish that blacks and whites could live separately, I wish no harm on blacks as individuals or as a group. Indeed, I don’t think blacks are the problem, I think white leftists are. Unfortunately, as long as black people live in white society, white leftists will use them to browbeat conservative whites. We traditionalists are like people who have alcoholic family members. We can drink alcohol without causing harm to ourselves or others (i.e., interact in a peaceable yet guilt-free way with blacks consistent with preserving white norms) yet our family members cannot. So it is better for everyone that they not be exposed to alcohol at all (i.e., the temptation to use the presence of blacks against other whites.) [LA replies: That’s a good analogy.]

But I do believe that if evil is present, it is better seen than unseen; thus, I am glad the pro murder rally was widely viewed. I hope it brought some centrists and conservatives to a greater racial awareness.


Posted by Lawrence Auster at March 26, 2009 01:48 PM | Send
    

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