Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 15, 2015
Earlier this year, the city of Baltimore began prosecuting police officers for arresting Blacks. The thinking was that because of slavery, Black people should not ever be arrested for anything.
The logic seemed perfectly reasonable: with all Blacks have already suffered 200 years ago in slavery, why should they have to be further punished for violence or drug dealing?
However, there has been an outcome that no one could possibly have predicted: with Blacks no longer being arrested for anything, crime has skyrocketed.
A 27-year-old man who was fatally stabbed Saturday evening became Baltimore’s 300th homicide victim this year, a gruesome milestone for a city that has struggled to curb rampant violence of a kind not seen since the 1990s.
Four hours later, the tally reached 301.
The man who became No. 300 was found with torso wounds about 4:45 p.m. on West Baltimore Street, police said. The next victim, a 22-year-old man, was found shot in the chest on Annapolis Road just after 9 p.m..
The swelling death count has both disturbed and confounded a community still struggling to recover from riots that followed the death of Freddie Gray in April.
“Three hundred lives wasted,” said Tessa Hill-Aston, president of the Baltimore branch of the NAACP. “All those people had potential.”
These could have been rocket scientists, diplomats and robotics engineers. And now their lives are gone, and no one has any idea why.
We have to ask, however: can we possibly allow cops to arrest Blacks ever again, in light of what we know about slavery from such films as Django Unchained? Most experts say “no.”