Never, Ever Forget: Black Power is the Ultimate EMP

Stuff Black People Don’t Like
December 11, 2015

There is no greater example depicting the quality of life individual black people collectively create than the empty stadium Major League Baseball in 65% black Baltimore on April 29, 2015.

It is my true belief children in the future will learn about this date as the moment the American experiment in integration finally failed, with the black cast of characters running the city government in Baltimore finally proving the prophecy of black elected power in Birth of a Nation correct.

It's 2015.. HOW CAN YOU BELIEVE SUCH BIGOTED AND HATEFUL THOUGHTS? Well... because a majority black city, with black elected officials allowed blacks to riot and force the cancellation of the only Major League Baseball game in the history of the league. That's why!!
It’s 2015.. HOW CAN YOU BELIEVE SUCH BIGOTED AND HATEFUL THOUGHTS? Well… because a majority black city, with black elected officials allowed blacks to riot and force the cancellation of the only Major League Baseball game in the history of the league. That’s why!!

An empty baseball stadium, because the black clowns democratically elected or appointed into power largely sided with the black uprising in the city, which meant they couldn’t guarantee the safety of the almost 99% white fan-base of the Orioles.

An empty baseball stadium played host to an actual Major League Baseball game… in 2015.

You always hear Social Justice Warriors cite this holy date of 2015 as some secularized proof in the  religious belief of the sanctity of progress (“how can you believe that.. it’s 2015” is a familiar refrain from the SJW).

Yes, that entire paragraph was entirely contradictory, yet it forms the basis of SJW thought when confronted with what black elected/appointed officials in 2015 Baltimore allowed to occur in the city they were stewards of… culminating in an EMPTY STADIUM BASEBALL GAME.

There is no more powerful moment depicting the reality of race and the complete failure of integration than this April 29, 2015 MLB game.

Which brings us to this. [Why black political power isn’t enough in Baltimore, CNN.com, 12-7-15]:

The first trial of six police officers charged in Freddie Gray’s death began last week, but the officers aren’t the only ones standing in judgment.

The city’s black political leaders are facing their own day of reckoning as well.

The death of Gray, a 25-year-old black man whose spine was virtually severed while in police custody, sparked one of the worst urban riots since the 1960s and led to the officers’ arrests.

His death also challenged a fundamental assumption that drove the civil rights movement and still reverberates in the demands of Black Lives Matter activists who press for black leadership in cities such as Ferguson.

Their assumption: Black political power can right the wrongs white leaders failed to address.

That belief propelled blacks into mayors’ offices across the nation, beginning with the 1967 election of Carl Stokes in Cleveland. Those mayors vowed to create jobs and reduce police brutality. Some such as Maynard Jackson in Atlanta and Marion Barry in Washington became virtual folk heroes, lauded for breaking the power of white big-city bosses. And majority-black cities such as Baltimore — which has a black mayor, police chief, chief prosecutor and a majority-black City Council — became bastions of black political power.

But if black political power is so important, why hasn’t it made more of a difference in the lives of poor black people in Baltimore such as Gray?That’s because the city’s black mayors have acted like political cowards, says William H. “Billy” Murphy Jr., the attorney for Gray’s family.

They’ve been afraid to use the power of their office to insist the black community get a cut of the city’s economic pie, says Murphy, whose father was one of the city’s first black judges and whose family founded the city’s black newspaper, the Baltimore Afro-American, more than a century ago.

“There’s been no black power in Baltimore even though there’s the illusion of black power,” says Murphy, who once ran unsuccessfully for mayor in Baltimore. “If mayors don’t use their own power to help the black community, that’s not power.”

Gray was a convicted heroin dealer, who in a sane society would have been publicly hanged for his crime of endangering the community instead of JUST spending a few years in jail. Not one person should cry over his death in police custody, but in 65 percent black Baltimore he has a community empowerment center named after him.

Every night I sleep soundly knowing Gray is dead.

Every night I sleep even better knowing the events of April 29th actually happened, for they did more to show the reality of the true destructive nature of black political power than any polemical written by a PhD or IQ study could ever hope to accomplish.

Four days prior to the empty stadium baseball game in 65 percent black Baltimore, the hilarious incompetent black mayor actually had the police stand down to allow blacks to riot and “we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that as well.” [Baltimore Mayor: ‘Gave Those Who Wished to Destroy Space to Do That’, CBS Baltimore, 4-25-15]

Every night I sleep soundly knowing Gray is dead.

Because the death of some convicted black heroin dealer set in motion a course of events exposing the reality of what happens when blacks attain positions.

Never, ever forget: give white people a pile of bricks, and watch a city be built; give black people a city, and watch the city crumble to bricks…