The New York Post yesterday blasted Don’t Make the Black Kids Angry.
They were upset about a video we did about a cop who was shot while chasing a fella through the hood. We asked a cop to write a commentary about what was really happening and it got a ton or reaction.
So much so that the head of a New York Police Union sent it to its members saying it was the best video of its kind he had ever seen!
And his union members should listen to “every word of it.”
The Post did not like it one bit and called it lots and lots of nasty names. Lots of back pedaling, fortified with a healthy dose of denial, deceit and delusion.
Racist Chinese people in San Francisco are thinking the unthinkable: They are talking about getting guns to fight back against the rampant black on Asian violence and crime there.
Of course, the local orange haired reporters do not approve.
And lets not forget the anniversary of the death of St. Michael of Ferguson. Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris are not.
Baltimore newspapers are trying to gaslight us: Convince that what we see with our own eyes is not really happening.
And you think it is, that’s your problem.
Ditto in Iowa.
Let’s take them down a few notches.
Can they both lose?
That is the first reaction many of us had when we saw Social Justice Fella accuse a YouTube exec of racism because the YouTube big shot did not want the fella to trespass in his apartment building.
A familiar story.
But it turns out there is a lot more to the story.
None of it good for YouTube.
So let’s get busy with that on a new podcast from Colin Flaherty.
St. Michael of Ferguson is being resurrected this week – complete with all the fairy tales that COPS started the riots and forced the fellas to throw molotov cocktails, shoot guns and loot stores.
How about a dose of reality about Ferguson from the cops who were there.
And then let’s talk a bit about new teachers in Chocolate Schools. It’s like Welcome to the Thunderdome – but school officials would have us believe it is more like the Dead Poets Society.
A dangerous fiction.
All this and more in this new podcast from Colin Flaherty
The most over rated — and hateful — writer of our age is dead.
We are of course talking about the author of Barack Obama’s favorite book, Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison.
This is one of these books that is favored by tons of people who have no idea what it is about.
No idea of the pure anti-white vitriol, scorn and hatred that drips from every page of that book. And her others as well.
So let’s talk about Toni. Let’s here an excerpt from her book. And when someone asks if black on white hatred is mainstream, just tell them yes, and direct them to the Song of Solomon.
The big message of the two recent massacres over the weekend was delivered loud and clear thousands of times: White people suck today more than ever before.
It takes a lot of denial, deceit and delusion to ignore a New York Times story that says 75 percent of mass shooters in America are black.
But that is what is happening today. All part of the greatest lie of our generation: The hoax of black victimization and white racism.
Plus, what’s up with using that fairy tale to sell razors and tennis shoes?
All this and more in a new podcast from Colin Flaherty.
The Psychos — aka candidates for the Democratic nomination for President — are all about this thing called Criminal Justice Reform.
White racism and Black victimization.
And it is not just a law, it is a movement. A dangerous movement.
All over the country parole boards and judges agree: We don’t need any more black people in prison. And the ones who are there should be released.
Today, the chicken are coming home to roost: Once released, the killers are still killing. The rapers keep raping. And the cycle of violence continues where it left off.
A disaster — that the Psychos are trying to convince us is really a reform.
And since it is Friday, today we take a look at another of my favorite authors, and his historical novels about Genghis Khan. As discussed on the podcast, you can find it here on Amazon:
Can they both lose?
That is the first reaction many of us had when we saw Social Justice Fella accuse a YouTube exec of racism because the YouTube big shot did not want the fella to trespass in his apartment building.
A familiar story.
But it turns out there is a lot more to the story.
None of it good for YouTube.
So let’s get busy with that on a new podcast from Colin Flaherty.