by Daniel Greenfield
 NYC Dems were too busy fighting white supremacy to stop a black supremacist terrorist.  
 
 
 
	Mayor Eric Adams, who had called white people “crackers”, claimed that 
he needed his brother to head his security because of an "increase in 
white supremacy" in New York City.
	The New York City Board of Health falsely claimed that racism was a "public health crisis" and a public school told parents to abolish their “whiteness”.
	After all that time battling white supremacy, which is as easy to find 
in the city as good manners and parking spaces, the black supremacist 
subway terror attack came out of the blue.
	29 people were wounded, including a pregnant woman and a 12-year-old, 
when Frank James, a racist gunman, opened fire on a Brooklyn subway 
train. James was a racial supremacist, but not the one that New York 
City’s political establishment had spent so much time searching for.
	James was just “abolishing whiteness” by putting critical race theory into practice.
	The black supremacist mass shooter has been charged with terrorism for a
 carefully planned terror attack, that included dressing up as a 
construction worker, deploying a smoke bomb and then opening fire. The 
racist terrorist’s victims included a pregnant woman, and a number of 
children and teenagers, some of whom were shot several times by the 
black supremacist.
	Like the black supremacist Jersey City terrorists, James used a U-Haul 
as a base and was convinced that black people were being victimized.
	“These white motherf—--s, this is what they do,” James had ranted in his YouTube videos while claiming that white people
 were plotting to kill all black people. “It’s just a matter of time 
before these white motherf—--s decide, ‘Hey listen. Enough is enough. 
These n—ers got to go.'”
	“And so the message to me is: I should have gotten a gun, and just started shooting motherf—--s.”
	And indeed that is allegedly what James did.
	An initial survey of photos from the scene appear to show wounded 
white, Latino, and Asian victims, but no black people, suggesting that 
the terrorist may have targeted people by race.
	Where could James have gotten his racist ideas from? While notions such
 as white replacement by minorities are denounced as dangerous racist 
conspiracy theories, the inverse, conspiracy theories that claim white 
people are going to launch a black genocide are mainstream.
	The Black Lives Matter protests were accompanied by false claims that police shootings of black men represent genocide.
 Every policy, from locking up violent criminals to merit-based college 
admissions, is not just denounced as racist, but as the new slavery and 
genocide.
	A Democrat political candidate even claimed that, “The Banning of Critical Race Theory is an Act of Genocide.”
	When everything you don’t like is genocide, it becomes a lot easier to 
kill. In the mind of the subway terrorist, he may well have been acting 
in self-defense against a vast conspiracy of whiteness which, any day 
now, was just going to kill black people like, in his own words, “cattle
 waiting to be taken to the slaughter." Instead the people on the subway
 became his cattle.
	When even Pizza Hut distributes flyers
 to teachers encouraging them to indoctrinate their students to believe 
that "America is a country built on a foundation of slavery, genocide, 
and white supremacy”, what exactly do you expect from your friendly 
local racist gunman?
	"America is going to come to an end," James insisted in one of his 
videos, arguing that the country represented the vision of "a handful of
 Europeans" and that black and white people were as incompatible as 
different families of monkeys and whales, and could not co-exist.
	Or as National Book Award winner Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote,
 the 9/11 firefighters and police officers “were not human to me” 
indicating there’s a thin line between literary awards and shooting 
people on the N train. Crossing the thin line involves taking their 
rhetoric seriously.
	The incompatibility of black and white people, an idea once reserved 
for the margins where black and white supremacists resided, has been 
aggressively mainstreamed with racially segregated campus events and 
employee groups in corporate offices. HR and DEI offices recirculate 
claims that every form of professional office behavior is evil racist 
whiteness.
	Beliefs that were marginal a generation ago are now being taught in colleges and schools.
	James just put them into action. Critical race theory insists that 
white people are innately evil oppressors. If its proponents really 
believe that, why aren’t they shooting white people too?
	Or, as Nikole Hannah-Jones, the originator of the racial revisionist 
1619 Project hoax raved, “the white race is the biggest murderer, 
rapist, pillager, and thief of the modern world" who continues to "pump 
drugs and guns into the Balck (sic) community, pack Black people into 
the squalor of segregated urban ghettos and continue to be bloodsuckers 
in our communities."
	If you believe that sort of thing is true, why not act on it?
	The language of civil rights has long since been eclipsed by the 
hysterical language of racism and the institutions, public and private, 
pushing racism and racial supremacism also deny that mainstreaming 
racism could possibly have any negative consequences. Instead Senator 
Cory Booker and Kamala Harris actually worked to dismantle FBI monitoring of black supremacists.
	The rising wave of racist attacks in New York City, primarily against 
Asians and Jews, was met with failed efforts to blame President Trump 
even though the perpetrators were mostly black.
	Instead of reckoning with the reality and the consequences of racist 
propaganda, New York City, like other woke cities, remained obsessed 
with white supremacy. While serious white supremacist attacks have 
happened elsewhere in the country, the Big Apple is not a likely venue 
for any such attacks. City and state officials who spent all their time 
warning about white supremacy were disregarding the more likely sources 
of violence like that of Frank James.
	Almost 30 years ago, Colin Ferguson had opened fire on a Long Island 
Railroad train. In his notebook were a series of racist rants about 
white people and Asians. His lawyers famously blamed "black rage" 
claiming that the experience of racism made the killer lose control.
	Ferguson and James are familiar characters in the crazed pantheon of 
urban life. Every New Yorker passes by them on the daily commute, 
looking away from the mumbling men obsessed with a world only they can 
see, orbiting their victimhood, until they finally fall and lash out 
with a knife or a gun. And people bleed in subways and on sidewalks 
while the news cameras roll.
	Maybe both black supremacist monsters would have pulled the trigger 
even if there weren’t an entire industry making millions by propping up 
their racist fantasies.
	Or maybe not.
	There's been a long list of black supremacist killers in the BLM era 
from Micah X. Johnson, who killed 5 Dallas cops, Kori Ali Muhammad's 
murder of 4 people in Fresno, and Darrell Edward Brooks Jr. who ran over
 women and children at the Waukesha Christmas parade. It would be absurd
 to pretend that the mainstreaming of black supremacism did not play a 
role in that.
	New York City’s leaders needed to spend less time babbling about white 
supremacy and more time reckoning with the racist black supremacist 
terrorists who are walking among them.
	Before the next black supremacist terrorist attack takes place.
 
Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an 
investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left and 
Islamic terrorism.
Source: https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2022/04/nyc-dems-were-too-busy-fighting-white-supremacy-daniel-greenfield/ 
 
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