Democrats at the presidential debate Thursday night worked themselves into a sticky mess over the myth about nationwide “white supremacy,” and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker was probably the best example.
Booker said that as president he would open an office “in the White House” (location matters in Washington) that would “deal with the problem of white supremacy and hate crimes.”
If he does win the presidency, I hope that’s a promise Booker keeps, so that we can finally put it to rest that the Democratic and national media fueled farce-panic over “white supremacy.”
As detailed in my forthcoming book, Privilged Victims: How America’s Culture Fascists Hijacked the Country and Elevated Its Worst People, the data on violent crimes committed by so-called white supremacists is very poor. If it shows anything, it’s that many if not most of these crimes are white-on-white.
FBI data already shows that interracial crime is extremely rare. Using the most recent 2017 data, less than 10% of homicides with a white offender involved a black victim. Of homicides with a black offender, less than 20% involved a white victim.
On top of that, the alarming studies that the media and Democrats base their claims on count all kinds of crimes as “white supremacy.” If a white person who collected Nazi memorabilia kills another white person, that’s considered white supremacy. If a white person kills their own family members, but has some association to white supremacy gangs, that’s also considered white supremacy.
Hate crimes are routinely faked, and states are even now grappling with how to define “hate crime.” Is it a hate crime to yell “f— you pig” at a police officer in uniform? Ask Cory Booker.
There is no vast problem with white supremacist violence. If Booker wins the presidency and sets up an office to research the problem, the lack of findings will be the great accomplishment of his first term.
Then again, Booker is not going to be the nominee or the president, so never mind.
