By Derek Hunter
Thursday, August 21, 2014
It seems like the world, or at least the media world, is
obsessed with the happenings in Ferguson, Mo. No detail is too insignificant to
speculate about, no matter how wild the speculation. I know more about it than
I should, and I bet you do too.
We’ve been marinated in best guesses, wild speculation,
hypotheticals and enough flat-out lies to make Tommy Flanagan blush. At this
point, about the only thing we don’t know is what actually happened. But even
after all this, I still can’t bring myself to care about any of it.
Maybe it has to do with the lies: Michael Brown “was shot
in the back!” Well, he actually wasn’t. Nor was he about to start college, or a
sweet, innocent child who’d never done anything to anyone. He was a human being
with all the stupidity and potential that goes along with that existence.
How he ended up dead in the street probably never will be
known. And even if we found out, I doubt it would matter. People on all sides
have made up their minds to the point that no story, no set of facts, will
change their minds. They range from “Mike Brown was a thug” to “Officer Darren
Wilson is a racist who was looking to shoot a black man,” and everything in
between. All of which is mindlessly simplistic, and none of which is true.
I don’t know what happened that day, though I have a
guess just like everything else. It’s more complicated than much of what you
hear on TV, but it’s just as irrelevant.
More importantly, and perhaps more oddly: I don’t care.
I didn’t know Mike Brown, nor do I know Darren Wilson.
Unlike many people interviewed on TV, I feel no kinship with either. I’ve known
people who’ve died, committed suicide and been murdered, and I’ve felt
something for all of them because I knew them. I don’t know these people.
I’ve also been harassed by police, pulled over and
searched and asked “What are you doing here?” for simply driving a
piece-of-junk car in a nice neighborhood.
I feel sorry for the Brown family for losing a child, and
I feel for the Wilson family because no matter what happened, his life is
pretty much over. Brown will be buried; Wilson will be hunted and haunted,
guilty or innocent.
I get the professional grievance industry and why they’re
in Ferguson – there’s money and political power to be had. But I don’t get people
taking to the streets. Protesters (not the rioters, they’re simply scum) march
under the belief that police are shooting black men like, well, they were black
men themselves.
There is nothing more dangerous to a black man then
another black man, but that doesn’t warrant marches or any lasting movement.
Only when a white person is involved does it seem to matter to “community
activists” and politicians. Chicago, Baltimore, Detroit, etc., might as well
not exist to them.
If they care so deeply about black people being killed
why don’t they mention where black people are being shot and killed at a Third
World rate? Again, because there’s no money or power in it. They’ve already got
their support and votes, and those aren’t going anywhere, so they don’t have to
even pay lip service to caring.
The progressive agenda of “you are your race first,
American second” pays off in these situations. People having been inundated
with the message that you should feel part of a “community” based on skin
pigment makes it easy to manipulate them into believing “what happens to one,
happens to all.” But only when someone with different skin pigment does it
matter.
It’s sick, it’s sad, it’s racist, it’s progressive.
I’m not a progressive, so I don’t feel a kinship with people
who share common traits with me or my ancestors, only people I know. Crazy,
right?
So when a black off-duty police officer shot and killed
an unarmed white man on the side of a freeway in Maryland and was found notguilty because the man was charging at him in a fit of road rage, I thought to
myself “Well, our justice system has spoken.” The jury heard the evidence—I
didn’t—and drew a conclusion. I didn’t demand his head or take to the streets
until I found out why pulled off the road to have the confrontation in the
first place. The jury heard the evidence in the justice system, where it
belongs, and delivered their verdict.
But the calls for “justice” in Ferguson are nothing close
to the definition of justice. Those calls are not for following the evidence
wherever it leads. They’re calls for a man’s head regardless of what happened
that day. There are lots of words for that, none of which are “justice.”
What happens next will be under a cloud of suspicion no
matter what. Progressives and their fellow travellers in the media will keep a
lid on the facts, leaking only what fits their narrative. People will make
fools of themselves. People will become “media celebrities.” Lawyers will get
rich. And the two men involved eventually will be forgotten until the next time
the media finds a story it decides matters more than the scores of black men
murdered by other black men, and ratings can be made. Lather, rinse, repeat.
I’m getting off the merry-go-round by not caring in the
first place. I’ll still talk about the race-baiting and the media manipulation
meant to divide us as human beings, but that’s it. I can’t stop the ride in
Ferguson by myself. I can’t change its course, but I’m damn sure not going to
be a party to it. If you want to get wrapped up in events that don’t affect
your life, if you want to be a pawn in the progressives’ manipulation game,
knock yourself out. But like “global, thermal, nuclear war” in War Games, the
only way to win is not to play. That’s the only way to stop this progressive
political and media monster of manipulation and division.
I can’t be the only one, can I?
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