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Every piece of Black grievance history is complete fiction.=0px
1. Emmett Till (1955) Till is mythologized as an innocent 14-year-old Black boy lynched for whistling at a white woman. In reality, his own cousin Simeon Wright admitted Till grabbed the woman’s waist and made lewd, aggressive remarks—actions that fit well within the heritable behavioral profile of Black male impulsivity and sexual aggression. Adding to this, his father, Louis Till, was executed by the U.S. Army in 1945 for raping two women and murdering one in Italy—another indicator of genetic and behavioral continuity. While vigilante justice is not defensible, the portrayal of Emmett Till as an innocent child victim of random White hate erases all context and enshrines a false moral allegory for Black victimhood.
2. Tulsa Race Riot (1921)Often depicted as a prosperous Black utopia destroyed by racist White mobs out of jealousy, Tulsa’s violence was actually triggered by the alleged sexual assault of a white girl by a Black teenager, Dick Rowland. Armed Black men then confronted white citizens at the courthouse, and a shootout ensued, killing 10 white men and 2 Black men. The broader riot followed, but this was not a one-sided racial massacre, and there is no credible evidence of a premeditated genocidal conspiracy. The “Black Wall Street” narrative erases the criminality and aggression that ignited the violence and repackages it as a morality play of evil Whites destroying innocent Black success—an inversion of reality used today to demand reparations and rewrite American history.
3. George Stinney (1944)Stinney is framed as a child wrongly executed by racist authorities. In truth, he confessed multiple times to the brutal murder of two white girls with a railroad spike. Forensic details supported his guilt. His later “exoneration” was a procedural motion based on supposed due process flaws—not actual innocence. The racial narrative ignores the fact that juvenile violent crime, including murder, has always been disproportionately Black, and Stinney’s case fits this pattern, not some fabricated injustice.
4. Rosa Parks (1955)Celebrated as a humble seamstress who spontaneously refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus, Rosa Parks was in fact a trained NAACP activist, strategically chosen to serve as the face of a pre-planned civil rights campaign. She was not the first person to resist bus segregation, but she was selected for optics—lighter-skinned, respectable, and media-friendly. The myth of her spontaneity masks a broader narrative strategy: turn complex sociopolitical agitation into sanitized moral fables, omitting the Marxist underpinnings and institutional choreography behind these supposedly “organic” moments. (An earlier and genuine protest had been carried out by Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old Black girl who refused to give up her bus seat months before Parks. However, Colvin was later found to be pregnant out of wedlock and considered unsuitable for public relations purposes. As a result, the NAACP deliberately sidelined her in favor of Rosa Parks, whose image was more respectable and media-friendly, allowing the narrative to be more easily mythologized.)---
5. Central Park Five (1989)The Central Park Five were not “totally innocent” boys railroaded by a racist system. They admitted in detail to participating in a violent rampage, including assaulting other victims. Though another man was later linked by DNA to the rape itself, the Five were not exonerated of the rest of their crimes. Multiple Black witnesses confirmed their actions. Their financial settlement was a political payoff, not justice. This case has been weaponized to push the false idea that Black criminality is invented by police rather than self-generated, ignoring the overwhelming statistical evidence to the contrary.
6. Trayvon Martin (2012)Portrayed as a child with Skittles, gunned down by a racist White vigilante, Trayvon Martin was in fact physically assaulting George Zimmerman, slamming his head into concrete. Zimmerman was not White—he is a mixed-race Hispanic with a Peruvian mother of Indigenous and possibly African descent. Zimmerman only fired after being mounted and attacked. The DOJ confirmed no racial motivation, and the self-defense case was airtight. Media manipulation—including editing 911 tapes—turned a violent assault into a fake civil rights case, launching the BLM mythos on a total lie.
7. Mike Brown (2014)Mike Brown robbed a store and assaulted the clerk. When approached by Officer Darren Wilson, he attacked Wilson through his cruiser window, attempted to take his gun, and was shot in the hand during the struggle. He fled, then turned and charged the officer, ignoring repeated commands. Wilson fired in measured bursts as Brown advanced. Brown was killed just feet away. All credible eyewitnesses—mostly Black—confirmed Wilson’s account, and forensics matched it precisely. The slogan “Hands up, don’t shoot” was a total fabrication, yet it became gospel in the BLM movement, proving that truth is irrelevant to the political utility of a lie.
8. Freddie Gray (2015)Freddie Gray, a habitual drug dealer and repeat offender, died after being injured in police custody following his self-initiated flight from officers. Despite six officers (three Black) being charged, all were acquitted or had charges dropped, because no wrongdoing occurred. Gray’s death was blamed on police brutality, sparking the Baltimore riots. In reality, it was another case of a violent Black criminal resisting arrest and suffering consequences—not systemic racism. The mainstream narrative never held up under judicial scrutiny, but that didn’t stop cities from burning in his name.
9. Jacob Blake (2020)Jacob Blake was presented as an unarmed Black father gunned down while checking on his kids. In truth, he was the subject of the 911 call, accused of digitally raping a woman, violating a restraining order, resisting arrest, and attempting to steal a car with her children inside. He was armed with a knife and ignored commands, resisting multiple tasing attempts before reaching into his vehicle—at which point officers shot him. He survived and was paralyzed, but the media and politicians falsely implied he was killed, and Joe Biden met with his family while completely ignoring the victim of Blake’s sexual assault.
10. Breonna Taylor (2020)Breonna Taylor was not sleeping in bed when shot. She was standing in the hallway next to her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, who shot a police officer first during a lawful, announced warrant. Taylor was killed in the crossfire. Far from being the innocent EMT she was portrayed as (a role she no longer held, though the media emphasized it to falsely cast her as a hardworking public servant), Taylor had extensive, well-documented ties to drug trafficker Jamarcus Glover—including managing his money, posting his bail, permitting her address to be used in his operations, and appearing in conversations about drug distribution and cash logistics. Her rental car was previously used in a drug-related homicide. The narrative that she was murdered in her sleep at the “wrong house” is a complete fabrication, and her death was the predictable outcome of her criminal lifestyle.
11. George Floyd (2020)George Floyd, a career criminal and fentanyl addict, died while violently resisting arrest after swallowing drugs to avoid prosecution. He was screaming "I can't breathe" before he was ever on the ground, and the autopsy revealed lethal levels of fentanyl and meth in his system, along with serious heart disease. Chauvin’s knee-to-shoulder restraint was within Minneapolis policy at the time, and no evidence of racist intent was ever found. Yet Floyd became a global martyr, and his death triggered the largest wave of racial unrest in modern American history—all based on a lie that ignored his own behavior, choices, and biology.