Saturday, January 11, 2014

Knockout: it's a black thang

CBS ran a sugarcoated segment on a street game called Knockout.

As a middle-aged black man explains to the camera, “Knockout is a game that a lot of our teenagers play, just where they dare one of the guys to just randomly choose anybody walking down the street.”

The segment shows a home-video recording of a white man seemingly in the middle of giving directions to the black teens in the video, when suddenly the black male he’s directly speaking to lunges forward with a fist to his temple. The white man, heavyset, falls flat on his back onto the concrete, out cold.

Spread throughout CBS’s segment on Knockout are interviews with blacks in their late teens. Each of them knows what the game is and only one of them manages to say that “dey shouldn’t be doin’ it.”

In one interview, three black males face the camera, their faces blurred. When prompted by the interviewer off-camera, the one in the middle explains the game.

"The game Knockout is like when people bored, dey, uh, see where dey [unintelligible mumbling], and whoeva come walkin’ down the block a’ suh’n ["or something"], dey jus’ knock ‘em out." As he’s explaining this, his two friends behind him are having a good laugh about it all, no doubt recalling with fondness the last time they struck cold an innocent white person in the temples.

Two more interviews follow with two more groups of blacks, both of them explaining the game as nonchalantly as if it’s as harmless as giving noogies to a friend.

Then we see CCTV footage of a white schoolteacher walking through an alley towards a populated sidewalk. He’s perhaps 40 feet from the end of the alley when a pack of six black teens enters the alley from the sidewalk end.

At this point, the teacher is probably thinking one of two things. If he is a leftist, he was probably thinking, “Ah, the diversity in this city is so wonderful. I’m not worried that I’m about to walk past a group of six blacks in an alley. In fact, I’m so titillated that I get to show how anti-racist I am, it’s giving me a diversi-boner.” Or, if he is a rightist, he was probably thinking, “Oh, God, what do I do? If I act like I’m afraid of them, they’ll accuse me of being racist, beat me, and take my wallet. Just breathe. Keep walking forward, give a courtesy smile, and breathe.”

He keeps walking toward them and they keep walking toward him. As they pass each other, sure enough, one of them darts out with his fist, makes solid connection with the man’s head, and he’s passed out before he hits the ground. His head slams onto the curb. There is a moment of celebration—putting fists up to their mouths in that way that they do, and pointing at the broken cracker in the gutter—and they continue on their happy way.

More CCTV footage in the CBS segment shows a white woman walking down the sidewalk by herself. No one is around, but approaching at stealthy jog from behind her comes a black male teenager. “Perhaps she dropped an earring and he wants to return it to her,” thinks the delusional leftist. “Oh, crap, she’s in trouble,” knows the race-realist.

When he reaches her, he swings his long arm in a wide arc and lands his fist against the side of her head, launching her unconscious body forward and to the side, hitting the concrete flat like a rag doll. The black turns around and jogs back in the direction he came from, likely to meet up with the homies he was no doubt entertaining in knocking out the white woman. You can imagine them jumping up and down in primitive celebration, resembling the prehistoric chimpanzees in the beginning of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

The video of the segment can be seen at ConservativeVideos.com, which introduces the video with the politically correct title, “The Sick ‘Game’ Thugs Are Violently Playing On Innocent Pedestrians.”

"Thugs"? There are black thugs and there are white thugs, but not a single of the thugs in the videos was white. The problem, then, it can be reasoned, is not thugs; the problem is blacks. Why can’t we just say it?

The CBS interviewer, at the end of the segment, asks the middle-aged black man who appeared at the beginning, “What’s the point [of Knockout]? Is it a macho thing?”

"It’s a macho thing," the black man responds with a nod. But he knows better.

It’s a black thing.

No comments:

Post a Comment