Black folks just aren't into white people. Do you really think the people giving the better part of $1 million to a GoFundMe for this reprobate and wishing death upon the victim's twin brother and his family actually believe that it was an act of self-defense? Don't be naive. Listening and watching many of you wrack your brains trying to figure this simple equation out is like observing a teenager endlessly trying to talk herself into believing the boy is still into her. Black folks will literally state in interviews and on public stages that they don't like white people. Our pop culture is also literally full of anti-Anglo bullshit. You don't see this? Really? I often go back to watching the black preacher/provocateur Jesse Lee Peterson. I haven't watched him in ages, but he used to sometimes bring an audience of white people into his little sanctuary and talk God and culture with them. He would lead with this to these naive, bourgeois white folks: "The first thing you need to know is that black people don't like you."
The black people carrying on after this verdict despise blind justice. They're all about settling scores based upon their imagined oppression. They aren't oppressed. No demographic group in the United States is oppressed. What passes for "oppression" here is heaven in countries where actual oppression occurs.
That case over in Ireland is actually perfect in terms of representing the phenomenon I'm describing. Four days before the inbred "migrant" tried to decaptate him, the white Irishman helped his eventual attacker move into his home. The migrant wasn't into him, either. He wouldn't be into you. Or me. Karmelo Anthony wasn't into his victim or the rest of the people in that tent. He wouldn't be into you. Or me. We both know why. Maybe you and I should take the late Scott Adams' advice from a couple years ago. Among other people it would benefit is black folks themselves. They aren't improved by the paternalistic groveling and simping from guilty white folks who pat them on the head and tell them that we really can't expect too much from them, anyways.