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Government And MSM Deflecting Truth About Terrorism In Burnings Of Black Churches [Picture, Video]

Monday, July 6, 2015 13:43
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(Before It's News)

 

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The cause of a fire at Glover Grove Baptist Church in Warrenville, S.C., has yet to be determined.

 

ABC News Screenshot

 

 

 

 

There is something both sinister and cowardly about trying to destroy Black Jesus.

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screen shot

 

 

Black churches in North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida and Tennessee have burned in the weeks following the terrorist attack on Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., that killed nine people. In response, agents of the state and mainstream media have attempted to gaslight black America into believing that the smoke choking our collective souls is imagined.

Lightning, that was it. Maybe some delinquent kid or faulty electrical wiring. According to the Department of Justice, “Preliminary investigations indicate that two of the fires were started by natural causes and one was the result of an electrical fire …. If in fact there is evidence to support hate crime charges in any one of these cases, the FBI, in coordination with the ATF [Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives] and local authorities, will work closely with the Civil Rights Division and the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices to bring those forward.”

Is it possible that these fires can be easily explained away by bad lightning or bad luck? Maybe. Is it likely? Absolutely not. 

Unsurprisingly, even with America’s long history of white supremacist violence against black homes and institutions—particularly houses of worship—there has been more effort put into pre-emptively dousing black rage than into diffusing the coalesced white hatred that has risen to the forefront in the wake of Dylann Roof’s attack on Mother Emanuel.

We’ve been here before—right here. This is not an attack on Christianity; it is an attack on black America.

 “We are familiar with the terror tactics of the KKK and other racists hate groups …. These fascists, cowards have always targeted black churches in the South,” said Frank Chapman, field organizer of the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression.

“That is why we don’t believe these are just random acts of violence. These are deliberate acts of terrorism designed to cripple and destroy our movement …. This is not a time for attacking the religious beliefs of the victims and survivors of racist terror. We must insist and demand that these racist-terrorists be brought to justice.”

Chapman is spot-on in his assessment, even though his expectation of “justice” within the same racist framework we’re trying to dismantle feels like a dream deferred. Justice in the United States has never been considered an inalienable right for black people, rather a privilege stingily and reluctantly handed out to the most “respectable” among us, if even then.

 I am reminded of John Henrik Clarke, who wrote:

Who is justice? I would like to know,
Whosoever she is, I could love her so.
I could love her, though my race
So seldom looks upon her face.

This country’s steep investment in white supremacy and white innocence underlines Clarke’s words. With scarce details, a narrative has emerged in the wake of the church fires that seems relentlessly devoted to ensuring that each fire is viewed in a vacuum. After nearly a week of silence from mainstream media, the forced response seems to be, “There’s nothing to see here, no connection to the mass murder in Charleston and definitely not to each other.”

Oh, but there is. Nothing could interest me less than cold, theoretical musings on the history of church fires and the callous dismissal of black fear as it’s flung against a wall of apathy and tepid concern. And though forgiveness of the heinous acts committed against black folks has been positioned as next to godliness, if our blackness is really sacred, then our rage in response to attempts at its annihilation must be divine.  SOURCE

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