#Beat Up a White Kid Day is an honest name, a self-explanatory name too. Is it justified? My answer is YES! The Wikipedia redirects #Beat Up a White Kid Day to #Melissa King assault case implying that it was a one off rather than hate driven custom. The body of the Wiki's article makes it clear that this is not true. The Judge who convicted six of the criminals was forthright about the matter. Further an older version of the Wiki had a piece, #Beat Up a White Kid Day making it clear that it was a nasty tradition among blacks. The Wiki has been corrupted according to Larry Sanger - see The Wikipedia Is A Left Wing Propaganda Machine Says Its Co-Founder
The Metapedia's article, #Beat Up a White Kid Day ex Metapedia does not go beyond the Wiki's but then it works within a limitation; it uses the truth. However it has articles about Kill Haole Day, Knockout game and Hate crime. They cover similar ground, hatred driven by Racism but Anti-White Racism. You will be delighted to know that #Taharrush gamea is about hate driven attacks by Arabs and Egyptians. You might think that Devil's Night casts light on this phenomenon.
Compare this phenomenon with:-
The Knockout Game
Devil's Night
Black Bike Weekend Achieves Three Dead And Five Wounded
at Myrtle Beach.
Police Take 250 Prisoners At Miami Black Beach Week or even
Black Spring Breakers Go Armed [ 30 March 2022 ]
Beat Up a White Kid Day ex Metapedia
is the colloquial name for racially motivated attacks against White children occurring on May 1st. A trial in 2003 ended with six convictions for a mob attack causing serious injuries on a 13-year-old White girl, Melissa King, on May 1st, 2003, in Cleveland, Ohio. The judge stated that White students in Cleveland's integrated public schools had reason to fear assaults by non-White on every May 1. Many testimonies by students and teachers in the local The Plain Deadlier also stated the existence of a tradition of attacks against Whites on May 1st.[1][2][3][4]If May 1st "Beat Up a White Kid Day" attacks have occurred later than this in Cleveland or elsewhere is unclear. See also
Beat Up a White Kid Day ex Wiki redirects to Melissa King assault case
The Melissa King assault case was an incident in Cleveland, Ohio when personal animosity between two girls led to an alleged attack by eighteen youths aged between eight and fifteen on a thirteen-year-old white girl named Melissa King. Of the eighteen children, six were convicted. Although there were allegations that this was part of a customary "Beat up a White Kid" day, both prosecutors and defense lawyers agreed that the incident arose from a vendetta between two girls.2003 case
On May 1, 2003, school officials and students at Wilbur Wright Middle School separately notified police that "a large fight" was planned for after school near the intersection of Almira Avenue and West 110th street in Cleveland, Ohio.[1][2] Initially, it was believed that police arrived as the attack was under way.[3]Two police cars were there prior to the attack and when school let out they saw a large group of students walking in the street on West 110th. From their automobiles, the police warned them to walk on the sidewalk. Some of the students moved to block the police cars as part of the pre-planned attack.[1][2][4]
With the police kept at a distance, a pack of twelve girls and six boys, ages 9 through 15, began to run towards Melissa King, a 13-year-old white girl who was a student at Wilbur Wright and was walking home with two friends.[5][1][2]
On reaching King, one girl grabbed King's hair from behind and yanked her to the ground.[6] Then the black and Hispanic youths, 17 of whom were students at Wilbur Wright,[6] beat, kicked, and choked her.[3] As they pummeled and scratched at King, the attackers called her "honky", "white trash", and "white bitch."[7]
By the time police broke up the attack,[6] King had suffered serious injuries to her head, arms, face, neck, back, and an eye and experienced dizziness and blackouts that her mother claimed required repeated visits to the hospital.[1][3][8] When the attackers were asked separately by the police officers why the victim was jumped, each one stated, "It's May Day!"[1] They each went on to explain that May Day "is the day blacks beat on whites" and is known as "beat up a white kid day."[1][2][3][9] Others familiar with the attack said it wasn't personal, but in keeping with the May Day tradition where minority children get a "free shot" at white children simply because of their race.[10]
Defense lawyers and prosecutors both agreed that the attack sprang from a personal vendetta between Melissa and one girl. This girl testified that Melissa had overheard her talking to a school counselor after she was sexually abused and attempted suicide, and claimed Melissa had spread gossip about this.[citation needed] Within a few days of the attack, Wilbur Wright school responded by suspending five of the eighteen attackers from school for ten days.
2003 fall-out
When the attack was publicized a day later in The Plain Dealer, more than 100 readers contacted the newspaper to confirm that the May Day ritual had been alive and well for years.[11] Many in their 20s recalled staying home sick from school on May Day in the 1990s or hurrying home to avoid getting hurt.[11] Some teachers did not give homework that day because they knew attendance would be down.[11] Although annual assaults on white children by minorities is rooted in certain public schools on Cleveland's West Side,[6][12] the event may have multiple origins. For example, one man recalled that when he served in the military, many of his friends reported, participated in, or became victims of this annual ritual.[11]In June 2003, the juvenile justice unit of the Cuyahoga County prosecutor's office filed felonious assault and aggravated riot juvenile charges against the eighteen attackers.[3] Stating that the attack was some sort of May Day ritual with the "focus to beat up a white kid," the juvenile justice unit also charged the attackers with ethnic intimidation—a hate-crimes law.[3]
In July, Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court Judge Joseph F. Russo entered not guilty pleas and appointed lawyers for the youth, and issued arrest warrants for the four who failed to attend the court hearing.[13]
Judge Russo ended the trial on October 2003 with six convictions.[14] These six individuals admitted aggravated rioting, and two of those admitted to felonious assault. Judge Russo said that testimony from prosecution witnesses including Melissa was too conflicting, inconsistent and sometimes obviously false to prove the culpability of four defendants beyond reasonable doubt.[citation needed]
He also concluded that "based on the evidence I've heard, May Day is reality and the evidence was overwhelming that this was an attack based on May Day and that the victim was chosen because she was white."[5] In drawing his conclusion, Judge Russo suggested that white students in Cleveland's integrated public schools have reason to fear assaults by minorities in so-called May Day attacks every May 1.[5][15]
Taharrush gamea - Metapedia
Taharrush or Taharrush gamea has been stated to be a gang-rape phenomenon in the Arab world and also appearing in Europe. The name translates to "collective harassment". It is carried out by large groups of men who sexually assault lone women, either by groping, or in some instances, raping them. The men first surround their victim in circles. Some then sexually assault her, while others not directly involved watch or divert outsiders' attention to what is occurring. Sometimes the victim is also robbed. It is carried out in public and almost always at demonstrations or large public gatherings, where the attackers find safety in numbers and disorder. The attack may go unpunished, because the large number of perpetrators and the chaos of the attack make it difficult for authorities to identify those involved.[1]/a>Some well-known stated examples include an attack on the journalist Lara Logan, working for CBS, in Tahrir Square, Egypt, in 2011, during celebrations for the "Arab Spring" and in Cologne and other cities at 2015-2016 New Year celebrations. On 12 January 2016, "German police believe it was 'taharrush' committed in Cologne and other cities at New Year by Arab and North African men that led to hundreds of police complaints in the following weeks. [...] A total of 19 suspects have been identified, all foreigners."[1]
On 22 January 2016, when including reported attacks from all of the major cities in the North Rhine-Westphalia state, then the complaint figure almost topped 1,000. 359 complaints related to sexual offences. 659 women were reported as victims. There were 126 complaints of "rape by a group" and 47 complaints of "sexual assault by a group". German police had identified only 30 suspects despite that, reportedly, 1,000 migrants went on a rampage in Cologne. All of the suspects were of North African origin, with 15 being "asylum seekers". More generally, investigators have said the majority of the perpetrators were of North African and Arabic origin. Residents of Cologne were reported to be arming themselves with pepper spray and air guns.[2]
According to a police document leaked in July 2016, "the previous estimates have to be dramatically revised–upward. Authorities now think that on New Year’s Eve, more than 1,200 women were sexually assaulted in various German cities, including more than 600 in Cologne and about 400 in Hamburg. More than 2,000 men were allegedly involved, and 120 suspects–about half of them foreign nationals who had only recently arrived in Germany–have been identified. Only four have been convicted, but more trials are underway. [...] Officials have linked the sexual assaults to the influx of refugees. “There is a connection between the emergence of this phenomenon and the rapid migration in 2015,” Holger Münch, president of the German Federal Crime Police Office, told Sueddeutsche Zeitung. Many suspects had originally come to Germany from North African countries rather than Syria, officials said."[3]
Beat Up a White Kid Day ex Wiki some time ago
QUOTE
Beat Up a White Kid Day is the colloquial name for racially motivated attacks that occur on May 1 where African American, Hispanic, and other people of colour randomly seek out white (Caucasian) children and attack them. First publicized in Cleveland, Ohio, USA in 1993 following the May 1, 1992 national appeal for calm by Rodney King during the 1992 Los Angeles riots, these attacks occur on May 1, mostly in connections with schools. [ These occurrences were recognized through an October 2003 U.S. court proceeding, where an Ohio judge concluded that "based on the evidence I've heard, May Day is reality and the evidence was overwhelming that this was an attack based on May Day and that the victim was chosen because she was white.
UNQUOTE
Diversity is our strength. It gives a us a vibrant community and cheap labour. It also benefits from a total news blackout from the main stream media. You don't have to believe that it is part of a conspiracy to destroy America by cultural genocide but it explains what is being done to us by the disciples of Antonio Gramsci the chief theoretician of the communist party.