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David Horowitz - I Cant Breathe: How a Racial Hoax Is Killing America

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THE TRUTH ABOUT THE BLACK LIVES MATTER MARTYRSThis book is essential. Dont miss it. MARK LEVINA brilliant examination of the actual facts of the George Floyd case and the subsequent exploitation of his death by Black Lives Matter. LEO TERRELL, civil rights attorney & commentatorIn his latest salvo in the battle for Americas survival, David Horowitz exposes the racial hoax that is spawning riots and dividing the nation. Examining the twenty-six most notorious cases of police racism from Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown to George Floyd and Breonna TaylorHorowitz demonstrates that Black Lives Matter has lied about every one of them in its quest to undermine law and order, fuel race hatred, and destroy America.In case after case, the lies and mythmaking break down under Horowitzs scrutiny. Even the chief prosecutor in the George Floyd case was forced to admit that he had no evidence of racial bias, while Breonna Taylor, the longtime accomplice of a major drug dealer, was killed when she and her boyfriend resisted arrest.The unchallenged myths about racist murders by the police have brought mayhem and crime to our cities, where the victims are predominantly black. They are also a slander against the United States, the least racist country in history, and against black Americans, the vast majority of whom are successful and law-abiding citizens.Now the Biden administration has embraced the false narrative of systemic racism and white supremacy, which supposedly infect every aspect of American life, using it to justify a witch hunt for domestic terrorists. Most Americans, black and white, know in their bones that this portrayal of their country is a lie. An unflinching and courageous accounting, I Cant Breathe is the urgently needed proof that they are right.

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I Cant Breathe Read at your own risk How a Racial Hoax is Killing America - photo 1

I Cant Breathe

Read at your own risk!

How a Racial Hoax is Killing America

David Horowitz

Trigger Warning: This book presents facts about controversial incidents at odds with the conventional wisdom.

To the victims PART ONE AN AMERICAN CATASTROPHE A SUMMER OF INSURRECTIONS O n - photo 2

To the victims

PART ONE AN AMERICAN CATASTROPHE
A SUMMER OF INSURRECTIONS

O n May 25, 2020, the death of a black American in the custody of Minneapolis police led to one of the greatest eruptions of lawlessness and violence in American history. The violence was provoked by a disturbing video that recorded the last breaths of George Floyd, a Minneapolis citizen who expired with a policemans knee pressed firmly on the side of his neck for more than nine minutes. The principal organizer of the protest was a group called Black Lives Matter (BLM), which for seven years had been conducting similar demonstrations against what it called the systemic racism and brutality of a white supremacist society that targeted black Americans like George Floyd.

The protests and riots that followed Floyds death were so large and destructive, involved so many Americans, and involved such powerful elements of the nations culture as to reshape its political alignments, affect a presidential election, and inspire the largest exodus from Americas cities ever recorded. An earthquake in the nations human landscape had altered its political and social fault lines for good.

Studies by Princeton University and the Wisconsin-based Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project revealed that during the first 103 days of the unrest, there were 633 violent protests in approximately 220 locations across the United States, including 48 of the 50 largest American cities, and 74 of the top 100. Black Lives Matter activists were involved in about 95 percent of those violent and destructive incidents.

During the riots, Black Lives Matter leaders issued no condemnations of the violencein direct contrast to the Civil Rights Movement leaders of the 1960s, who insisted on the principle of non-violence and whose demonstrations were not accompanied by attacks on police and the destruction of local businesses. The peaceful protests associated with Black Lives Matter were staged during the daytime and then regularly morphed into riots under cover of night. These facts make it difficult to regard the peaceful protests as distinct and separate from the violence, rather than as fraternal accessories to it.

The insurrectionary nature of the Black Lives Matter protests was captured in the principal slogan used by both demonstrators and rioters: No Justice, No Peace! This could easily be seen as a thinly veiled threat: Submit to our views and meet our demands, or face destructive chaos. The chant No Justice, No Peace! accompanied by such large-scale violence made clear that the remedy envisaged was notand could not bea reform within existing institutions. To make the changes necessary to secure justice, the system must be dismantled first, and then reimagined, to use the in-vogue radical verb. The message was clear: the only acceptable solutions were extreme measures. Only a revolutionary force outside the system could fix it, even though the systems in cities like Minneapolis and all the other major centers of the violence were entirely controlled by liberal Democrats who had endorsed the Black Lives Matter movement. Apparently, those liberals shared the goals of the radicals but lacked the spine to achieve them.

Six years earlier, Black Lives Matter had instigated similar riots over a similar arrest in Ferguson, Missouri. The principal differences between the civil violence in Ferguson and Minneapolis were scope and scale. The Ferguson street battles, arsons, and lootings were mainly confined to one city and lasted roughly one month. But in the intervening years, Black Lives Matter had grown in number and capability to the point where it could now threaten civil order on a national scale. Its increased power was fueled by tens of millions of dollars donated by tax-exempt foundations; major American companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon; and wealthy individuals on the political left, such as George Soros and LeBron James.

During the 2020 sieges, hundreds of millions of additional dollars in donations from corporate America and celebrities in entertainment and sports flowed into the war chest of Black Lives Matter, making it the most powerful radical movement in American history. Thanks to its increased resources, the wave of Black Lives Matter riots engulfed hundreds of municipalities and brought several major cities, including Minneapolis, Portland, Seattle, and New York, to their knees.

The night after George Floyds death, thousands of angry demonstrators took to the streets and began a war that would continue throughout the summer and beyond. As in the Ferguson riots, the primary targets were the forces of law and order. It was an insurrectionary movement, directly challenging the civil authority.

Sometime after 6:00 p.m. on the night after George Floyds death, rioters in Minneapolis vandalized the local police headquarters, spray-painting squad cars and hurling rocks and other projectiles at law-enforcement officers.

In direct refutation of the central claim of Black Lives Matterthat rampant white supremacy in America had led to George Floyds murderthe actions of the arresting police officers were universally condemned across the country. The spectacle of a black mans life slipping away on camera was horrifying to Americans, both black and white. Police chiefs and police unions across the country were as outraged as everyone else about what had happened to George Floyd, describing the incident as not acceptable, deeply disturbing, and absolutely reprehensible.

The consensus over the Floyd killing raised unsettling questions. How could there be systemic racism throughout Americas criminal justice system if the condemnation was so universal? Many police departments, including Minneapoliss, were headed by blacks. Why were violent demonstrations and threats of No Justice, No Peace the only solutions capable of addressing the death of George Floyd if it was so unanimously deplored? In the prevailing atmosphere of outrage, these questions were never asked. Instead, bowing to the political demands of the rioters, the Minneapolis authoritiesall Democrats and supporters of Black Lives Matterordered their police department not to suppress the violence of what were, in fact, vigilantes, and therefore not to fulfill their oaths of office to ensure civil order and peace.

The Riots

With police standing by or in retreat, some two thousand rioters burned down the Minneapolis Third Precinct police station. It was actually surrendered to the rioters by the Democrat authorities, as the mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, explicitly ordered his officers to evacuate the station.

More ominously, this easy victory for the rioters became an inspiration to radicals in other cities to do the same. The attacks on police marked the beginning of sustained violent assaults that left in their wake the kind of devastation familiar in war zones. During the next several weeks, looters and arsonists destroyed nearly 1,500 businesses in Minneapolis and its twin city, St. Paul, alone.

Many of the destroyed businesses were local shops that served poorer communities. The life savings and investments of the ordinary citizens who owned them were destroyed overnight. One handicapped black woman wept bitterly as she said, These people did this for no reason. This is ridiculous. These people are tearing up our livelihood. This was the only place I could go to shop, and now I dont have anywhere to go.

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