News and Political Commentary

A Tale of Two Murders

by Paul Jones

On Aug. 3, 2016 the dead body of Karina Vetrano was found, a 30 year old woman who had gone jogging the day before along a bike path in Howard Beach, Queens. Investigators found that she had been strangled and there was evidence of sexual assault. Her father, Phil, a retired FDNY firefighter who was working during 9/11, was with the police when the discovery was made.

On April 19, 2017 the accused killer later found guilty of the crime, a black man named Chanel Lewis who lived in a housing project in a nearby part of Brooklyn, New York, said in a report by “The New York Daily News” that “he attacked Vetrano to ‘let my emotions out’ in confession to authorities.” “The mother Cathy Vetrano didn’t speak on Tuesday, but blasted her daughter’s suspected killer at his arraignment in February. ‘He’s a demon,’ she said.”

According to Wikipedia, “During his confession, he also said that he ‘didn’t like the people over there’ referring to the Howard Beach neighborhood, historically an Italian-American community.” This might have resulted from what happened in Howard Beach on Dec. 20, 1986, when “a black man was killed and another was beaten in a racially charged incident that heightened racial tensions in New York City…To protest the killing of Griffith, 1, 200 demonstrators marched through the streets of Howard Beach on Dec. 27, 1986. A heavy NYPD presence kept angry white locals, who were screaming at the crowd of marchers, in check.”

In the more recent murder earlier this month in Brooklyn, Iowa, that of Mollie Tibbets, the jogger who was killed by Christian Rivera, there has been a completely different reaction. Mollie, having been up to her death a typical, brainwashed young white woman at Iowa College, apparently had plenty of non-white friends and not only was she liberal and deracinated, as the system wants all younger whites to be, but her family is as well. So when it was found that an illegal Mexican immigrant in the neighborhood had stabbed her to death, the only reaction I have heard about by parents or relatives is not anger against the killer, as was the case with Karina Verano’s family, but anger against politicians like Trump who are supposedly trying to politicize the tragedy by talking about the need for border security and tighter controls over illegals in the U.S.

In the “Lancaster Online” of Sept. 2, 2018 in an opinion piece the father of Mollie, Rob Tibbets, “spoke out against using his daughter’s death in support of ‘views she believed were profoundly racist,’ a call that comes after President Donald Trump and others seized on the suspected killer’s immigration status to argue for changes in U.S. immigration laws.” The day before, in an opinion piece published by “The Des Moines Register” he pointed out that his stepdaughter is Latina and he argued that the suspected killer “is no more a reflection of the Hispanic Community as white supremacists are of all white people.” At her funeral eulogy he said, “The Hispanic community are Iowans. They have the same values as Iowans,” He said. “As far as I’m concerned, they’re Iowans with better food.”

Using the language imposed by political correctness, the term “white supremacist” means any white person who is not totally deracinated and not guilt ridden about the “evils” our race has supposedly caused the non-white races of the world, or as Susan Sontag put it, “The white race is the cancer of human history.” Mollie, her family and relatives apparently were good students in that regard, while Karina and hers are still part of a tight knit white enclave in New York City where it is still not considered immoral to have a realistic view about race and the much higher crime rate of blacks and Hispanics compared to whites. Mollie’s Dad in his eulogy at her funeral called her a “hero,” while I see her as a victim of the family’s inability to be objective about racial realities.

As long as the kind of thinking expressed by the family of Mollie’s is prevalent among whites, our European descendants in the U.S. are going to undergo many more of the kind of atrocities that happened to Karina and Mollie.

Please follow and like us:
error3987

Leave a Reply

Theme by Anders Norén

error

Enjoy this blog? Please spread the word :)