The hate crime that wasn’t
The American Thinker had this article about the hate-crime that wasn’t. (H/T ECM)
Excerpt:
Late one night, a black woman living in a predominately white neighborhood was startled awake by the sound of breaking glass. Inside her 4-year-old son’s room, she found a brick. Attached to it was a note: “Keep Eastside White. Keep Eastside Strong.”
Yes, a clear-cut case of racism. A hate crime. Yet incredibly, the police decided otherwise. Why? Police said the note did not constitute “hate speech.” Accordingly, the crime “probably would be criminal mischief and deadly conduct, both misdemeanors,” according to police.
No doubt, the brick-throwing incident — and the police’s handling of it — would surely make a good story for Harvard’s Henry Louis Gates, Jr to include in yet another essay or book on America’s deep-seated racism. Racism that he recently experienced first-hand.
The forgoing incident, by the way, occurred not long ago in Austin, Texas. However, two small details were changed to make a point: The mother was in fact white, and she was living in a predominately black neighborhood. This may help to explain why police decided there was no hate crime: Hate crimes, of course, can only be committed by whites against other racial and ethnic minorities.
It doesn’t fit the left’s narrative.
The attempted rape that wasn’t
Here is another American Thinker article about a rape that didn’t count as a rape. (H/T Andrew)
Excerpt:
There is a young man imprisoned in the California State Prison system whose story has to be told again and again until he is pardoned or otherwise released from his sentence. His story really boils down to one question: Should not our sons be accorded the same legal protections as our daughters if they are raped or fighting off an attempted rape?
This is the story of Steven Nary, an 18-year old sailor who stood nary a chance after a night on the town turned horribly wrong.
It doesn’t fit the left’s narrative.