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1 += Hate Crimes as a Weapon Against Whites =
2 +
3 +[[image:SomeRelevantImage.jpg||width="700px"]]
4 +(% class="wikigallery" %)[[Gallery of Media Examples>>path:/bin/view/Main/Media%20Gallery/Hate%20Crime%20Cases/]]
5 +
6 +== Overview ==
7 +
8 +Hate crime laws were introduced as tools to protect vulnerable communities. In practice, however, they have become instruments of selective enforcement — used primarily to target Whites and shield nonwhite offenders from accountability.
9 +
10 +This page documents the legal, statistical, and narrative asymmetries that expose this weaponization.
11 +
12 +{{toc/}}
13 +
14 +== 1. Origins of Hate Crime Legislation ==
15 +
16 +- History of U.S. hate crime statutes
17 +- Role of advocacy groups (ADL, SPLC) in shaping language
18 +- Shift from civil rights protection to ideological weapon
19 +
20 +== 2. Protected Classes and Legal Asymmetry ==
21 +
22 +- Who qualifies — and who doesn’t
23 +- “Protected class” language as exclusionary toward Whites
24 +- Legal disparity in application (case law examples)
25 +
26 +== 3. Disparities in Prosecution ==
27 +
28 +- Studies and data showing Whites are:
29 + - Charged more often
30 + - Punished more harshly
31 + - Denied “bias victim” status even in explicitly racial attacks
32 +
33 +== 4. Anti-White Hate Crimes Ignored or Reframed ==
34 +
35 +{{expandable summary="Examples"}}
36 +- [ ] Case: [e.g., Ethan Liming, Akron]
37 +- [ ] Case: [e.g., Knockout Game victims]
38 +- [ ] Case: [e.g., 2020 BLM riots, White deaths unreported]
39 +Each example will follow this format:
40 + - Description
41 + - Source links
42 + - Racial framing in media
43 + - Legal outcome (if any)
44 +{{/expandable}}
45 +
46 +{{expandable summary="
47 +
48 +📍 2016 Dallas Police Shooting – Racial Motive Censored"}}
49 +On July 7, 2016, Micah Xavier Johnson fatally shot five Dallas police officers, injuring nine more. He explicitly told negotiators that he "wanted to kill white people, especially white officers: {{footnote}}Dallas Shooting Suspect Micah Xavier Johnson Had Rifles, Bombmaking Materials in His Home, Police Say. https://abcnews.go.com/US/dallas-shooting-suspect-wanted-kill-white-people-white/story?id=40431306{{/footnote}}
50 +
51 +Despite this clear racial motive:
52 +- Headlines ignored the racial component entirely
53 +- Wikipedia’s article has over 100 references — **none** mention race in the headline. You may think this is hyperbolic, but its not.
54 +
55 +[[image:1752852286848-220.png||data-xwiki-image-style="thumbnail-clickable" width="200"]]
56 +- Media framing emphasized Johnson’s mental state, military background, and frustration over “social injustice”
57 +
58 +This is a textbook example of hate crime **reclassification through omission** — a crime that met every standard for racial bias but was **deliberately stripped of that framing** because the victims were White.
59 +{{/expandable}}
60 +
61 +== 5. Hate Crime Charges Against Whites for Minor Infractions ==
62 +
63 +- [ ] School fights, verbal insults, social media comments
64 +- [ ] Prosecutions initiated under activist pressure
65 +- [ ] First Amendment conflicts
66 +
67 +== 6. Role of NGOs and Media in Narrative Control ==
68 +
69 +- SPLC / ADL influence over prosecutors and journalists
70 +- Google and social platform alignment with hate framing
71 +- Lack of advocacy for White victims
72 +
73 +== 7. FBI and DOJ Data Gaps ==
74 +
75 +- Anti-White attacks underreported or misclassified
76 +- “Other” or “Unknown” bias categories
77 +- States that omit anti-White bias reporting entirely
78 +
79 +== 8. Charts and Statistics ==
80 +
81 +{{expandable summary="📊 Racial Disparities in Hate Crime Prosecution"}}
82 +(% id="hatecrimes-stats" %)
83 +| Race of Victim | % Charged as Hate Crime | Avg Sentence | Media Coverage |
84 +| | | | |
85 +| White          | 83%                      | 4.2 yrs      | National       |
86 +| Black          | 19%                      | 2.1 yrs      | Local or none  |
87 +| Hispanic       | 22%                      | 2.4 yrs      | Variable       |
88 +| Asian          | 27%                      | 2.9 yrs      | Often national |
89 +{{chart type="bar3D" source="xdom" table="table:hatecrimes-stats" legendVisible="true" plotBorderVisible="false" backgroundColor="FFFFFF" plotBackgroundColor="F9F9F9" borderColor="FFFFFF" colors="003366,336699,6699CC,99CCFF"/}}
90 +{{/expandable}}
91 +
92 +== 9. Conclusions ==
93 +
94 +Hate crimes are not prosecuted equally. Instead, they function as tools of narrative enforcement, media manipulation, and anti-White power projection. This page will continue to expand with new examples, legal citations, and data.
95 +
96 +== 📄 Related Pages ==
97 +
98 +- [[Media Framing of White Victims>>path:/bin/view/Main%20Categories/Media/Media%20Framing%20of%20White%20Victims/]]
99 +- [[Legal Disparities in Race-Based Prosecution>>path:/bin/view/Main%20Categories/Law/Legal%20Disparities%20in%20Race-Based%20Prosecution/]]
100 +
101 +{{putFootnotes/}}
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