Tuesday, February 23, 2021


DailyKenn.com — America's homicide rate spiked after the death of George Floyd. The career criminal died in police custody in 2020 giving far-left extremists an excuse to run amok for months on end. 

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Now, a study reveals the consequences of the left's subsequent assault on law and order: A significant increase in homicides. Many, if not most, of those murdered were black. That, in turn, seems to confirm that the so-called 'black lives matter' movement is counter productive and that left-wing extremists really don't care about black lives. Rather, they seem intent on advancing class warfare at the expense of black lives. 

How serious is the backlash? It seems those who passionately hate blacks actually support the black-lives matter movement because of it's stochastic effect. Every sign reading "black lives matter" encourages blacks to kill each other.

Excerpted from wnd.com ▼

In the weeks following Floyd's death on Memorial Day, for example, homicides rose 100% in Minneapolis, 200% in Seattle, 240% in Atlanta and 182% in Chicago. In New York City, shootings have more than doubled so far in 2020 compared to last year.

[Steve] Sailer's graph, using data from 19 cities scraped from the City Crime States website, shows that prior to Memorial Day of 2020, the worst day for murders in 2020 was 18. But on May 31, the first day of massive protests, 37 people were murdered according to the data.

A second national surge began about six days after the June 12 death in Atlanta of Rayshard Brooks, who stole an officer's tazer and shot at him.

By July 4, murders were up 23%. By July 21, the rise was 27%.

A third increase began about a week after the Aug. 23 police shooting of Jacob Blake, who was shot while armed with a knife while resisting officers in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Sailer explained that his graph shows the homicide trends over the course of 2020 -- until September -- in comparison to the average for the five previous years across 19 cities for which CCS had day-by-day homicide stats.
 


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