What is a false flag operation? It's when a group uses deliberate misinformation to disguise an actual source of responsibility and pin the blame on another party. President Trump "colluding with Russia" is a false flag. Anyone with a brain larger than a pea knows that it was Hillary Clinton who hired a foreign actor to work with the Russians and develop a fictitious hit job on then-candidate Trump. And the big lie continued even after Trump was elected and the truth was exposed, due in large part to the DNC's propaganda wing (AKA the mainstream media).
The false flags keep popping up, even when the truth is plainly visible. Hunter Biden's laptop ("Russian disinformation!") is another case in point. What should have been a blockbuster, election-breaking story of the century was virtually ignored by the media and the gullible lapdogs among the Great Unwashed. Pretty depressing, isn't it?
There are too many lies and false flags to list here, but there's one in particular that I find especially perplexing: white rage. I've known and interviewed white separatists, klansmen, outlaw bikers, and Christian Identity types. But I've never met someone who struck me as having "white rage," at least as I'd define it. I remember the days when the term "black rage" was used to offset accusations of racism against blacks. The theory was that they couldn't be racist because this country's history of slavery and oppression created a psyche where they lashed back at whites out of frustration and anger, not because of the color of their skin. As a result, a black career criminal could rape and murder a white girl, but it would never be called a "hate crime." That was impossible, because blacks were incapable of hating whites based on the color of their skin. It was a history of oppression that prompted their criminal behavior. Therefore, they were the actual victims. Obviously, white rage, whatever it is, is not the equivalent to black rage.
The term "white rage" apparently came into vogue a few years before the current Marxist revolution. According to Wikipedia, the phrase was coined by one Carol Anderson, who happens to be black and is a professor of (drum roll, please!) African-American studies at Emory University. "Her research focuses on public policy with regards to race, justice and equality," Wikipedia noted. It's unknown why the current buzzword "equity" was not...
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Fixed, Thanks.
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