But the victims of these rapes are also overwhelmingly black, as is the reporter who presents their stories. Thus — unless it constitutes racism simply to reveal such unpleasant facts — the makers of this documentary can hardly be described as racists.
The reporter, Sorious Samura, is a relatively recent arrival from Senegal, and did not grow up in the behavioral sink of the suburban housing estates where most of this documentary was filmed. He is patient and calm throughout, but his moral outrage at what these kids are doing shows through repeatedly — he finds it difficult to comprehend how boys could turn into violent predators at such a young age.
WARNING: These videos are disturbing. The language is not explicit, and no violence is depicted, but the actions that are described and discussed in them may upset sensitive viewers:
Part 1:
Part 2:
Parts 3 through 5 are below the jump.
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Part 3:
Part 4:
Part 5:
Hat tip: The Observer.
3 comments:
Paging Lorena Bobbitt to the black surgical phone.
All in favor of Sorious Samura appropriating Obama's Nobel Peace Prize, say "aye".
One last word: Jackals ... J A C K A L S
Some years ago, there was a TV programme of gang rapes in south Africa. Then there are similar rapes in America and wherever there are Blacks.
Again knife culture is mainly among the Black community.
It is hard to avoid the conclusion that criminality is part and parcel of the Black culture wherever it is.
Have blacks, as a group, anywhere adapted to Western mores and norms in a consistent and overwhelming positive manner? What is being described is not out of the ordinary, but just whatever can be expected. If there is a warning, it is directed toward other groups attempting to emulate this gangland, anti-civilizational culture of violence and barbarism, along with the politicians and their supporters who welcome this sort of thing in their quest to destroy Western civilization.
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