They want public outrage and shock. Nothing scares white people more than the thought that Black people dont respect the cops. Good propaganda tool.
Well....what the blacks in Baltimore did last night provided all the shock they needed.
Just like body cams on cops......all you have to do to expose reality is put a camera on the black community and let them speak for themselves. Last night...they did. And White Flight 2015 begins. Luckily...we have the money to flee the urban crapholes.
Let me know when they actually put a camera on the Black community instead of Black criminals. White people are stupid if they believe that most Blacks are like that. I know fear triggers a mental shutdown in whites but this is ridiculous.
Call it what you will but people react to the kind of lawlessness that invariably follows these "peaceful" protests. In Ferguson the property wealth of home and biz owners - both black and white - was recently flushed down the toilet:
Home Values Tumble in Ferguson Realtor Magazine
Home values in Ferguson, Mo., have plummeted nearly 50 percent since Michael Brown’s death, new housing data shows.
Protests erupted in November following a grand jury's decision not to indict Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of teenager Michael Brown.
Members of the community are feeling the financial toll from the civil disturbances last year that caused property values to fall rapidly. John Zisser, owner of a business called Zisser's Tires says last year his business' property was valued at nearly a million. "If I sold this place today, I could probably get $300,000 for it, if anyone is crazy enough to buy."
Since Brown's death in August and the protests that followed, home prices have been steadily declining, according to housing data from MARIS, an information service for real estate professionals. Before Brown's death, the average home sold in 2014 for $66,764 in Ferguson. For the final three and a half months of 2014, the average home sold for $36,168 – a 46 percent decline. So far in 2015, prices are continuing to tumble, with homes now selling on average for $22,951.