IM2
Diamond Member
- Mar 11, 2015
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Every day, there are several threads started by people here about crimes by a black person against someone white. Earlier today I read a comment where one of the members claimed that there was an epidemic of this kind of crime. Never mind that crimes against backs a committ by whit in a wide variety of ways, particularly as it pertains to white collar crimes, the truth goes like this:
Current, reliable data show that most violent crimes in the United States are intra-racial — offenders and victims tend to share the same race — while documented inter-racial violent victimizations are substantially rarer. Recent reporting and analyses through 2025 and 2026 emphasize this pattern, but interpretations differ on causes and policy responses.
1. Why the question matters for public debate and policy
Public interest in intra- versus inter-racial crime drives media narratives, political messaging, and policing priorities, and misreading the data can fuel fear or policy missteps. Reporting about isolated, high-profile incidents — such as the Cincinnati brawl discussed in July 2025 — can generate outsized perceptions of inter-racial violence; that story noted that Black Americans accounted for 37.5% of arrests for violent crimes in 2023 while constituting 13.6% of the population, a statistic that lacks contextualizing denominators and victims’ race details. Other sources emphasize that despite headline cases, broader victimization surveys and Justice Department summaries consistently show the majority of violent incidents occur within the same racial group, reinforcing a different empirical baseline than sensational coverage.
2. What the national victimization data actually show
National Bureau of Justice Statistics and similar compilations referenced in recent reporting indicate most violent crimes are intra-racial, with non-Hispanic white offenders most often victimizing white victims and Black offenders most often victimizing Black victims; one synthesis cited that Black offenders accounted for about 15% of violent victimizations of white people from 2017–2021, while over half of violent crimes against white people were committed by white offenders. That pattern arises because violent crimes are usually interpersonal and geographically localized; demographic exposure — who interacts with whom in neighborhoods, workplaces, and social networks — strongly shapes offender–victim pairings, producing a clear statistical predominance of same-race incidents.
factually.co
Since MAGAS live according to this law, it's OK for whites to kill other whites, but black-on-black killings must be punished to th full extent of the law. White on white crime does not reflect upon the entire white culture, it's only an individual act, but if a black person kills another black person, it's a sign of the rot within the entire black culture.
Current, reliable data show that most violent crimes in the United States are intra-racial — offenders and victims tend to share the same race — while documented inter-racial violent victimizations are substantially rarer. Recent reporting and analyses through 2025 and 2026 emphasize this pattern, but interpretations differ on causes and policy responses.
1. Why the question matters for public debate and policy
Public interest in intra- versus inter-racial crime drives media narratives, political messaging, and policing priorities, and misreading the data can fuel fear or policy missteps. Reporting about isolated, high-profile incidents — such as the Cincinnati brawl discussed in July 2025 — can generate outsized perceptions of inter-racial violence; that story noted that Black Americans accounted for 37.5% of arrests for violent crimes in 2023 while constituting 13.6% of the population, a statistic that lacks contextualizing denominators and victims’ race details. Other sources emphasize that despite headline cases, broader victimization surveys and Justice Department summaries consistently show the majority of violent incidents occur within the same racial group, reinforcing a different empirical baseline than sensational coverage.
2. What the national victimization data actually show
National Bureau of Justice Statistics and similar compilations referenced in recent reporting indicate most violent crimes are intra-racial, with non-Hispanic white offenders most often victimizing white victims and Black offenders most often victimizing Black victims; one synthesis cited that Black offenders accounted for about 15% of violent victimizations of white people from 2017–2021, while over half of violent crimes against white people were committed by white offenders. That pattern arises because violent crimes are usually interpersonal and geographically localized; demographic exposure — who interacts with whom in neighborhoods, workplaces, and social networks — strongly shapes offender–victim pairings, producing a clear statistical predominance of same-race incidents.
What are the current crime rates for intra-racial vers...
Executive Summary Current, reliable data show that most violent crimes in the United States are intra-racial — offenders and victims tend to share the sam...
Wilhoit's Law states that "Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect."
Since MAGAS live according to this law, it's OK for whites to kill other whites, but black-on-black killings must be punished to th full extent of the law. White on white crime does not reflect upon the entire white culture, it's only an individual act, but if a black person kills another black person, it's a sign of the rot within the entire black culture.