Justifiable Homicide, a term too often used to describe the racist murders of Black people.
- Gabriel Prosser

- May 3
- 2 min read

The conning esoteric language of the white supremacist continues to make light of their wrongdoing. They are the chief deceivers of the nation, and the world over.
For far too long the murders of Black people by this system of white supremacy has allowed the fascist pigs and other areas of law to run amuck on the lives and rights of one people Black people, with no real repercussions or changes to deter this from happening.
The white supremacists and their weaponized media use the words Justifiable Homicide when they are referring to the murders of Black people to make light of their deaths and those who caused them.
We the Black people of this country cannot continue to forgive and forget the wrongs of a government and system that refuses to get it right when it comes to our lives and rights.
There has to something done to stop the civil war that is covered up by the media as they continue to rule our murders as justifiable Homicides.
Not long ago the world witnessed Daniel Penny murder Jordan Neely, and this was ruled as Justified by the racist powers that be.

Compare this to the recent case of Karmelo Anthony and Austin Metcalf we all know that this will not be ruled as a Justifiable Homicide even though evidence proves this. Which is exactly my point.

The murders of Black people by white aggressors will always be seen as Justified in a white supremacist system no matter the cause, proof of this is how some white people still can't get over O.J. Simpson.

Those in blue that are sworn to protect are the worst terrorist, and gangsters in the Black communities, yet we are told to turn the other cheek and look the other way why they are doing it, and even worse told not to believe what we have seen with our own eyes.
Rarely will you hear the term Justified Homicide being used when it pertains to the death and murders of white people. They will be labeled as just that deaths, or murders to constantly seek empathy and compassion from the public.




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