The outpouring of hatred against white people which erupted in May 2020 after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, serves as a classic example of how lies and distortions have become the norm in the mass media and in the mind of the mob.
CHAPTER
1
George
Floyd: A Test Case in Anti-White Hatred
The
outpouring of hatred against white people which erupted in May 2020 after the death
of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, serves as a classic example of
how lies and distortions have become the norm in the mass media and in the mind
of the mob.
The
establishment narrative alleges that Floyd, a 6 feet 4 inch (193 cm) and 223 pound (101 kg) “black”[1] American, was killed after
he was held in a neck restraint position by a white police officer.
The incident was filmed by a bystander
with one of the now ubiquitous cell phone cameras, and showed Floyd being held
by officer Derek Chauvin in a neck restraint pose.
On the video, Floyd can be heard telling the policeman
that he “can’t breathe,” and he then becomes unresponsive.
Floyd was subsequently treated onsite by paramedics, was
transported to a local hospital, but could not be revived. He was declared dead
at 9:25 p.m. on May 25, 2020.
The
footage of Floyd’s treatment went viral on social media. Within hours, there
were protests, which soon escalated into violence, looting, and arson. Thanks
to the mass media’s coverage, the protests first went national in the US
(following the same pattern in most cases, i.e. violence, arson, and looting),
and then, finally, internationally, as the protests “spread” to many parts of Western
Europe.
Before
all of the facts were known, the narrative had been created: Floyd had been
murdered by a racist white policeman for no reason at all except that he was
black, and this was just one of a long line of similar incidents where black
people are routinely murdered at will by whites. It is claimed that this is the
result of what is called “systemic racism,” or “endemic racism,” generated of
course by whites against nonwhites.
To
satisfy the mob, all four officers were fired. Chauvin was charged with second-degree
murder, third-degree murder, and manslaughter. The other three officers
present, Tou Thao, Thomas Lane, and J. Alexander Kueng were charged with aiding
and abetting both second-degree murder and manslaughter.
The
first flaw in this narrative came with the official autopsy carried out on
Floyd exactly twelve hours after his death.
The key findings from this report are:
1. No life threatening injuries identified (page 2 section III).
2. From the title of the autopsy report the cause of death is inferred to be cardiopulmonary arrest aggravated by law enforcement restraint and neck compression.
However:
(a) no physical damage to the neck or trachea is identified—except for resuscitation attempts.
(b) Suffocation by having weight restricting movement of the diaphragm—called mechanical asphyxia—is ruled out. If this was the case, there would be tell tale signs, including oxygen starvation in Floyd’s blood samples.* Nothing was found that supported mechanical asphyxiation as a cause of death.
He had sustained multiple minor injuries of the head and shoulders.
3. There is no evidence in the autopsy to support a death by homicide. This is an unfortunate case of a combination of factors, the most patent being Floyd under the influence of narcotic substances, his physical size and aggressive behavior. The role of the enforcement officers in this case does not support a conclusion of homicide.
* See “Forensic Analysis of Injury and Death by Asphyxiation,” TASA ID: 1785, The Tasa Group, Categories: Accident Analysis / Reconstruction.
According to the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office Autopsy Report, 20-3700, which listed the date and hour of the autopsy as 5-26-20; 9:25 a.m., and was carried out by pathologist Andrew M. Baker, MD, the primary cause of death was listed as “cardiopulmonary arrest”—in more common terms, cardiac arrest, or a sudden stop in effective and normal blood circulation due to failure of the heart to pump blood.[2]
In other words, the autopsy carried out within twelve hours of Floyd’s death indicated that he died of a heart attack, and not from being restrained by the police.
The autopsy report went on to reveal that Floyd was, proverbially speaking, as high as a kite, and certainly near death from a drug overdose, at the time of his arrest. In fact, Floyd had a history of drug abuse, with no less than four previous arrests involving drugs.[3]
The autopsy report showed the following drugs in his system at the time of autopsy:
Toxicology (testing performed on antemortem
blood specimens collected 5/25/20 at 9:00 p.m. at HHC and on postmortem urine)
A. Blood drug and novel psychoactive
substances screens:
1. Fentanyl 11 ng/mL
2. Norfentanyl 5.6 ng/mL
3. 4-ANPP 0.65 ng/mL
4. Methamphetamine 19 ng/mL
5. 11-Hydroxy Delta-9 THC 1.2 ng/mL; Delta-9
Carboxy THC 42 ng/mL; Delta-9 THC 2.9 ng/mL.
1. Fentanyl
is a narcotic analgesic with a potency at least eighty times that of morphine.
A dangerous dose of fentanyl in humans is 2 mg.,
and blood concentrations of approximately 7 ng/ml or greater often cause death.[4] (Bear in mind that Floyd’s sample of 11 ng/mL was taken twelve hours after his
death. This would mean that he likely took a far higher dose.)
2.
Norfentanyl is fentanyl’s
main metabolite—a substance necessary for metabolizing fentanyl. It is a US
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Schedule II controlled substance.
Substances in the DEA Schedule II have a high potential for abuse which may
lead to severe psychological or physical dependence.
3. 4-ANPP (4-anilino-N-phenethyl-piperidine) is another fentanyl metabolite conclusively linked to fatalities among drug users.[5]
4. Fatal methamphetamine overdoses are formally diagnosed from 100 mg–5g.[6] Floyd’s reading of 19 ng/mL—once again, bear in mind that his samples were taken at least twelve hours, and likely more, after he took the drugs)—means that his overdosing on this drug alone most likely killed him, especially given the fact that cardiac arrest is one of the most common side effects of methamphetamine overdoses.
According to the US’s National Institute on Drug Abuse, using methamphetamines causes a “variety of cardiovascular problems, including rapid heart rate, irregular heartbeat, and increased blood pressure . . . people who use methamphetamine long term may exhibit symptoms that can include significant anxiety, confusion, insomnia, mood disturbances, and violent behavior.”[7]
Furthermore, the effects of methamphetamine generally last 2–4 hours and the drug has a half-life of 9–24 hours in the body.[8] This means that Floyd had taken the drug just prior to his arrest and death.
5. 11-Hydroxy Delta-9 THC, Delta-9 Carboxy THC,
and Delta-9 THC all are indicators of heavy cannabis abuse. While not fatal by
themselves, when combined with the fentanyl and methamphetamine overdoses
detailed above, they would most certainly have contributed to Floyd’s serious
medical problems.
It is
therefore clear from the toxicology report that Floyd would have likely died
that day from cardiac arrest, regardless of whether or not he had been arrested
and restrained.
The
next flaw in the establishment narrative concerning Floyd’s death is the claim
that the policeman restraining him used some type of unnecessary and cruel “knee
on the neck” restraint method, and that this then caused the subject’s death.
Once
again, the truth was completely overlooked in the rush to blame “white racism.”
The official guide issued by the Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) to its
officers—and which was made publicly available long before the Floyd incident,
specifically allowed the use of knee on the neck restraints on suspects who
actively resisted arrest.
As was
outlined in the “Minneapolis PD Use of Force Policies, 5-300 Use of Force,”
section 5-311, titled “Use of Neck Restraints and Choke Holds,” which was
written into the code in October 2002, a “neck restraint” is defined as:
Neck Restraint: Non-deadly force option. Defined as compressing one
or both sides of a person’s neck with an arm or leg, without applying direct
pressure to the trachea or airway (front of the neck). Only sworn employees who
have received training from the MPD Training Unit are authorized to use neck
restraints. The MPD authorizes two types of neck restraints: Conscious Neck
Restraint and Unconscious Neck Restraint (04/16/12).
Conscious Neck Restraint: The subject is placed in a neck restraint
with intent to control, and not to render the subject unconscious, by only
applying light to moderate pressure (04/16/12).
Unconscious Neck Restraint: The subject is placed in a neck restraint
with the intention of rendering the person unconscious by applying adequate
pressure. (04/16/12).”
“PROCEDURES/REGULATIONS
II.
1.
The Conscious Neck Restraint may be used against a subject who is actively
resisting (04/16/12).”
The
regulations go on to state that a subject engages in active resistance when he
or she engages:
“in physical actions (or verbal behavior
reflecting an intention) to make it more difficult for officers to achieve
actual physical control.”
As
bodycam footage from all the officers involved in the case show, Floyd actively
resisted arrest, and the bystander video—which went viral and was the main
cause of incitement—only showed the very end of the entire incident.[9]
The
full videos show Floyd being uncooperative and becoming agitated when he was
told to get into a police vehicle. In fact, he thrashed about in the back of
the police car to the point where he injured himself.[10]
Furthermore,
the 9-1-1 call which started the entire saga, reveals clearly that Floyd was
heavily under the influence of drugs and acting highly erratic long before the
police became involved.
As
the official 9-1-1 call transcript—released by the city of
Minneapolis—revealed, the person who called the police from Cup Foods at 3579
Chicago Avenue, in Minneapolis, reported that Floyd was “not in control of
himself” and was heavily under the influence of what we now know was a lethal
dose of narcotics.
The
transcript reads:[11]
Operator: How
can I help you?
Caller: Um
someone comes our store and give us fake bills and we realize it before he left
the store, and we ran back outside, they was sitting on their car. We tell them
to give us their phone, put their (inaudible) thing back and everything and he
was also drunk and everything and return to give us our cigarettes back and so
he can, so he can go home but he doesn’t want to do that, and he’s sitting on
his car cause he is awfully drunk and he’s not in control of himself.
After
asking for a description of the car, the operator asks the caller to confirm
that Floyd was under the influence of “something.”
Operator: On
38th ST. So, this guy gave a counterfeit bill, has your cigarettes, and he’s
under the influence of something?
Caller: Something
like that, yes. He is not acting right.
The official charge sheet issued against Officer Chauvin[12] contains the following incredibly important details:
While Officer Kueng
was speaking with the front seat passenger, Officer Lane ordered Mr. Floyd out of
the car, put his hands on Mr. Floyd, and pulled him out of the car. Officer Lane
handcuffed Mr. Floyd. Mr. Floyd actively resisted being handcuffed.
Once handcuffed,
Mr. Floyd became compliant and walked with Officer Lane to the sidewalk and sat
on the ground at Officer Lane’s direction. In a conversation that lasted just
under two minutes, Officer Lang asked Mr. Floyd for his name and
identification. Officer Lane asked Mr. Lloyd if he was on anything and explained
that he was arresting Mr. Lloyd for passing counterfeit currency.
Officers Kueng and
Lane stood Mr. Floyd up and attempted to walk Mr. Floyd to their squad car (MPD
320 ) at 8:14 p.m. Mr. Floyd stiffened up, fell to the ground, and told the
officers he was claustrophobic.
MPD Officers Derek
Chauvin (the defendant) and Tou Thoa then arrived in a separate squad car.
The officers made
several attempts to get Mr. Floyd in the back seat of squad 320 from the driver’s
side.
Mr. Floyd did not voluntarily
get in the car and struggled with the officers by intentionally falling down,
saying he was not going in the car, and refusing to stand still. Mr. Floyd is
over six feet tall and weighs more than
200 pounds.
While standing
outside the car, Mr. Floyd began saying and repeating that he could not breathe.
The last sentence above, as detailed in the charge
sheet, is critical: it indicates that the now infamous “I cannot breathe”
statement, widely used by protestors and rioters to justify their criminal
rampages, was first used before Floyd was
put into the neck restraint position, and while he was still standing upright
under his own volition.
This, more than anything else, shows that he was in
fact starting to exhibit the first signs of cardiac arrest, brought on by his
drug overdose.
The charge sheet even states that Floyd was able to “move
back and forth” under Chauvin’s knee restraint:
The defendant went
to the passenger side and tried to get Mr. Floyd into the car from that side
and Lane and Kueng assisted.
The defendant
pulled Mr. Floyd out of the passenger side of the squad car at 8:19:38 and Mr. Floyd
went to the ground face down and still handcuffed. Kueng held Mr. Floyd’s back
and Lane held his legs. The defendant placed his left knee in the area of Mr.
Floyd’s head and neck. Mr. Floyd said, “I can’t breathe” multiple times and
repeatedly said, “Mama” and “please” as well. The defendant and the other two
officers stayed in their positions.
The officers said, “You
are talking fine” to Mr. Floyd as he continued to move back and forth.
The
viral video—which was the primary driver for the entire uproar—shows that Floyd
was able to lift his head and neck even when being restrained by Chauvin’s knee.
This
alone proves that Chauvin could not have suffocated him, or cut off his air
supply, or caused the cardiac arrest.
A
complete transcript of the conversations contained in the police bodycam videos[13] also
confirms without question that Floyd was suffering from the first symptoms of
cardiac arrest and breathing difficulty long before he was restrained by
Chauvin:
Kueng: You got foam around your mouth, too?
George Floyd: Yes, I was just hooping
earlier.[14]
Kueng: Take a seat.
George Floyd: I can’t choke, I can’t breathe
Mr. Officer! Please! Please!
George Floyd: My wrist, my wrist man. Okay,
okay. I want to lay on the ground. I want to lay on the ground. I want to lay
on the ground!
Lane: You’re getting in the squad.[15]
George Floyd: I want to lay on the ground! I’m
going down, going down, I’m going down.
Kueng: Take a squat.
George Floyd: I’m going down.
Speaker 9:[16] Bro, you about to have a heart attack and shit, man, get in the car!
George Floyd: I know. I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe [crosstalk 00:10:18].
Lane: Get him on the ground.
George Floyd: Let go of me man, I can’t
breathe. I can’t breathe.
Lane: Take a seat.
George Floyd: Please, man. Please listen to
me.
Chauvin: Is he going to jail?
George Floyd: Please listen to me.
Kueng: He’s under arrest right now for
forgery. [inaudible 00:11:04] going on.
George Floyd: Forgery for what? for what?
Lane: Let’s take him out and just MRE.[17]
George Floyd: I can’t fucking breathe man. I
can’t fucking breathe.
Kueng: Here, Come on out!
George Floyd: (inaudible 00:11:10) thank you.
Thank you.
Thao: Just lay him on the ground.
Lane: Can you just get up on the, I appreciate
that, I do.
Chauvin: Do you got your ah, restraint,
Hobble?[18]
George Floyd: I can’t breathe. I can’t
breathe. I can’t breathe.
Lane: Jesus Christ.
George Floyd: I can’t breathe.
Lane: Thank you.
George Floyd: I can’t breathe.
Kueng: Stop moving.
This
transcript clearly demonstrates that Floyd was medically distressed to the
point that both a bystander and he pointed out that he likely was about to
suffer a “heart attack,” and that his breathing difficulties had started long
before he was restrained by Chauvin.
The “I
can’t breathe” mantra, which has become the slogan most used by so-called
protestors, had therefore nothing to do with the police officer’s actions.
In
addition, Floyd also readily admitted to recently administering the lethal
concoction of drugs via his rectum—a technique which is used to speed up the
absorption process and get a quicker “high.”
Yet
another flaw in the “racist white police” narrative lies in the fact that two
of the officers charged in the Floyd case are nonwhites.
Chauvin
and Lane are the only two whites. Keung is of mixed race (a white mother and a
Nigerian father), while Thao is Hmong Vietnamese.[19]
In
addition, at the time of the incident, Chauvin was married to a Chinese woman,
Kellie,[20] which makes a complete mockery of claims that he personally is a “racist” of
any sort.
In
summary then, the facts of the case are as follows:
1. Floyd
was pumped full of dangerous, life-threating, self-administered drugs.
2.
Floyd went to a store to buy cigarettes with a fake $20 note.
3.
The fake note was detected by the store staff who then called the police.
4.
Floyd was so incapacitated that he was unable to drive away from outside the
store and was sitting in his vehicle when the first two officers arrived.
5.
Floyd resisted being arrested and had to be handcuffed.
6.
When the second set of officers arrived, he resisted being put in the back of a
police vehicle.
7.
While standing up, outside of the police vehicle, Floyd started complaining
that he was unable to breathe. This was the first of many times that he uttered
the “I can’t breathe” sentence, and it clearly had nothing to do with Chauvin.
8. He
was then forced into the police vehicle, but caused such a commotion that he
injured himself.
9. He
was then taken out of the vehicle by the officers, and collapsed on the ground
of his own volition.
10.
In order to prevent him causing further trouble, one officer held down his
legs, one his torso, and the third—Chauvin—placed his knee on his head and neck
area to restrain him—exactly as specified in Minnesota Police Department
guidelines.
11.
The video evidence, and even the charge sheet, confirms that Chauvin’s knee
hold was not excessive, as Floyd could still move his head and talk—something
that would have been impossible had his air supply been cut off or if the
restraint position had been life-threatening.
12.
While being restrained, Floyd’s life-threatening self-administered drugs caused
him to go into cardiac arrest, which resulted in his death.
13.
Only two of the officers involved—Chauvin and Lane—are white. Keung is half black,
while Thoa is Vietnamese.
14. At the time, Chauvin’s wife was Chinese. Any
sort of “white racism” on Chauvin’s part is therefore extremely improbable.
Despite all these facts, Floyd’s death has been
uncritically presented by the mob and their supporting mass media as an example
of “inherent white racism” and proof that “racist white police” go about
murdering innocent blacks at will in America.
The
facts of the case clearly speak otherwise.
Ignoring
these basic facts, the mass media has engaged in endless incitement and
anti-white hatred, repeating over and over again how “white racism” is to
blame, and maintaining that the Floyd incident was merely another example of
how wicked white police are to innocent blacks.
The
mob, acting upon the mass media’s incitement, has in turn engaged in rioting,
looting, and vandalism across America and Europe.
The
facts show clearly that Chauvin and his fellow officers committed no crime. Yet
they have been arraigned on extremely serious charges which carry penalties of
decades in prison, not to mention the destruction of their personal lives and
careers.
Pressure
from the mob and the Black Lives Matter groups on the politicians has reached
such an extent that the city of Minneapolis even issued a “revised” cause of
death “press release report”[21] in which the “manner of death” was listed as homicide.
The
original autopsy report never even had an entry titled “manner of death.” This
entry has clearly been added to appease the mob, and, of course, is completely
inconsistent with the cause of death, as given in the same “press release
report.” This “second report” states that the “cause of death” is “cardiopulmonary
arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression.”
In addition, the MPD has now withdrawn its official
guidance for the use of leg and arm restraints, also in response to the mob’s
demands.
The
facts of the case clearly show that in any normal unbiased and objective court,
the charges against the officers would be thrown out without further ado.
However,
in the current climate of hysteria and anti-white hatred, there is no guarantee
that justice of any sort will be served.[22]
This complete distortion is indeed an indication of
systemic racism—not against blacks or nonwhites, but rather against whites.
This is Chapter 1 of the book The War Against Whites: The Racial Psychology Behind the Anti-White Hatred Sweeping the West.
NOTES:
[1]It might come as a shock to many “African-Americans”—and
whites—to realize that “black Americans” are actually largely of mixed-race,
and not really “African” at all. “Blacks” in America have on average 24 percent
European DNA, and many have more than that (Katarzyna Bryc, et al., “The
Genetic Ancestry of African Americans, Latinos, and European Americans across
the United States,” Am J Hum Genet.
2015 Jan 8; 96(1): 37–53). By way of comparison, in South Africa, the “Coloured”
population, another mixed-race group, have a similar level of European
admixture, between 21 and 28 percent (Erika de Wit, et al., “Genome-wide
analysis of the structure of the South African Coloured Population in the
Western Cape,” Human Genetics volume
128, pages 145–153 (2010), May 20, 2010).
[2] Ananya Mandal, MD, “What is Cardiac Arrest?”, News Medical Life Sciences, February 26, 2019.
[3] According to court records in Harris
County, which encompasses Floyd’s hometown of Houston, authorities arrested him
on nine separate occasions between 1997 and 2007. He served nearly a decade in
prison in total. The arrests are detailed in those records as follows: (1).
Aug. 2, 1997, arrested for delivering cocaine to a second party. (2). Sept. 25,
1998, arrested for theft. (3). Dec. 9, 1998, arrested for theft. (4). Aug. 29,
2001, arrested for refusing to identify himself to police officers. (5). Oct.
29, 2002, arrested for possession of cocaine. (6). Jan. 3, 2003, arrested for
criminal trespassing. (7). Jan. 3, 2003, arrested for intending to deliver
cocaine to a second party. (8). Feb. 6, 2004, arrested for possession of
cocaine. In total, Floyd served over four years in prison for all these crimes.
(9). Apr. 3, 2009: sentenced to five years in prison for aggravated robbery
with a deadly weapon.
[4] All
data from the “Fentanyl drug profile” fact sheet, European Monitoring Center
for Drugs and Drug Addiction.
[5] Hana F H Martucci.
et al., “Distribution of furanyl fentanyl and 4-ANPP in an accidental acute
death: A case report,” Forensic Sci Int.,
Feb. 2018;283:e13–e17.
[6] Lee Weber, “Methamphetamine
overdose: How much meth does it take to OD?,” April 1, 2013, American Addiction
Center.
[7] “Methamphetamine DrugFacts,” National
Institute on Drug Abuse, May 2019.
[8] Ibid.
[9] “Body camera footage of Floyd arrest
could show more of story,” ABC News,
July 15, 2020; “Body camera
footage of Floyd arrest could show more of story,” Associated Press, July 14, 2020; and “Body camera footage captures
distraught George Floyd: ‘I’m not a bad guy’”, Associated Press, July 15, 2020.
[10] Ibid.
[11] 911 Call Transcript Incident Number: 20‐140629 May 25, 2020; 20:01:14,
City of Minneapolis. Also reported in “Full transcript of George Floyd 911 call describes ‘awfully
drunk’ suspect who was ‘not acting right’,” New
York Daily News, May 29, 2020.
[12] State of Minnesota, Plaintiff, vs
Derek Michael Chauvin, DOB: 03/19/1976, State of Minnesota, County of Hennepin,
District Court, 4th Judicial District, Prosecutor File No. 20A06620, Court File
No. 27 - CR -20-12646.
[13] Filed in District Court, State of
Minnesota, 7/7/2020 11:00 a.m.
[14] "Hooping” is street slang for the
administration of psychoactive drugs via an enema in the rectum.
[15] The squad car,
that is, the police vehicle. At this time, Floyd was still standing outside the
vehicle, resisting being placed inside the car.
[16] A third party observing the scene.
[17] MRE is a reference to “Mechanical Restraint Equipment,” i.e., handcuffs
and other methods of physically restraining a suspect.
[18] Hobble restraints are leather belts
used to limit the hand and feet movement of unruly suspects. They are common in
all police forces.
[19] “Officers Charged in George Floyd’s
Death Not Likely to Present United Front,” New
York Times, June 4, 2020. “The Black Officer Who Detained George Floyd Had
Pledged to Fix the Police,” New York
Times, June 27, 2020.
[20] “Wife of Derek Chauvin, officer
charged with murder in George Floyd’s death, files for divorce,” ABC News, June 3, 2020.
[21] Press Release Report, Floyd, George
Perry, Case No: 2020-3700, June 1, 2020.
[22] At time of writing, the tentative trial date for the four officers has been set for March 8, 2021.
6 comments:
Fantastic summary. Super well done.
Very impressive research - if only the lying anti-white MSM would publish this...
Thanks for putting this together. Very enlightening. Almost everyone has jumped the gun on this issue. BTW, I would love to see your analysis of the 2017 Egyptian mummy DNA study if you have the desire. Regards.
Thanks. THe 2017 DNA report on the Egyptian mummies is surveyed in the second edition of my book "The Children of Ra" https://ostarapublications.com/product/the-children-of-ra-artistic-historical-and-genetic-evidence-for-ancient-white-egypt/
I often read that it is Blacks, not Whites that are far more likely to be stopped and/killed by cops simply because they are Black. And it is White on Black crime that is greater. Have you ever written anything to expose this and get to the truth of the matter?
Martin James: yes, all of this is addressed in detail in my book "The War Against Whites."
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