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London Calling Podcast Yana Bolder
Let’s start things off by saying, there is a world of difference between a hate crime and the consequences of being a racist in public. But in today’s America—fueled by Donald Trump’s culture of grievance and white victimhood—the lines are being intentionally blurred. And as usual, Black people are paying the price.
Take the most recent viral incident in Holly Springs, Mississippi. A white man, reportedly intoxicated, barges into a local bar and starts throwing around the n-word like it’s 1825. When patrons respond with fists instead of forgiveness, he ends up stripped naked and beaten with poles. Now police are investigating that as a potential hate crime against the man who came in using racial slurs. The audacity would be laughable if it weren’t so damn dangerous.
Let me say it again for the people in the back: Suffering the consequences of your own racism is not a hate crime.
We’ve entered a new era in the American grift. Where once white supremacy used hoods and fire, it now dons legal briefs and GoFundMe links. Racism isn’t just a belief system—it’s a business model. A profitable one at that.
Remember Shiloh Hendrix, the woman accused of calling a five-year-old Black child the n-word at a Minnesota playground? She didn’t hide in shame. She launched a donation campaign and raised over $750,000. That’s right. You can racially terrorize a toddler and walk away with three-quarters of a million dollars. And people wonder why these incidents are increasing.
Kyle Rittenhouse killed two people at a Black Lives Matter protest and walked out of court a conservative celebrity with a PR team and a podcast. George Zimmerman profited off killing Trayvon Martin by posting autographed Skittles and gun memorabilia. We’ve got a pipeline of racist provocateurs turning public outrage into personal income, and white America is footing the bill.
This is bigger than individual bigotry; it’s systemic, and Donald Trump is its biggest investor.
From the moment he stepped into office, Trump launched an all-out assault on diversity. Whether by gutting DEI programs, penalizing colleges for acknowledging race in admissions, or signaling to the January 6th insurrectionists that their actions were worthy of clemency and possibly compensation, he’s made one thing crystal clear: protecting whiteness is the top priority. And he’s backed it with presidential pardons and campaign promises to “take a look” at punishing the Capitol officer who shot Ashli Babbitt.
Trump’s messaging has created a climate where white people feel emboldened to provoke, antagonize, and weaponize their own “victimhood,” then sue or crowdfund when reality punches back. And when they’re called out? The legal system becomes their next hustle.
The American Bar Association is watching this unfold in real time. The explosion of libel cases tied to racism allegations proves that white fragility is no longer just a TikTok talking point—it’s a litigation strategy. Zimmerman v. Buttigieg. Amy Cooper’s defamation claim against her employer. Even Oberlin College was sued for defamation because its students dared to protest a bakery after a Black student’s arrest.
Let’s be real, this isn’t about clearing names. It’s about silencing truth-tellers and draining the resources of Black Americans who dare to name what they see. It’s punishment disguised as justice. These lawsuits are intended to bankrupt and intimidate us out of holding anyone accountable for racism.
Meanwhile, white people who do engage in documented, verified racism get to cry on camera, monetize their misdeeds, and retire off public pity. We’ve moved from the Karen gets caught on tape era to the Karen cashes out phase of the grift.
And the worst part? The media often plays along. “Unarmed man beaten after bar altercation,” they’ll say. Or “Police investigating hate crime.” What they should say is: “Drunken racist assaulted after provoking patrons with slurs.” But that doesn’t fit the narrative of white innocence and Black savagery, so they skew the framing, and we keep getting played.
Let’s call this what it is: a coordinated cultural and legal attack on Black self-preservation. It’s not about what was said. It’s about who has the right to say anything at all. Because if white people get to weaponize racism and collect a check when they get called on it, what message does that send? That your trauma is their transaction. That our pain is just another profitable stop on the Caucasian Tear Tour.
To be clear, I’m not advocating violence, but I am demanding clarity. Consequences are not oppression. Accountability is not a hate crime, and Black people refusing to be disrespected isn’t reverse racism.
If we don’t draw a clear line now, the precedent being set will ensure that every racist has a lawyer on speed dial and a Venmo QR code tattooed on their chest. The question isn’t whether they’ll be punished for racism—it’s how much they’ll profit from it.
So while Trump pardons rioters and courts entertain libel suits from known bigots, the rest of us are left navigating a system that punishes truth and rewards audacity. It’s not just unjust—it’s un-American.
But then again, maybe this is the most American thing of all.
SEE ALSO:
White Folks Gave Us ‘Black Fatigue,’ Now They’re Trying to Steal It
Malcolm X’s Legacy Is The Blueprint For Black Self-Sufficiency
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