RAW EGG NATIONALIST: Free at last: Good riddance to the Community Relations Service and its anti-white agenda

The CRS emboldens the perpetrators of anti-white crime and tells them white people are fair game, that the usual sanctions simply don’t apply. 

The CRS emboldens the perpetrators of anti-white crime and tells them white people are fair game, that the usual sanctions simply don’t apply. 

ad-image

Free at last! It’s finally happening: The Community Relations Service is being abolished.

You can be forgiven for not knowing what the Community Relations Service is, but trust when I say that it’s a good thing it’s on Trump’s chopping block, according to CBS

The Community Relations Service is at the heart of anti-white racism in the US today. It’s helped to create a culture where the families of white victims of non-white crime—especially violent crimes, including murder—are forced to express public sympathy for the perpetrators and to disavow the possibility of any racial motive, even in cases where there obviously is or could be one. 

In effect, the Community Relations Service has been covering up anti-white violence, excusing it, and allowing more to happen as a result. The CRS emboldens the perpetrators of anti-white crime and tells them white people are fair game, that the usual sanctions simply don’t apply. 

And it’s all paid for by the taxpayer—by tens of millions of white people.

Pretty sick, right?

The CRS was founded in 1964 as part of the Civil Rights Act, to help pour oil on what were then very troubled waters indeed. The Service recently described its mission as helping to realise Martin Luther King Jr.’s “inspiring dream of a vibrant, all-embracing nation unified in justice, peace and reconciliation.” Which sounds great, of course, when said from a soapbox in a roaring down-home Southern-Baptist oratorical style—but things look quite different when the CRS puts those tubthumping words into action.

Over the decades since 1964, the CRS has become one of the most sinister institutions in America, part of an enormous edifice of systematic anti-white racism, which includes diversity, equity and inclusivity (DEI) initiatives in every major business, affirmative action at universities, and “anti-racist” education, beginning at elementary school, that’s the complete opposite of “anti-racist”—that wouldn’t sound out of place on the airwaves of Radio Rwanda.

The Community Relations Service has kept its activities largely secret. The public doesn’t have access to its activities, and the Service doesn’t really publish much about what it does. But it does provide some indication of when it’s been called into action; for instance, after the LA Riots in 1993 and during the craziness of the 2020 Summer of Floyd.

Just occasionally, though, we get glimpses of what the Community Relations Service really does, in detail. Until recently—until I started writing about the CRS, in fact—the website listed the case of Donald Giusti as a “successful” case study of its work.

In 2018, Donald Giusti was beaten over the head and stomped to death by a gang of Somalis in a park in Maine. Tensions between locals in the community of Lewiston had been high after an influx of migrants and boiled over, finally, one day at the park. The police chief decided it was time to call in the Community Relations Service, “to help ease racial tensions and strengthen community relations,” as the CRS website no longer puts it.

One part of the “peacemaking” process was getting members of the victim’s family to make public statements calling for calm. Giusti’s uncle and sister were called on to speak to the press. Both read prepared statements that were basically identical in their message.

“We want to see things come to an end, we want people to be able to come to the park and be happy. Walk through the park and not be afraid,” said the uncle. The sister expressed her hope that her brother’s death would not be for nothing and that it would “give this community a voice to say something needs to give.”

The CRS wasn’t finished. It also had to make sure the man accused of landing the fatal blow on Donald Giusti got off with a reduced sentence—to “strengthen community relations.” Instead of being charged with murder, the killer was allowed to plead “no contest” to a reduced charge of criminal negligence. He was sentenced to just nine months in prison.

Once you know this is what the CRS does—how it browbeats white people into accepting a different kind of “justice”—you start to see a pattern. All the bizarre pleas by white families for peace and understanding and reconciliation start to look even more suspect than they already did.

Has the CRS been coaching these people as well? 

Just last week, the father of Austin Metcalf, the Texas schoolboy stabbed to death at a track meet over a backpack, issued a statement in which he forgave the killer, Karmelo Anthony, and begged the public not to make the killing a racial issue. 

As I said at the time, it could be that Jeff Metcalf is simply a committed Christian who believes, wholeheartedly, in the notion of forgiveness, and is so self-possessed and earnest in his belief that he can say so, mere hours after the senseless killing of his own son. Jeff Metcalf could also be a true born-again libtard, the kind of person for whom signalling his own virtue takes precedence over everything else: “I’m a GOOD person, in case you didn’t know!” These people also exist. Or Jeff Metcalf could have been coached by the Community Relations Service, just like Donald Giusti’s uncle and sister were.

In truth, we simply don’t know. 

We also don’t know whether the CRS got to the father of Aidan Clark last September and made him say he wished his son had been killed by an old white guy, rather than a Haitian immigrant, so the killing couldn’t be politicised by the Trump campaign. We don’t know whether the CRS got to the father of Jonathan Lewis, who was kicked to death behind his school by a gang of black teens; the father begged for love and understanding too. The family of Andy Probst, a retired police chief who was run down by two non-white teens on a joyride, did the same, and said they didn’t want their father’s murder to be part of “a culture war.” 

If I were a betting man, I’d say that at least one of these cases involved the CRS, probably more.

But even if all of them were spontaneous expressions of authentic feeling, there are other cases—many other cases—where the Community Relations Service has intervened in this way. We just don’t know about them. At the very least, we can say this for certain: The Community Relations Service has helped to create a cultural “script” for white people to read, to excuse violence against them, simply on account of the color of their skin. And for that, it deserves to be destroyed a thousand times over.

Image: Title: crs
ADVERTISEMENT

Opinion

View All

KENNY CODY: Trump's young MAGA base creates a sustainable future for conservatism

Thanks to the Trump Administration and its policies, the gains conservatives have made among them loo...

SHANE CASHMAN: Cloning developments are frightening, not historic

This will eventually turn into the ethics of resurrecting people....

Moscow bombs Kyiv, killing at least 9, injuring dozens as peace talks hit the rocks

At least 42 people were hospitalized including six children, a Telegram post from the Kyiv City Milit...