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The Worst Week Yet: September 29-October 5, 2024

 
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Manage episode 444004186 series 3493546
Counter-Currents에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Counter-Currents 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.

1,761 words

Washed-out section of the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina in the wake of Hurricane Helene. Image source: National Park Service

Last week I spoke of my morose dread that when Hurricane Helene passed through the Atlanta suburbs, my house would be uprooted and start spinning in the air Wizard of Oz-style, but we survived with little more than a thorough soaking.

To nearly everyone’s surprise, the area that wound up getting crushed to bits was North Carolina’s western hill country. It used to be that coastal North Carolina towns such as Cape Hatteras and Cape Fear needed to batten down the hatches during hurricane season, but not this time.

One expects flatlanders rather than mountaineers to be most affected by tropical storms. Florida, which has the lowest high point of any state in the Union—some unremarkable geological lump near the Georgia border that manages to rise a piddling 345 feet above sea level—seems to get the worst of it most of the time. Coastal areas along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean typically bear the brunt of hurricane season.

Audio version: To listen in a player, use the one below or click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save link/target as.”

https://counter-currents.com/wp-content/uploads/audio-articles/wwy193.m4a

But now that the BBC is calling it the “deadliest mainland US hurricane since Katrina in 2005,” I’ve realized Helene was an atypically inland hurricane. Katrina’s trajectory was even further inland.

When I asked ChatGPT what town Helene hit hardest, it answered:

The town that suffered the most casualties from Hurricane Helene last week was Asheville, North Carolina, where catastrophic flooding caused widespread devastation. The death toll in the Asheville area, particularly in Buncombe County, has reached at least 72 people, with more than 200 still unaccounted for. The flooding there surpassed records set in previous disasters and caused significant destruction to infrastructure and homes.

In an article called “50 States in 50 Lines,” I described North Carolina thusly:

Rolling hills and friendly hill folk—except for Asheville, where the hippie-hipsters walk around as if they have dreamcatchers lodged in their rectums.

Asheville is an Appalachian anomaly, as if someone had surreptitiously dumped a mini-Portland amid hillbilly country. It boasts of an all-female city council—four whites and three blacks. Although still only 10% black as of 2020, the town has been pursuing slavery reparations for years now. Not to be outdone by larger and blacker cities, last year Asheville had its very own shooting at a Juneteenth festival.

The federal response to the devastation in western North Carolina became last week’s political hot potato. Right-leaning observers compared it unfavorably to the feds’ response to Hurricane Katrina, while leftist media apologists scurried to “debunk” those claims.

Gregory Hood in American Renaissance:

Western North Carolina and other areas of Appalachia have been devastated by flooding, with more than 1,000 people reported missing. President Donald Trump headed to the area to provide aid and draw attention to the residents’ plight — something the national media is hardly doing. It is quite a contrast to Hurricane Katrina, which crippled the Bush Presidency and became an excuse for the media to berate whites about racism. However, when white people are most of the victims, it seems that silence (at best) is the rule.

A typical response article came from David Klepper, who has also written about “antisemitism” for the Times of Israel and “transphobic Texas shooting conspiracies” for People’s World. But in this case, he’s writing for the Associated Press in what was not marked as an opinion piece, so we can take solace in the knowledge that his essay is fair and objective rather than a brick-hard fecalith of gaslighting. Mr. Klepper’s article is titled “After the deluge, the lies: Misinformation and hoaxes about Helene cloud the recovery.” It has a subhead titled “Debunking conspiracy theories takes time away from recovery efforts.” He prattles about “extremist groups” and the “hucksters” who “spread false claims,” about “Far-out tales of space lasers, fake snow and weather control technology — sometimes tinged with antisemitism.”

Of course he squeezed “antisemitism” in there. It’s like he couldn’t help it. How many Jews are there in western North Carolina’s hill country, anyway? Five? Do they even know about Semites out there?

Interestingly, the word “debunk” has its roots in North Carolina’s western hills. Asheville is the seat of Buncombe County, NC. The word “buncombe” was a favorite of H. L. Mencken’s. Pronounced “bunkum,” it became synonymous with “hogwash” or “nonsense”—or, if you’re more crudely inclined, “bullshit.” It gradually became spelled “bunkum” and was then attenuated to “bunk.”

I’m not a mind-reader, nor am I what you might call politically savvy. Sometimes I even struggle to decide what to eat for breakfast. I don’t know enough about FEMA or hurricanes or logistical challenges when hurricanes hit hillbilly country to have a solid opinion on whether the feds deliberately withheld aid from devastated white Appalachians. But I agree with Gregory Hood that the establishment press attacked the federal management of majority-black New Orleans during Katrina, while they ran cover for the feds’ handling of majority-white western North Carolina during Helene.

I’ve spent the better part of the last three decades noting how nearly all the media, regardless of political leanings, regard southern Appalachia’s white hillbillies as contemptible subhumanoids. The 1913 book Our Southern Highlanders presented the region’s wild and woolly whites as an exotic and uncivilized species. So I was saddened to find that Helene took out large chunks of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Starting just south of Asheville and running nearly 500 miles up into Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, the Blue Ridge Parkway is one of the nation’s most jaw-droppingly unspoiled drives. Hearing that a hurricane crippled it felt as if one of hillbilly country’s major arteries had suffered a debilitating stroke.

Happy Hate Crimes Awareness Month!

Were you aware that October is Hate Crimes Awareness Month? I wasn’t, and I find this problematic. How can we be aware of hate crimes if we’re not even aware that there’s a whole month devoted to being aware of them?

This October marks only the second Hate Crimes Awareness Month in history. Last year, motivated by a “deeply disturbing, ongoing series of hate-fueled crimes,” the SPLC announced that October would henceforth be known as “Hate Crimes Awareness Month.” Their official press release quoted the pumpkin-headed SPLC President and CEO Margaret Huang:

More than ever, the mainstreaming of white supremacy and hate violence today underscores the need for all of us to reject hate wherever and whenever it occurs…. But to do that effectively, we must understand the extremist forces we’re up against and the scope of the crisis…. We must stop this cycle of hate that too often ends with dire consequences for the Black [sic] community and other communities of color, Jewish people [sic], and the LGBTQ+ community.

To heighten my awareness of hate crimes, I availed myself of two hate-spurred incidents that hit the news last week.

In San Antonio on Wednesday morning, an unnamed black female was reportedly “made aware that someone had spray-painted racial slurs, swastikas, and referenced body parts on her property.”

That’s horrible, but why was she keeping “body parts on her property”?

The woman says that after seeing the spray-painted slurs and swastikas, she’s now terrified to sleep at home:

Being targeted as a Black [sic] female, it made me feel as someone is watching me, to say kill all n******… I broke down in tears because, in all the years that I’ve lived here in San Antonio, Texas, I’ve never encountered this type of behavior from anyone. So, I was shocked and broken…. I mean, this was a public street, but it’s my fence. I’m very much targeted. They skipped over all the houses and got me, so somebody is watching me …. It could be kids, it could be adults, it could be a gang, it could be anybody. I don’t know, but it made me feel like I didn’t belong in my own home, and I don’t feel safe in my own home.

Sad, sickening, sobering stuff.

Only a day before I learned of the San Antonio hate crime, I was made conscious of an eerily similar case out of Ohio. Angela Frase, a black woman who had spent decades in a loving interracial marriage, said she and her melanin-deprived hubby had endured a cavalcade of emotional bludgeoning and pyrotechnic terrorism at the hands of shadowy neighborhood hatemongers. Frase said that someone had clumsily spray-painted a swastika and the “N” word so that she’d see it. A police deputy would later note that the term “white power” had been spray-painted on the race-mixing negress’ garage.

Then one morning while she and her husband had been staying in a motel due to a string of unexplained gas leaks and mysterious electrical mishaps at her house, she came home to find that her interracial abode had been blown to bits:

It was like, this didn’t just happen. I don’t understand it…. We got here and this is what we saw, but it was in flames, you know? It was done, there was nothing that could be saved…. They will figure it out, you will pay for it, it is sickening to do this to someone’s home and not even know if they are in there.

About a week later, the hapless miscegenator told authorities that she’d gone to her mailbox, only to find that it contained a stuffed doll someone had painted black. She said the doll also had a piece of string wrapped around its neck as if to simulate a lynching.

These sordid events, both real and alleged, happened back in the summer of 2019. I became aware of this case last week because Ms. Frase is finally being charged with staging the whole sorry-ass Hate Fiasco. According to a Cleveland news station, “Feds say Wayne County home explosion hate crime was scheme to defraud insurance company”:

Federal court records revealed investigators figured out it was Angela Frase who “did knowingly devise and intend to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud her insurance company and to obtain money and property by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises from about June 1, 2019 through June 17, 2020….

Court documents say she received checks for more than $320,000.

Federal prosecutors say in the months before the explosion Angela started complaining on Facebook about flooding, saying “It’s time to sell this place and move.”…

Court documents also say a neighbor offered to help and [her husband] Brad replied, “If you want to help me you can blow the rest of the house up.”

’Twould be a pity if the anonymous black woman in San Antonio had also fabricated her spray-painted swastikas-and-N-words story.

For the sake of public decency, is it wrong to hope that this Texas woman was at least the victim of a legitimate hate crime?

  continue reading

12 에피소드

Artwork
icon공유
 
Manage episode 444004186 series 3493546
Counter-Currents에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Counter-Currents 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.

1,761 words

Washed-out section of the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina in the wake of Hurricane Helene. Image source: National Park Service

Last week I spoke of my morose dread that when Hurricane Helene passed through the Atlanta suburbs, my house would be uprooted and start spinning in the air Wizard of Oz-style, but we survived with little more than a thorough soaking.

To nearly everyone’s surprise, the area that wound up getting crushed to bits was North Carolina’s western hill country. It used to be that coastal North Carolina towns such as Cape Hatteras and Cape Fear needed to batten down the hatches during hurricane season, but not this time.

One expects flatlanders rather than mountaineers to be most affected by tropical storms. Florida, which has the lowest high point of any state in the Union—some unremarkable geological lump near the Georgia border that manages to rise a piddling 345 feet above sea level—seems to get the worst of it most of the time. Coastal areas along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean typically bear the brunt of hurricane season.

Audio version: To listen in a player, use the one below or click here. To download the mp3, right-click here and choose “save link/target as.”

https://counter-currents.com/wp-content/uploads/audio-articles/wwy193.m4a

But now that the BBC is calling it the “deadliest mainland US hurricane since Katrina in 2005,” I’ve realized Helene was an atypically inland hurricane. Katrina’s trajectory was even further inland.

When I asked ChatGPT what town Helene hit hardest, it answered:

The town that suffered the most casualties from Hurricane Helene last week was Asheville, North Carolina, where catastrophic flooding caused widespread devastation. The death toll in the Asheville area, particularly in Buncombe County, has reached at least 72 people, with more than 200 still unaccounted for. The flooding there surpassed records set in previous disasters and caused significant destruction to infrastructure and homes.

In an article called “50 States in 50 Lines,” I described North Carolina thusly:

Rolling hills and friendly hill folk—except for Asheville, where the hippie-hipsters walk around as if they have dreamcatchers lodged in their rectums.

Asheville is an Appalachian anomaly, as if someone had surreptitiously dumped a mini-Portland amid hillbilly country. It boasts of an all-female city council—four whites and three blacks. Although still only 10% black as of 2020, the town has been pursuing slavery reparations for years now. Not to be outdone by larger and blacker cities, last year Asheville had its very own shooting at a Juneteenth festival.

The federal response to the devastation in western North Carolina became last week’s political hot potato. Right-leaning observers compared it unfavorably to the feds’ response to Hurricane Katrina, while leftist media apologists scurried to “debunk” those claims.

Gregory Hood in American Renaissance:

Western North Carolina and other areas of Appalachia have been devastated by flooding, with more than 1,000 people reported missing. President Donald Trump headed to the area to provide aid and draw attention to the residents’ plight — something the national media is hardly doing. It is quite a contrast to Hurricane Katrina, which crippled the Bush Presidency and became an excuse for the media to berate whites about racism. However, when white people are most of the victims, it seems that silence (at best) is the rule.

A typical response article came from David Klepper, who has also written about “antisemitism” for the Times of Israel and “transphobic Texas shooting conspiracies” for People’s World. But in this case, he’s writing for the Associated Press in what was not marked as an opinion piece, so we can take solace in the knowledge that his essay is fair and objective rather than a brick-hard fecalith of gaslighting. Mr. Klepper’s article is titled “After the deluge, the lies: Misinformation and hoaxes about Helene cloud the recovery.” It has a subhead titled “Debunking conspiracy theories takes time away from recovery efforts.” He prattles about “extremist groups” and the “hucksters” who “spread false claims,” about “Far-out tales of space lasers, fake snow and weather control technology — sometimes tinged with antisemitism.”

Of course he squeezed “antisemitism” in there. It’s like he couldn’t help it. How many Jews are there in western North Carolina’s hill country, anyway? Five? Do they even know about Semites out there?

Interestingly, the word “debunk” has its roots in North Carolina’s western hills. Asheville is the seat of Buncombe County, NC. The word “buncombe” was a favorite of H. L. Mencken’s. Pronounced “bunkum,” it became synonymous with “hogwash” or “nonsense”—or, if you’re more crudely inclined, “bullshit.” It gradually became spelled “bunkum” and was then attenuated to “bunk.”

I’m not a mind-reader, nor am I what you might call politically savvy. Sometimes I even struggle to decide what to eat for breakfast. I don’t know enough about FEMA or hurricanes or logistical challenges when hurricanes hit hillbilly country to have a solid opinion on whether the feds deliberately withheld aid from devastated white Appalachians. But I agree with Gregory Hood that the establishment press attacked the federal management of majority-black New Orleans during Katrina, while they ran cover for the feds’ handling of majority-white western North Carolina during Helene.

I’ve spent the better part of the last three decades noting how nearly all the media, regardless of political leanings, regard southern Appalachia’s white hillbillies as contemptible subhumanoids. The 1913 book Our Southern Highlanders presented the region’s wild and woolly whites as an exotic and uncivilized species. So I was saddened to find that Helene took out large chunks of the Blue Ridge Parkway. Starting just south of Asheville and running nearly 500 miles up into Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, the Blue Ridge Parkway is one of the nation’s most jaw-droppingly unspoiled drives. Hearing that a hurricane crippled it felt as if one of hillbilly country’s major arteries had suffered a debilitating stroke.

Happy Hate Crimes Awareness Month!

Were you aware that October is Hate Crimes Awareness Month? I wasn’t, and I find this problematic. How can we be aware of hate crimes if we’re not even aware that there’s a whole month devoted to being aware of them?

This October marks only the second Hate Crimes Awareness Month in history. Last year, motivated by a “deeply disturbing, ongoing series of hate-fueled crimes,” the SPLC announced that October would henceforth be known as “Hate Crimes Awareness Month.” Their official press release quoted the pumpkin-headed SPLC President and CEO Margaret Huang:

More than ever, the mainstreaming of white supremacy and hate violence today underscores the need for all of us to reject hate wherever and whenever it occurs…. But to do that effectively, we must understand the extremist forces we’re up against and the scope of the crisis…. We must stop this cycle of hate that too often ends with dire consequences for the Black [sic] community and other communities of color, Jewish people [sic], and the LGBTQ+ community.

To heighten my awareness of hate crimes, I availed myself of two hate-spurred incidents that hit the news last week.

In San Antonio on Wednesday morning, an unnamed black female was reportedly “made aware that someone had spray-painted racial slurs, swastikas, and referenced body parts on her property.”

That’s horrible, but why was she keeping “body parts on her property”?

The woman says that after seeing the spray-painted slurs and swastikas, she’s now terrified to sleep at home:

Being targeted as a Black [sic] female, it made me feel as someone is watching me, to say kill all n******… I broke down in tears because, in all the years that I’ve lived here in San Antonio, Texas, I’ve never encountered this type of behavior from anyone. So, I was shocked and broken…. I mean, this was a public street, but it’s my fence. I’m very much targeted. They skipped over all the houses and got me, so somebody is watching me …. It could be kids, it could be adults, it could be a gang, it could be anybody. I don’t know, but it made me feel like I didn’t belong in my own home, and I don’t feel safe in my own home.

Sad, sickening, sobering stuff.

Only a day before I learned of the San Antonio hate crime, I was made conscious of an eerily similar case out of Ohio. Angela Frase, a black woman who had spent decades in a loving interracial marriage, said she and her melanin-deprived hubby had endured a cavalcade of emotional bludgeoning and pyrotechnic terrorism at the hands of shadowy neighborhood hatemongers. Frase said that someone had clumsily spray-painted a swastika and the “N” word so that she’d see it. A police deputy would later note that the term “white power” had been spray-painted on the race-mixing negress’ garage.

Then one morning while she and her husband had been staying in a motel due to a string of unexplained gas leaks and mysterious electrical mishaps at her house, she came home to find that her interracial abode had been blown to bits:

It was like, this didn’t just happen. I don’t understand it…. We got here and this is what we saw, but it was in flames, you know? It was done, there was nothing that could be saved…. They will figure it out, you will pay for it, it is sickening to do this to someone’s home and not even know if they are in there.

About a week later, the hapless miscegenator told authorities that she’d gone to her mailbox, only to find that it contained a stuffed doll someone had painted black. She said the doll also had a piece of string wrapped around its neck as if to simulate a lynching.

These sordid events, both real and alleged, happened back in the summer of 2019. I became aware of this case last week because Ms. Frase is finally being charged with staging the whole sorry-ass Hate Fiasco. According to a Cleveland news station, “Feds say Wayne County home explosion hate crime was scheme to defraud insurance company”:

Federal court records revealed investigators figured out it was Angela Frase who “did knowingly devise and intend to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud her insurance company and to obtain money and property by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises from about June 1, 2019 through June 17, 2020….

Court documents say she received checks for more than $320,000.

Federal prosecutors say in the months before the explosion Angela started complaining on Facebook about flooding, saying “It’s time to sell this place and move.”…

Court documents also say a neighbor offered to help and [her husband] Brad replied, “If you want to help me you can blow the rest of the house up.”

’Twould be a pity if the anonymous black woman in San Antonio had also fabricated her spray-painted swastikas-and-N-words story.

For the sake of public decency, is it wrong to hope that this Texas woman was at least the victim of a legitimate hate crime?

  continue reading

12 에피소드

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