
My favorite type of racist, or what’s known as a “MAGA” in this context, is the person who is completely unaware of how easily they can be mistaken for an “Aryan,” but more importantly, how they never imagined that the very shoe they once licked for approval would one day be used to bite their teeth.
Usha Vance’s attempt to ingratiate herself with white supremacists reminds me of this 2015 case involving an Indian-American police officer in plainclothes who had just murdered an innocent Black man in cold blood.
What you see in the picture is the racist killer, Raja, wearing his shirt inside out, surrounded by professional police officers in more appropriate uniforms and precinct chiefs with years of experience helping racist white police officers get away with murdering innocent Black men.
They brought him back to the scene of the crime, where he had gone hunting the night before, to explain the legitimacy of his killing. Clearly, they don’t believe what he’s selling. Raja is a cruel and deceitful killer.
Corey, the innocent Black man he killed, was a musician returning home from a concert. When Raja pulled up in the opposite direction in an unmarked white pickup truck, Corey was parked on the side of the road with his disabled car, having refused several offers of rides from friends, insisting on staying to protect his drum kit.
When Raja got out of his unmarked white pickup truck without turning on his lights or identifying himself as a police officer, and fired a shot from about half a football field away from Corey’s car, Corey was on the phone with roadside assistance, which later recorded the entire incident.
In fact, after Raja shot and killed Corey, he called 911 from his personal phone, and the operator asked him, “Where’s your radio?” That was the extent to which he wasn’t acting like a police officer that night.
When they brought him back to the scene to explain what had happened, he was unaware that the police, who were not trying to save him, had reviewed the recorded call with the roadside assistance company that Corey had been speaking to on the phone that fateful night.
Hmm. Many immigrant minorities in this country insist that “Make America Great Again” is a “sensible” conservative ideology similar to the one they were used to in their home countries, which I strongly disagree with, having spoken with several of them at university who had “recently” arrived here.
It seems to me that many of the “Make America Great Again” minorities are the classic case of the oppressed becoming the oppressor. “Make America Great Again” doesn’t give them a chance to cooperate in feeding the hungry and the poor; instead, it gives them a constitutionally protected opportunity to indulge their “worst instincts.”
Some of them, like Raja, are bloodthirsty. But what we can all agree on is that white supremacists want priority in “things” here, and even that’s becoming difficult. The “Make America Great Again” supporters might not let you swoop in from Hashmagash and start claiming their land unless Kash Patel intervenes, of course.
What makes the suffering of Black people feel so terrible and so grand? And why lie after portraying it?
I don’t understand it.
Let’s talk about that thing pinned to his shirt.
Honestly, that thing on his shirt might affect me the way Usha Vance’s demure looks affect MAKE AMERICA GREAT 2016 at this point in American politics; I found Raja’s show disturbing. Usha Vance is the only prominent MAKE AMERICA woman who has maintained her elegance and won’t endorse:
Excessive amounts of blonde hair extensions
Excessive amounts of lip fillers, girl fillers, not to mention awful makeup
It’s almost as if there’s a uniform look that the leading MAKE AMERICA women strive for.
I mean, does she think she’s bigger than the show? She’s already chosen the side that disenfranchises her; so why not just go along with it? I guess what I’m also saying here is that if Usha had dyed her hair blonde earlier, we might have avoided the tragedy of watching Erica Kirk throw her weight around the timeline like that.




