Yet another race hoax bites the dust. It feels like we see this story play out again and again: a so-called hate crime hits the headlines, the media and leftist activists rush to cry “racism,” and then—reality hits. This time, it’s a Virginia Tech professor trying his hand at the old liberal playbook. Predictably, it blew up in his face.
Dr. Onwubiko Agozino, who teaches sociology (shocking), reported to cops that a bunch of white teens pulled up outside his house, blasted rap music, hurled racist insults, and tossed snow and ice his way. The woke brigade swooped in, eager for another example of Trump’s “racist America.” They called it a targeted, terrorizing attack. It was all over social media faster than you can say “Jussie Smollett.”
Then police actually did their jobs—a wild idea for the left, apparently—and the truth came out. These kids weren’t aiming to commit a hate crime. They were just going to a nearby party and clearing snow off their truck. No racist shouting. No N-words. No targeting anyone’s house. The whole story collapsed like a house of cards. But that didn’t stop the professor and his activist pals from hyping up a fake narrative.
Liberals and their allies in academia have a sick obsession with pushing the racism agenda, even if they have to invent the incidents themselves. They want America to seem divided and evil, so they’re constantly searching (or creating!) scandals to keep their “white supremacy” fantasy alive. Why? Because it’s about power, control, and distracting from their own failures.
Here’s the punchline: while sane Americans want unity and truth, the left keeps fumbling the ball. They accuse others of hate, but they’re the ones manufacturing division. Maybe this professor should try teaching honesty for once, instead of peddling hoaxes to get attention.
How many more fake hate crimes do we have to go through before people wake up and realize who’s really poisoning our culture? Enough is enough. Let’s knock some sense back into “woke” academia and remind them: the truth matters more than their sick narratives.
Source: Townhall
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