Squires: If 'silence is violence,' corporate media should stand trial every time black men like Mike Hickmon are killed



During the summer of 2020, it was common to hear from liberals seeking to guilt white people into supporting Black Lives Matter that “silence is violence” and “silence is complicity.”

Their belief was simple: The deaths of black men should matter to white people who have the privilege and resources to change America for the better. Corporate media and big business got the memo. So did the NBA, MLB, NHL, and NFL. All made some reference to BLM on their courts, fields, or uniforms.

The Washington Nationals postponed a game with the Philadelphia Phillies on August 27, 2020, to “call attention to racial and social injustice” in the wake of the Jacob Blake shooting. The team made no mention of the mass shooting a few weeks prior, when more than 20 black people were shot at a black party 12 minutes from the stadium.

This perverse dynamic is why the fatal shooting of coach Michael Hickmon in Lancaster, Texas, is not getting the type of attention you would expect from ESPN, Fox Sports, or the rest of corporate sports media.

According to reports, coach Hickmon was shot at a youth football game by Yaqub Talib, brother of retired NFL cornerback Aqib Talib, after a fight at the end of the game. Yaqub Talib turned himself in to police on August 15 after they issued a warrant for his arrest on murder charges. Witnesses allege Aqib Talib participated in the fight that precipitated the shooting.

Murder is the ultimate act of evil, regardless of the ethnic makeup of the victim or perpetrator. But if silence is violence, then the only group more violent toward black men than their peers are the black elites whose righteous indignation flares up like seasonal allergies when the loss of black life is a sign of ongoing racial strife.

It is unfair to demand that every black celebrity respond publicly to every homicide with a black victim. That doesn’t mean people shouldn’t ask why sports networks that covered the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict would completely ignore a fatal shooting at a youth football game that involved a former NFL player. I have not heard from Stephen A. Smith, Shannon Sharpe, or Snoop Dogg — who has been a very public supporter of youth football. The highest-profile ESPN personality who has addressed this incident is Kendrick Perkins, an NBA analyst.

The reason for this violent silence is simple. Black death is profitable to corporate media only if the person holding the gun is white. This incident would likely generate a lot more attention if a white player with a bad reputation had been involved.

When white men engage in acts of violence, their actions are attributed to their privilege, rage, and racism. When black men do the same, society is blamed for putting them in an environment that forced them into criminal behavior. Perhaps the people who have become so accustomed to blaming poverty for crime have a hard time understanding how the brother of a millionaire could end up shooting someone at a football game for kids.



Coach Hickmon’s son was on the field at the time of the shooting. Not only is this a traumatic incident for him personally, but it is also a terrible lesson for all of the boys in the game. Black boys are exposed to death way too often in this country, from the suburbs of Dallas to public housing units in Washington, D.C. They hear the gunshots at night, and many have lost friends to senseless acts of violence. They hear it in their music and see it in the videos they watch. They are saturated in death, and many turn to sports as a way to escape the harsh realities in their neighborhoods.

Activists want all the public attention on black victims when they are shot by white police officers, but not when the triggerman looks like his target. These same “racial justice” advocates turn into White Lives Matter spokesmen whenever people try to bring attention to the shootings that happen on a daily basis in black neighborhoods across the country.

The racial disparity in homicide victimization is so large that the rates for whites and blacks can’t be shown on the same graph. This is why homicide is both the leading cause of death for young black men and the second leading cause of black male incarceration. Too many young black men have been taught to sow in seconds and reap in years. Prison is what awaits a man who has low impulse control, a dangerous weapon, and a lack of respect for human life.

The kids on that field learned a series of bad lessons that day. They witnessed the death of their coach at the hands of a man with access to millions. They saw adults who couldn’t control their emotions turn a football field into a crime scene. They saw a former NFL player use his name and resources to escalate conflict instead of trying to calm things down on the field. This isn’t the type of example they need on their journey toward manhood. In the aftermath, they will also receive a sober reminder: Black lives do matter – but only when white people take them.

An Illinois school district promoted radical social justice curriculum in special-needs classrooms, instructed students to not to say 'All Lives Matter'



The District 65 school district in Evanston, Illinois — a suburb just outside Chicago — urged special-needs students not to use the phrase "All Lives Matter" prior to hosting a week of events dedicated to indoctrinating students with woke talking points from the Black Lives Matter agenda.

The Daily Wire reported that the school district hosted a "BLM Week of Action" this past February. The program was reportedly sponsored by a national organization called "BLM at School," which demands the inclusion of "black history and ethnic studies" in K-12 curriculum, restorative justice discipline, the funding of a "counselors not cops" program, and the hiring of more black educators.

To explain to its learning-disabled students why they could not say "All Lives Matter," District 65 schools presented them with a slide show that emphasized concepts found in critical race theory.

The slide titled "Why don't we say 'All Lives Matter'" showed students a comic strip where a smug-looking man uses a garden hose to pour water on a perfectly fine house while the one adjacent to it is on fire. The cartoon man smugly proclaims, "All houses matter."

This slide had a speaker's note attached to it that read: "This is important! Even if it remains here for the adults! This is a tricky concept but should be talked about even if it's just for the adults in the room."

The slide show also compelled instructors to have special-needs students "stand in a circle" facing one another and put their hands in the circle made up of their peers. Students were instructed to "notice how everyone has different color skin."

Teachers were instructed to ask their students, "Who in this circle has brown skin?"

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a parent of a third-grade student in the district said that he was "disturbed" by the instructional materials.

"I think they're trying to undermine arguments that kids might hear outside the school," the parent continued. "I believe they're trying to put a division between children and parents. It's so shocking. You hear about this stuff, but then to see it right in front of you."

A slide near the end of the presentation directed teachers to "read aloud" from a book called "Giant Steps to Change the World" authored by filmmakers Spike Lee and Tonya Lewis Lee.

A note in the speakers' section for this part of the presentation said, "White people need to be taking giant steps."

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Legendary performer Stevie Wonder released two new songs for the first time in four years — and one of them pointedly dismantles the notion of "all lives matter."

What are the details?

The song "Can't Put It in the Hands of Fate" is a socially conscious track addressing police brutality and the Black Lives Matter movement.

"Can't Put It in the Hands of Fate" also name-checks former NFL star-turned-political activist Colin Kaepernick.

The song features rappers Rapsody, Cordae, Chika, and Busta Rhymes.

Wonder — real name Stevland Hardaway Morris — sings, "You say you're sick and tired of us protesting, I say 'Not tired enough to make a change' ... you say you believe that 'all lives matter,' I say 'I don't believe the f*** you do.'"

Wonder, according to reports, said the new song was a direct response to "systemic racism."

"[E]very young person is saying this stuff here is unacceptable," he said. "We can't be a united people of the world and have this craziness. ... Change is right now — we can't put it in the hands of fate."

He also said that people of the U.S. — and around the world — need to atone "not just for a couple of years, but at least three to five years."

"[W]e cannot ignore and act like the things in this nation didn't happen," the performer explained. "We can't erase them out of history books. 1619, it happened. The slave trade did happen. Reconstruction did happen, 150 million black people did die, that did happen. The only way I think we can fix it is through our love and respect."

During a recent virtual press conference, Wonder added, "I was thinking about where we are in the world. And I was thinking about how this is most crucial time. Not just black people or people of color but young people everywhere are going, 'This is not acceptable.' Change is right now. We can't put it in the hands of fate. Ain't nobody got time to wait."

Other lyrics include:

Apologize, you denied my people
Made our death legal
We all paralegal
Gotta defend ourselves when the laws ain't equal
Cops aim lethal
Death in cathedrals
Bang-bang boogie, you could die wearin' a hoodie

Yeah you say you're sick and tired of us protesting
I say "Not tired enough to make a change'"
"Just you hold on'" I say '"No way, 'cause we can't put it in the hands of fate"

You say that you believe that all lives matter
I say "I don't believe the f*** you do"

I've seen too many of our generations live and die for that pie in the sky
You say, "Those innocent lives should've not been taken"
And I say, "For them is why we take a knee"
You say, "Is that the right play?"
I say, "First Amendment everyday 'cause we can't put it in the hands of fate"

Look, said we ain't talkin' no more, we gettin' to it
Can't put it in the hands of fate, this how we do it
Now let me go and get with all of my people, you know I have to get
That'll show me sacrifice just like my brother Colin Kaepernick
Opportunities that I get to talk, you know I have to spit
Breonna Taylor turn in her grave, you know we have to get justice
And stay in your place, we still focused on the outcome of George Floyd case

(Content warning: Rough language):

Stevie Wonder - Can't Put It In The Hands of Fate feat. Rapsody, Cordae, Chika & Busta Rhymeswww.youtube.com

College football coach replaces BLM sign taped to office door with 'All Lives Matter to Our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ' sign. He's no longer with team.



In August, Kurt Beathard — then-offensive coordinator for the Illinois State University football team — found a Black Lives Matter sign taped to his office door, Outkick's Jason King reported.

Given that the BLM organization has an affinity for Marxism and a dim view of the nuclear family, Beathard immediately removed the sign, the outlet said.

"'I thought, 'No, I can't have this on my door,'" he told King. "So I took it off and put it behind the chair in my office. I was praying about it and I thought, 'All lives matter here, and there's no other organization other than Jesus Christ to sponsor that.'"

So later that day Beathard placed a new sign on his office door with a new message: "All Lives Matter to Our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ," the outlet said.

'As a favor, could you please take that off your door?'

Given the volatility surrounding the BLM movement and the speed at which news travels, one might assume backlash against Beathard came fast — but it didn't.

He told Outkick that his new sign remained on his office door for nearly two weeks before pushback came from one of his superiors.

FCS coordinator replaces #BLM sign with "All lives matter to our Lord & Savior Jesus Christ" sign on office door.… https://t.co/7mRxGQxSrk
— FootballScoop Staff (@FootballScoop Staff)1601308785.0

"They didn't demand it," Beathard recalled to the outlet. "They just said, 'As a favor, could you please take that off your door?' I didn't take it off right away. I sat there and prayed about it, and I said, 'God knows where my heart is. That's all that matters. If it will help to take it off, I'll take it off.'"

But it was too late.

Beathard told Outkick that a few days before he was asked to remove his sign, a photo of it had been taken and circulated among players — and some of them were offended. And on Sept. 2, the school told Beathard he was no longer on the coaching staff, the outlet said, adding that ISU reassigned him.

'I never quit. I did not quit that job.'

A number of news outlets reported that Beathard resigned from his position, including student paper the Vidette. But he told Outkick that was not the case: "I never quit. I did not quit that job."

School officials last week told the Pantagraph they wouldn't discuss what led to Beathard's departure. And while three sources close to the football program told the Pantagraph that a Black Lives Matter poster had been taken down in the team's locker room, Beathard said he wasn't involved in removing posters in the locker room.

"That locker room crap is wrong," he told the Pantagraph. "I took the sign down somebody put on my door. That's it. I didn't take anything off that wasn't put on my door. I wrote the message."

Rough times

Besides his departure from the football team, it already has been an exceedingly difficult year for Beathard.

Outkick said Beathard's wife, Karen, died of cancer over the summer and that his 22-year-old nephew, Clayton, was stabbed to death Dec. 22 outside a Nashville bar.

"I truly believe that all lives matter," he told Outkick. "It's right there in the Bible. God doesn't discriminate. He doesn't say, 'Oh, I kinda like some of these people. But I really, really, really like these other people.' I keep hearing about the abortion rates and the gun killings. I think about the stuff that I got angry about when my nephew was tragically murdered. His life mattered. My wife's life mattered, too. She lived with cancer for five years. She mattered to me. It's about every life."

He also told the outlet that he doesn't regret what he wrote on the sign.

"I don't like the way this has to be," Beathard noted to Outkick. "I don't like that you can't have a different opinion than someone else. But I wouldn't change [what I did]. I'm not going to deny Jesus. If you deny Jesus, he'll deny you. It's written in the Bible, multiple times. I'm not going to back down on that one. … I think I have a message to share with players. I really do. I think I can be good for them. I can stand for Jesus in front of a group of players and not be ashamed."

Here's Beathard in action a few years ago:

Spring Camp Report 2014 - OC Kurt Beathard Mic'd Upyoutu.be

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