America’s Institutional Racism Is Anti-White
Jeremy Carl's new book unmasks the pervasiveness of anti-white racism across all levels of American society.
Anti-white racism has infiltrated nearly every institution in America — and unfortunately, that includes the church.
“I want to talk about a little more how this is manifesting itself in the church,” Allie Beth Stuckey says to author and senior fellow at the Claremont Institute Jeremy Carl, who wrote the book “The Unprotected Class: How Anti-White Racism Is Tearing America Apart.”
“They perpetuate this narrative that yes, white people, you are collectively responsible for being the initiators of reconciliation because of what some black people at some point in history went through,” Stuckey continues, adding, “This has been 100% accepted, celebrated, glorified, even among conservative evangelicals.”
Carl has noticed the anti-white narrative gaining power in various organizations led by Christians around the country.
“I talk about Christianity Today, the Gospel Coalition, Acts 29 Network — and again, I’m not painting with a broad brush both from knowledge and also not wanting to falsely accuse everybody who is associated with that with engaging in this, but you saw these sorts of problems pop up in these very prominent evangelical spaces,” Carl says.
One senior editor at the Gospel Coalition, Brett McCracken, called on “white Christian leaders to listen to and defer to non-white and nonwestern Christian leaders” in a post on X.
“We see this kind of language over and over again,” Stuckey says.
According to Carl, even the head of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary admitted to being a racist and declared he would be one until his “glorified body is resurrected.”
“It’s such a virtue signal, because if you’re actually racist, at least in the popular understanding of that, well then you certainly shouldn’t be running the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary,” Carl says.
Stuckey notes that to her knowledge, none of them have come forward to admit they were wrong.
“I haven’t seen any apologies from these people saying, ‘Oh, I don’t think deriding white image bearers of God was the right thing,'” she says.
“I think you’re probably going to be waiting a long time before you get that type of apology,” Carl laughs.
To enjoy more of Allie’s upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
In yet another blow to DEI initiatives across the country, three white former executives with the Department of Education in New York City will soon receive a hefty payout after they had allegedly been demoted in favor of "less-qualified" employees "of color," the New York Post reported.
Five years ago, Lois Hererra, Jaye Murray, and Laura Feijoo filed a lawsuit alleging that the city's DOE had discriminated against them on the basis of their race, as Blaze News previously reported. The lawsuit originally sought $90 million in damages.
Hererra, a Harvard alumna who had become executive director of the Office of Safety and Youth Development following decades at the agency, had been demoted in favor of Mark Rampersant, a black man with a GED. Murray, a former executive director of the Office of Counseling Support Programs, was demoted three rungs and had to report to Rampersant at one point. Finally, Feijoo, a former senior supervising superintendent who once supervised all other DOE superintendents was passed over for an opening at deputy chancellor by one of her black subordinates, Cheryl Watson-Harris, who did not even have the license necessary for the position at the time she was hired.
Those staffing changes occurred under the leadership of former Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza, a lackey of Democrat former Mayor Bill de Blasio, who was "fixated on diversity," according to an internal DOE email written by then-chief operating officer Ursulina Ramirez.
According to the lawsuit, Carranza threatened the job of any "Caucasian DOE employees" who dared to question his "equity platform." "Get on board ... or leave," he allegedly warned them.
In sworn depositions in connection with the lawsuit, both Carranza and de Blasio admitted that they wanted to create a DOE that "looked like New York City," the Post reported. Carranza resigned from his position in February 2021, and de Blasio was term-limited out of office the following December.
Three months ago, a judge ruled that the lawsuit showed "evidence of race-based discrimination in Carranza’s DOE," and a trial had been set for June.
Rather than proceed with the trial, the city elected to reach a settlement with the plaintiffs. Hererra, Murray, and Feijoo will now each receive $700,000.
Their lawyer, Davida Perry, called the settlement "a resounding affirmation that discrimination of any form should not be tolerated in educational institutions, regardless of the race of those negatively impacted." She also claimed her clients "feel justified and vindicated."
Though the city will have to shell out more than $2 million to settle with the three white women, it still has not admitted wrongdoing. "The DOE and City are fully committed to fair and inclusive employment practices, and we maintain that these claims lack merit,” a spokesman for the Law Department said. "Nevertheless, settlement of this long standing case was in the best interest of all parties."
Hererra has since retired, and Feijoo left for another job three and a half years ago. Murray is the only plaintiff who remains on the NYC DOE payroll, but her duties have been "sharply reduced," the Post said.
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
The man who allegedly stabbed two teenage girls at Grand Central Terminal in New York City on Christmas Day now faces hate crime charges since he supposedly shouted racist invectives against white people during the attack.
Just before 11:30 a.m. on Christmas Day, two teen girls from Paraguay were enjoying lunch with their parents at Tartinery, a busy café in the Grand Central Dining Concourse. While the family sat at their table, Esteban Esono-Asue, a 36-year-old career criminal who goes by the name Steven Hutcherson and who reportedly lives at the station, began causing a disturbance by attempting to sit down at the restaurant without placing an order, KTVO reported.
His behavior was apparently so erratic that Tartinery staff members denied him a table. He then reportedly became enraged, pointing at the teen girls, ages 14 and 16, and noting that they were allowed to stay.
"I want all the white people dead," the suspect, who is black, then yelled. "I want to sit next to the cr*ckers."
Hutcherson then allegedly pulled out a knife and viciously stabbed the two girls. The 14-year-old sustained a wound to her thigh, but her older sister suffered a wound in her back so deep that the blade nicked her lung, causing it to collapse. Thankfully, none of the injuries are considered life-threatening, and the girls are recovering.
Within a minute, officers with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority apprehended the suspect and hauled him away to jail. Hutcherson was initially charged with felony counts of attempted murder, assault, and criminal possession of a weapon, as well as misdemeanor endangering the welfare of a child.
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has since announced that all of the felony counts against Hutcherson will be charged as hate crimes. Hutcherson is scheduled to appear in court on Friday.
The Legal Aid Society, which is representing Hutcherson, did not respond to a request for comment from NBC News.
Hutcherson is no stranger to law enforcement. Reports say that MTA and NYPD officers have arrested him a total of 17 times, three of which came just in the past six months.
During an incident in November, Hutcherson made racially charged comments while attacking his victim, Yussif Abdullahi, a 46-year-old Ghana native who was working outside a freight truck depot in Hunts Point at the time, the New York Post reported.
"Why are you working for white people?" Hutcherson screamed, according to the criminal complaint. "I’m going to kill this man!"
"I’m gonna shoot you. I don’t care what kind of green card the government gave you," he continued while flashing what appeared to be a weapon in his possession.
No gun was ever recovered, but Hutcherson eventually pled guilty to third-degree misdemeanor assault. Judge Matthew V. Grieco sentenced him to conditional discharge on December 12, about two weeks before the attack in Grand Central Terminal.
"I’m so disappointed in the cops," Abdullahi said after the stabbing of the two teens. "When he was threatening me, he told me, 'The cops don’t do s***! They don’t do s***!' And what he said was true. The cops didn’t do anything."
"They shouldn’t have let him out."
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Michelle Wu, mayor of Boston, clearly didn’t consider the optics of hosting an “electeds of color’ party – a race-restricted event that excluded … you guessed it ... white people.
To make matters worse, the staffer who sent the email invitation accidentally sent it to everyone on the council, including the Caucasian members.
Understandably, people are furious. Wu is facing heavy criticism from conservatives and liberals alike, and yet somehow, she’s decided to defend her actions.
Dave Rubin plays the clip of her response to the incident.
“Given some of the strife that exists though in this council, are you concerned this lends itself at all to further divisiveness?” a reporter asked.
“No, I mean, again, this is a group that has been in place for many, many years. We want to be a city where everyone's identity is embraced and that there are spaces and communities that we can help support,” Wu ignorantly responded.
“Oh, there are spaces and communities that we can help support, so we can look at a bunch of people by their skin color and say, ‘Don't eat with us; don't come to this dinner party,”’ mocks Dave. “That's what we used to call racism.”
“If a bunch of white people wanted to have dinner with no colored people, as you call them, you'd call them racist, so it's racist whichever way it goes,” he explains.
But Wu clearly doesn’t share Dave’s sentiment.
“It was truly just an honest mistake that went out in typing the email field, and I look forward to celebrating with everyone at the holiday parties that we will have besides this one. … It is my intention that we can, again, be a city that lives our values and creates space for all kinds of communities to come together,” Wu said.
“Lady, you’re racist,” Dave says.
To enjoy more honest conversations, free speech, and big ideas with Dave Rubin, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.