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Hunting Whitey
The Dindu Version of the Deer Hunter's Tree Stand
© 2016 James LaFond
DEC/29/16
If you live in a majority paleface neighborhood, not to far from an area that was demographically like yours a few years ago, but is no longer safe to walk in, where robberies and break-ins abound, what is the first telltale sign that you are being hunted?
Any black person who has escaped, or remains stuck in, the inner city, can tell you, but the cops won't, the media won't and even the utility charged with lighting your neighborhood won't.
When the streetlights above the mouths of alley's, where they empty into a street, mysteriously begin going out, your neighborhood is being hunted by Dindu hordlings. Hordlings are the youthful members of the Dindu nation, not yet full-fledged hordesmen. These aspiring whitey hunters will use stones or pellet pistols to knockout alley lights and then use these for vantages to bum-rush pedestrians and as avenues of access to the backs of houses as well as retreat paths from the police. This is why security bars always go up on corner houses first, because those residents see this activity.
Loch Raven Heights is a small neighborhood of brick town homes in the 250-300K range, in the Parkville Precinct of Baltimore County. About 3 by 5 blocks, Loch Raven Heights is bordered on the west and south by posh and well-policed Loch Raven Village and to the north and east by Ridgley Oak, where homes go for half the value and are still selling so slowly—with up to 8 for sale signs to a block—that many of the houses are being put up for rent.
This past Christmas Eve a young man was leaving his parent's house to get to his car when two thugs rushed him silently from the mouth of a darkened alleyway. Fortunately, due to the headlights of one of the many cars leaving this neighborhood after family visits [I was in one of them] the young men saw his attackers in enough time to outrun them.
There was no police action taken.
There were no reports of crimes in Baltimore County for the entire week other than a black man attacking police with a knife in Pikesville and a white volunteer fire fighter committing arson in Middle River.
Where I live in Baltimore City, we have unlit, unpaved service roads between rows of houses facing parallel streets. These have mostly been permitted to grow in and become thick brush, ideal habitat for rabbits, foxes and raccoons. The brush also prevents easy access to the unlit backs of houses. Up the street, last month, two gentrification immigrants were having the City clear this so that they could use it as an alley! What idiots! If this alley gets cleared for its entire length the pigs will be finding bodies back there.
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