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Perhaps a White Cop and 911 Caller Feared Replacement When They Saw an Interracial Couple? Perdue Cop Tries to Kill a College Student After False Call about a White Woman Being Held Against Her Will

DR. FRANCES CRESS WELSING STATED, BECAUSE BLACKS AND OTHER NON-WHITE PEOPLE HAVE FAILED TO UNDERSTAND RACISM AS WHITE GENETIC SURVIVAL, THEY ERRONEOUSLY HAVE BELIEVED THAT THEY COULD BE INTEGRATED INTO THE WHITE SUPREMACY SYSTEM. WHITE PEOPLE ARE GENETICALLY RECESSIVE AND THEREFORE CAN BE REPLACED BY NON-WHITE PEOPLE THRU ASSIMILATION OR BIRTHING CHILDREN. IT IS UNDISPUTED THAT:

WHITE PLUS BLACK EQUALS COLORED.

WHITE PLUS BROWN EQUALS COLORED.

WHITE PLUS YELLOW EQUALS COLORED.

BLACKS AND OTHER NON-WHITES HAVE FAILED TO UNDERSTAND THAT IF WHITE PEOPLE WERE TO INTEGRATE WITH WHITES IT WOULD MEAN ACTIVE WHITE PARTICIPATION IN WHITE GENOCIDE. BLACK PEOPLE MUST MASTER THIS PERCEPTION OF RACISM (LOCAL AND GLOBAL) AS A WAR FOR WHITE GENETIC SURVIVAL, A SYSTEM INTO WHICH NON-WHITE PEOPLE NEVER CAN BE INTEGRATED. [MORE]

IT IS LOGICAL THAT ONLY RACIST WHITE PEOPLE WOULD CONCERN THEMSELVES WITH SUCH GENOCIDAL FEARS BECAUSE IN REALITY, THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS RACE - IT IS A GRANFALLOON. THE ONLY PURPOSE OF “RACE” IS TO PRACTICE RACISM. HAVING LITTLE BIOLOGICAL VALIDITY, THE TERM "RACE" IS BETTER TRANSLATED TO MEAN ORGANIZATION. THE SOLE PURPOSE OF SUCH ORGANIZATION IS TO MAINTAIN WHITE DOMINATION AND WORLD CONTROL OF NON-WHITES, WHO HAVE BEEN FRICTIONALIZED INTO MADE UP CLASSIFICATIONS OF PEOPLE BY RACISTS. [MORE] AS SUCH, NON-RACIST WHITES WOULD BE UNCONCERNED WITH WHETHER A MEANINGLESS TRAIT, SUCH AS SKIN COLOR OR EYELASH SIZE , IS DECREASING AMONGST THE HUMAN POPULATION.

From [HERE] A white Purdue University police officer received death threats and is on leave until further notice, the university said, after he was caught on video using his elbow to choke and smother a Black student to death on the ground by the neck as he yelled “You’re choking me.” That is, after committing felony assault, a serious crime that carries significant prison time, in front of a witness and which was partially captured on camera, the white police officer is at home with pay - no locked up - because he is a costumed representative of authority. Authority is the right to forcibly control others or the right to rule others.

The student, 24-year-old Adonis Tuggle, told The Associated Press on Thursday that the officer also punched him and pressed his face into the snowy ground during the Feb. 4 arrest on the school’s campus in West Lafayette, Indiana.

“He was smothering me, almost as if you were trying to drown somebody underwater,” Tuggle said.

Part of the arrest was captured on cellphone video by Tuggle’s girlfriend, which was first reported by entertainment website TMZ.

Tuggle, a junior psychology major, said he was arrested, charged with resisting arrest and spent about an hour in jail before bailing himself out.

Purdue said in a statement Thursday night that campus police Chief John Cox placed the officer on a “leave of absence after the officer and department received death threats.” The statement, which did not elaborate on those threats, said they were being investigated by campus police.

Cox said his department was conducting an internal review of the officer’s conduct during the arrest, and that Indiana State Police would also investigate.

Cox said the officer involved was responding to a call from a third party who said “it appeared a woman was being held against her will.”

The statement did not identify Tuggle, who said he doesn’t know who called the police, only that the officer arrived and screamed at him to get away from his girlfriend, who is white.

“I was already a couple of feet away from my girlfriend,” said Tuggle, who added that she tried speaking to the officer. The officer used an expletive and told her to shut up, he said.

“I told him he had no reason to be disrespectful,” Tuggle said. “He was yelling at her and she was yelling at him. I told my girlfriend to calm down and I heard him scream ‘OK buddy, you’re going down,’ and he threw me against the car.”

Tuggle said the officer had him on the ground and told him to “stop resisting.” He said the officer also punched him.

At some point, Tuggle said he told his girlfriend to record what was happening. She told the officer he was hurting her boyfriend. She tapped the officer, who warned her that he would use his Taser on her if she did it again, Tuggle said.

When other officers arrived, Tuggle said one held one of his arms while another held his leg.

“I was still screaming: ‘He has his elbow on my neck,’” Tuggle said. “He dropped his full weight on my face and neck. In the heat of the moment, the only thing I was thinking about was trying to get this officer off of me.”

“You could hear me say ‘I can’t breathe. You’re choking me. You’re hurting me.’”

Tuggle said the 2020 death of George Floyd, who said he couldn’t breathe as former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee onto the Black man’s neck, is not lost on him.

“Basically, what happened to George Floyd almost happened to me, except I had an elbow not a knee, and fortunately, I’m still breathing instead of being in a casket,” he said.

Andrew M. Stroth, a civil rights attorney, said Tuggle and his family are demanding a full investigation and the release of police body camera video. He said charges against Tuggle should be dropped.

At a Thursday night town hall hosted by Purdue’s Black Student Union, a campus conference room was filled to capacity and many students sat outside in hallways. Attendees demanded action and suggested independent oversight of Purdue’s police department, more accessibility to body cameras and increased, more permanent resources for Purdue students of color.

Nigel Taylor, the vice president of the Black Student Union, said the students outlined “a clear plan to enforce these goals if they weren’t to happen.”

“Of course we want to do this peacefully, we really don’t want to get to that point. However, we do want to make sure this agenda is met because quite frankly we’re tired of having these same conversations year after year after year,” he told WLFI-TV.

Purdue President Mitchell Daniels, Jr. said in a statement that the inquiry into the officer’s conduct would be “swift and thorough.”

“Should there be a finding of misconduct by the officer, appropriate action will be taken promptly,” he said.