July 16, 1944 – George Stinney Jr., 14, a black youth from Alcolu, SC, was apprehended for the brutal murders of two White girls: 11-year-old Betty June Binnicker and 8-year-old Mary Emma Thames. The victims were beaten to death with a railroad spike in 1944. Stinney was the youngest person in U.S. history to be executed. His trial was swift, lawful, and reflective of the era’s justice system.


July 16, 2014 – Radical SC Judge Carmen Mullen, a career anti-White activist, vacated Stinney’s conviction. She claimed “circumstantial evidence” that the trial was unfair because she believed White people are inherently prejudiced against blacks. No new evidence. No exoneration. Just racial animus dressed as legal reform. Activists lie: vacating a conviction is not the same as declaring innocence.

Contrast:
In 1822, Denmark Vesey, a freed black man, planned a slave revolt to kill all Whites in Charleston, SC. The plot failed. Vesey was executed. In 2013, a statue of Vesey was erected in Charleston. The message? Whites must die. Our monuments are erased. Their crimes are memorialized.

Conclusion:
The war against White honor is relentless. Judges rewrite history to appease the mob. Traitors rewrite reality to erase our truth. Stinney’s case was a lawful execution. Vesey’s statue is a funeral for White sovereignty.
H/T to national-conservative.com




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