Ta-Nehisi Coates vs. The 343
Back during the Great Awokening, nobody noticed that TNC hates firemen, especially the 343 who gave their lives on 9/11.
Now that Ta-Nehisi Coates is daring to disagree with Zionist Jews as opposed to just spewing hate at white people in general, his 2015 award-winning mini-memoir Between the World and Me is finally getting some non-adulatory critical attention outside of Taki’s Magazine.
Coates grew up in Baltimore a timid comic book nerd who was taught by his Black Nationalist parents, who refused to move to a less black neighborhood where their fearful son would be more at home, to blame all the terrifying things the other black boys did to him on whites, for reasons.
It’s not hard to feel a certain degree of sympathy for the race-loyalist Coates, whose extreme racism functions as a coping mechanism to concoct conspiracy theories to prevent him from having to acknowledge that his youth was made miserable by other blacks (including his parents).
On the other hand, it’s ridiculous that during the Great Awokening, countless pundits and professors took Coates’ transparent cope seriously.
Now that Coates’ has alienated some Jewish liberal intellectuals, however, his lucrative free ride is finally over. Coates’ passage on 9/11 is drawing particular attention:
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