Walsh’s critique relies on selective revisionism that prioritizes peripheral militancy over the movement’s foundational non-violent strategy. This reductionist framing serves more as a partisan provocation than a rigorous historical inquiry.
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The Myth of a Peaceful Civil Rights Movement Ends NowAdded:
Now, the truth is that many of the nonviolent protesters he's talking about were about as nonviolent as the Antifa and BLM riers who set downtown Kenosha on fire in 2020 and many other cities, which is to say they were not nonviolent at all. It's extremely difficult to find any accurate reporting on this topic. As you might imagine, uh no mainstream news source even at the time would provide anything approaching an honest report on these riots. So, in that respect, you know, not much has changed. But if you spend any amount of time listening to the black activists who actually participated in these supposedly nonviolent demonstrations, here's what they'll tell you. This is um an interview with a man named James Beville.
He was one of the organizers of the children's crusade in Birmingham where the water hoses were famously used.
Beville many times over did preach nonviolence, but uh he also acknowledged that many of the demonstrators were attacking police officers. This is from an interview in the documentary Eyes on the Prize. And here's what Beville said.
Quote, "What I did actually was tell the students that they had to respect police officers, that their job was to help police and to keep order. Police were not were there to keep order, and that the people who was there throwing things was probably paid instigators, and therefore he had to watch them. And it was very effective. had started all the students to pointing at adults who had rocks and knives and guns, then the adults had to start dropping them because it would have started a riot and a riot would have gotten off the issue.
But it's interesting, the students heeding Beville's call for nonviolence pointed at the adults who had rocks, knives, and guns. They identified the people who were throwing things, most likely rocks, at police officers. In other words, indeed, this was not a nonviolent protest.
In reality, in addition to participating in an illegal public gathering and blocking the roadways, demonstrators had armed themselves with deadly weapons.
They threw objects, bottles, rocks, and so on directly at the police officers.
That's not according to Bull Connor or the local police. That's according to one of the black civil rights activists who led the march.
Now, all this violence has been conveniently left out of the narrative that you'll find today in school textbooks. It's a very deliberate omission. Just like NBC News will flagrantly lie about what happened in Kenosha, the people writing the history books understand that if they're going to maintain the moral high ground, they need to airbrush history as much as they possibly can. If NBC News can call the Kosha riots a civil rights rally in 2026, there's no doubt that the media could also flagrantly lie about these civil rights marches in the 1960s.
If they can lie about what happened six years ago, they can lie about what happened 60 years ago much more easily.
It's not exactly a stretch, especially when you take a look at the kinds of cartoons uh of uh that newspapers in the South were publishing at the time.
Here's one from Charles Brooks, which you can see right there. It was originally published in the Birmingham News in the 1960s. It shows Martin Luther King Jr. declaring, "I plan to lead another nonviolent march tomorrow as the city lies in ruins behind him."
Now, if you show this to anyone on the left today, they'll tell you that, well, this cartoon was part of a vast right-wing conspiracy to just bismerch the good name of Martin Luther King Jr.
But the simplest explanation, which is that these civil rights rallies were actually extremely violent, makes a lot more sense, especially when you follow the pattern up to today, up to the civil the so-called civil rights marches we've se seen with our own eyes today. And that's not even getting into these supposedly peaceful sitins that that we're you're told about. You're supposed to conclude that it's totally peaceful to occupy an establishment without paying for anything while also refusing to leave.
This is called criminal trespassing. But every single history textbook claims that it's a brave, righteous form of protest that nobody is allowed to respond to.
Now, on that note, here's some uh peaceful black demonstrators uh leading a nonviolent quote unquote sitin at Cornell University in 1969, for example.
They took over a building that didn't belong to them, and they threatened to shoot anyone who interfered. Pay pay no attention to the to the guns and the ammo belts, uh you know, peaceful guns and ammo belts. Never mind the fact that these black activists committed domestic terrorism and endangered the lives of everybody on the campus. history books just sort of skip over all that. This was a heroic sitin for justice. And you know that's that. Along the same lines, ignore the fact that in 1967, a large group of black students violently attacked the editor of the student newspaper at San Francisco State University because he wrote an op-ed opposing DEI programs. That was called the Gator incident, and you're not supposed to talk about it. and certainly ignore the large-scale riot that followed a year later leading to the occupation of a university building and the response by the university which was to implement quote programs to admit 400 ghetto students for the fall semester.
Oh, and disregard the fact that in 1970 black militants kidnapped a judge, a prosecutor, and three jurors hostage in uh held them hostage in Marane County, California seeking the release of black criminals.
These uh mostly peaceful protests were not just threats and beatings. They were murderers, too. Some were targeted, others were totally random. Those militants ultimately ultimately uh killed that judge with a sawoff shotgun taped to his neck. Angela Davis, a civil rights activist, quote unquote, who owned the weapons used in the attack in the courthouse, but denied any prior knowledge of the crime and who was later acquitted on all charges related to the incident, would go on to become one of the most celebrated leftists in the entire country. The left still reverses Angela Davis today, not in spite of her connections to the Black Panthers and radical violence, but because of them.
Davis is the last living recipient of the Soviet Union's Lenin Peace Prize, which is a strange but fitting honor for a woman who was linked through the firearms to an act of domestic terrorism in which an innocent father's head was literally blown off with a shotgun.
Then there's the fact that Pepperdine University used to be located in South Central LA, but had to move their campus because white students kept getting attacked at random, and black students, spurred on by the Panthers and civil rights activists, quote unquote, nearly burned down one of the school's auditoriums uh during one of the many campus takeovers that kept happening.
And we can't forget the case of Mark Essex, the uh New Orleans sniper who killed nine people, including five police officers in 1972 and 1973. He explicitly targeted whites and was only taken out after a Marine helicopter pilot commandeered an assault helicopter and picked up random police officers to open fire on Essex from above.
I mean, that's quite a story. It's the kind of story you'd think everybody would know about. It's certainly cinematic enough for Hollywood to make a movie about it, but they never did. And the schools don't talk about it. And basically these days nobody knows about it for obvious reasons.
Um because you see this pattern where the so-called civil rights movement that we're often told became violent in 2020.
Well, in fact, it was violent the entire time. It was anti-white and violent the entire time from the beginning until now.
Um it's kind of like with the feminists where they say that well something happened with the latest wave of feminists where they became anti-f family and anti-man. Uh no they actually were that from the very beginning the entire time. This is how they've been.
Nothing changed. This is what the movement was fundamentally from the start.
But back to the civil rights movement.
Also buried were the so-called zebra murders which took place in San Francisco from 1973 to 1974.
Uh they never get any attention whatsoever. At least 15 white people were killed and many others wounded in a series of attacks by at least four black serial killers tied to the Nation of Islam who called themselves the death angels. And to this day, we still don't know the total number of white people who were killed or the total number of black attackers. The killing spree was inseparable from the civil rights movement. The San Francisco police had been thrown into disarray by an activist federal judge over a civil rights lawsuit related to diversity policy when the murders began.
And when the police tried to use emergency measures to stop the murders, they immediately faced lawsuits from the ACLU and uh and NAACP that shut those down. According to one professor, the zebra murders, quote, may have killed more people in the early to mid1 1970s than all the other serial killers operating during that period combined when a handful of suspects were eventually caught only because police were reduced to bribing one of the death angels to turn on his uh turn on his co-conspirators with cash and the promise not to prosecute. The longest trial in California history followed. It was it was all a circus. Hiring is not just about finding someone who can do the job. It's about finding someone who actually wants to do the job. When a candidate is engaged, it really makes all the difference. They ask better questions. They understand the role.
They're thinking about how they fit into it. All that matters more than anything you'll find on a resume. If you're hiring, you want a candidate who's passionate about your role.
Unfortunately, that insight can't really be found on resume uh unless you post your job on Zip ReCruiter. Try it for free today at ziprecruiter.com/walsh.
Zip Recruiter uses powerful matching technology to quickly connect you with qualified candidates. And they've added a new feature that shows you the most interested qualified candidates first, so you can focus on the people who are actually paying attention to your role.
Candidates can also explain in their own words uh why they're interested, which gives you a clearer picture before you even start the conversation. Find candidates who really want your job on Zip Recruiter. Four to five employers who post on Zip Recruiter get a quality candidate within the first day. Try for free at ziprecruiter.com/walsh.
That's ziprecruiter.com/walsh.
Meet your match on zipcruiter. All this to say, history, as you probably know, it is fake.
MLK and the civil rights movement were unpopular because they were correctly tied to mayhem and murder. All the crazy civil rights laws that were we are undoing today were forced on the public by terrorism.
Everyone had to accept the happy lie that it was only a peaceful revolution.
You're not told about any of this anti-white violence in school. Instead, you're fed a series of carefully curated pictures and videos to reinforce the false narrative that black activists were noble and peaceful and were primarily interested in racial equality.
The reality is the opposite.
At every turn, black activists used violence, slander, and propaganda to achieve their goals. They staged everything very deliberately in order to promote maximum outrage. And to this day, they're still doing it.
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