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White Teens Black
July 27, 2022, 8:49 PM · 2 min read
45th President of the United States
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Three weeks after Jill LeCroix, 57, was attacked in an “anti-white” hate crime on a Queens, New York, bus ride, two out of three of her attackers are now facing assault and aggravated harassment charges.
On July 9, the suspects, three Black teenage girls, assaulted LeCroix after accusing her of being a supporter of former President Donald Trump. Police have classified both charges as hate crimes and are looking for a third suspect involved in the attack on LeCroix.
The assailants are accused of bashing her in the head with a Bath & Body Works product, requiring her to receive staples. The bloody attack is currently under investigation by the NYPD’s Hate Crime Task Force.
LeCroix spoke with the Post about her life-threatening incident on the Metro bus, deeming it “crazy.”
3 women wanted for anti-white violent bias attack on a bus in Queens NY last week: NYPD Anyone with information in regard to this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) https://t.co/6UUwH6SJU5
— Blue Lives Matter 💎 (@RetiredNYCPD) July 16, 2022
“Before they hit me, the girl with the green hair said, ‘You probably like Trump! Don’t you?'” LeCroix said. “I said, ‘I love him.’ I didn’t see which one hit me first,” the Post reports.
“The one with the green hair, she was saying she hates white people, the way they talk, hates white skin, the way their skin cracks. Saying she was gangsta,” she said. “I was the only white person on the bus. By the time we started passing St. John’s Cemetery on Woodhaven, she started in on me, saying, ‘That’s where I’m going to bury you!”
“She had a bag from Bath & Body Works, and she took out a scrub and said she was going to beat me with it. It was tangerine,” LeCroix said. “She said, ‘You’re going to get what you deserve! All white people are going to get what they deserve.’ It was crazy.”
LeCroix was on the Q53 bus at Jamaica Avenue and Woodhaven Boulevard in Queens during the incident. Officers released a video of the suspected attackers, including the unidentified bright-green hair suspect.
LeCroix suspects that her attackers were around their teens to early 20s.
“The one with the green hair was the mouth, but they were looking for trouble,” LeCroix said. “When they got on the back door of the bus, they were laughing and the one with the pink hair said, ‘Yeah, I kicked that baby stroller!” she said.
“Never in my life have I been attacked like that,” LeCroix said. “They said they hate white people.”
LeCroix, who has three biracial children, said she’s still shaken up by the event weeks later.
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https://www.tiktok.com/@halpal___/video/6808598927676394758


https://twitter.com/LilBabyOG_/status/1247589686983491591?s=20


https://twitter.com/GoodeisSXE/status/1247542042785271809?s=20


https://twitter.com/livmanraksa/status/1247551584877379585?s=20


*First Published: Apr 7, 2020, 6:50 pm CDT
More stories to check out before you go


@ms_k_mc / TikTok


@bebegirl0018 / TikTok


@Blackkout__ / TikTok





Posted on Apr 7, 2020   Updated on Apr 8, 2020, 2:46 pm CDT
White girls and women are fetishizing Black men in bizarre TikTok videos that include rap songs, comments about physical attributes, and tags like #mytype or #Blackmen.
The Daily Dot reviewed nine videos where white women objectified Black men, including seven on TikTok and two posted by Twitter users calling out the creators.
Most of the videos following the trend have thousands of likes on TikTok. 
In a video with almost 4,500 likes, user @ms_k_mc appears makes faces alongside the text “Men I like.” Four options pop up: “White men,” “Asian men,” “Mexican men,” and “Island men.” She uses her fingers to shoot down each of the options before presenting above her the ultimate choice: “Black men” with the heart and fire emojis. 
#mytype what’s your type? #fineassblackmen ♥️♥️♥️
In another video , user @bebegirl0018 says “no” to a running list of ethnicities and races before the option “BLACK MEN??” appears on the screen and she nods in approval. Her video is tagged with #mytype, #blackguys, and #blackmen.
User @halpal__ shared a video with the caption, “WHERE ARE MY DARK CHOCOLATE BOYS” and expressed her preference for “specifically dark chocolate” men. 
“Just to clear the air—no, I don’t date white boys,” she says. “I do date mixed boys, I like y’all little caramels okay. Y’all is fine as shit. But if you are chocolate, specifically dark chocolate—baby boy!”
In another video , a user posted the caption, “I fetishize black men what abt it?”
Twitter users called out one woman for fetishizing Black men. A TikTok video shows her saying, “So sweet, wonderful personalities….your kisses and your hugs just hit different … For all my chocolate men out there, who said it was OK to be that fine?”
According to the tweet, the video was uploaded by a TikTok user with a private account.
“Yes my dad is OK with me dating Black guys,” the woman says later in the video.
It’s not clear what prompted the video trend, but people on social media are expressing their issues with the content.
“Stop this trend of fetishizing black men in tiktok,” one Twitter user wrote. “It’s weird and uncomfortable to watch. Just say you like black men and go.”
So dating a black person is suppose to change your innocence??? This yt girl is literally looking at black men like objects…TikTok better get to it n delete this foolishness https://t.co/G4AG826OgZ
the girls on TikTok calling black men fine like they’re rare creatures. https://t.co/l18CiHsWtY
The fetishization tied up in the #Blackmen TikTok trend is especially problematic given America’s history of white women—and society at large—using Black men as scapegoats for any criminal activity. In the 19th Century, Black men accused of sexually assaulting white women faced the death penalty, but white men accused of the same did not.
The historical problem has resulted in a psychological syndrome called “Blame a Black Man Syndrome,” according to Psychology Today , wherein either an imaginary Black man or an innocent, existing Black man are accused of a crime. According to psychiatry professor Rob Whitley, men who have been falsely accused of crimes can endure psychological damage “similar to that seen in torture survivors.”
Samira Sadeque is a New York-based journalist reporting on immigration, sexual violence, and mental health, and will sometimes write about memes and dinosaurs too. Her work also appears in Reuters, NPR, and NBC among other publications. She graduated from Columbia Journalism School, and her work has been nominated for SAJA awards. Follow: @Samideque
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https://www.tiktok.com/@halpal___/video/6808598927676394758


https://twitter.com/LilBabyOG_/status/1247589686983491591?s=20


https://twitter.com/GoodeisSXE/status/1247542042785271809?s=20


https://twitter.com/livmanraksa/status/1247551584877379585?s=20


*First Published: Apr 7, 2020, 6:50 pm CDT
More stories to check out before you go


@ms_k_mc / TikTok


@bebegirl0018 / TikTok


@Blackkout__ / TikTok





Posted on Apr 7, 2020   Updated on Apr 8, 2020, 2:46 pm CDT
White girls and women are fetishizing Black men in bizarre TikTok videos that include rap songs, comments about physical attributes, and tags like #mytype or #Blackmen.
The Daily Dot reviewed nine videos where white women objectified Black men, including seven on TikTok and two posted by Twitter users calling out the creators.
Most of the videos following the trend have thousands of likes on TikTok. 
In a video with almost 4,500 likes, user @ms_k_mc appears makes faces alongside the text “Men I like.” Four options pop up: “White men,” “Asian men,” “Mexican men,” and “Island men.” She uses her fingers to shoot down each of the options before presenting above her the ultimate choice: “Black men” with the heart and fire emojis. 
In another video , user @bebegirl0018 says “no” to a running list of ethnicities and races before the option “BLACK MEN??” appears on the screen and she nods in approval. Her video is tagged with #mytype, #blackguys, and #blackmen.
User @halpal__ shared a video with the caption, “WHERE ARE MY DARK CHOCOLATE BOYS” and expressed her preference for “specifically dark chocolate” men. 
“Just to clear the air—no, I don’t date white boys,” she says. “I do date mixed boys, I like y’all little caramels okay. Y’all is fine as shit. But if you are chocolate, specifically dark chocolate—baby boy!”
In another video , a user posted the caption, “I fetishize black men what abt it?”
Twitter users called out one woman for fetishizing Black men. A TikTok video shows her saying, “So sweet, wonderful personalities….your kisses and your hugs just hit different … For all my chocolate men out there, who said it was OK to be that fine?”
According to the tweet, the video was uploaded by a TikTok user with a private account.
“Yes my dad is OK with me dating Black guys,” the woman says later in the video.
It’s not clear what prompted the video trend, but people on social media are expressing their issues with the content.
“Stop this trend of fetishizing black men in tiktok,” one Twitter user wrote. “It’s weird and uncomfortable to watch. Just say you like black men and go.”
The fetishization tied up in the #Blackmen TikTok trend is especially problematic given America’s history of white women—and society at large—using Black men as scapegoats for any criminal activity. In the 19th Century, Black men accused of sexually assaulting white women faced the death penalty, but white men accused of the same did not.
The historical problem has resulted in a psychological syndrome called “Blame a Black Man Syndrome,” according to Psychology Today , wherein either an imaginary Black man or an innocent, existing Black man are accused of a crime. According to psychiatry professor Rob Whitley, men who have been falsely accused of crimes can endure psychological damage “similar to that seen in torture survivors.”
Samira Sadeque is a New York-based journalist reporting on immigration, sexual violence, and mental health, and will sometimes write about memes and dinosaurs too. Her work also appears in Reuters, NPR, and NBC among other publications. She graduated from Columbia Journalism School, and her work has been nominated for SAJA awards. Follow: @Samideque
‘Bro just DELETED the ENTIRE meal’: Customer claims DoorDash driver ate his Wingstop order, left a note in empty bag
‘This is better than 99.9% of the financial advice on this app’: DoorDasher shares how he orders food and pays himself to pick it up
‘Don’t want it to be awkward’: Domino’s worker mocks when customers come in 6 times within a week
‘Over donuts…’: Karen demands Dunkin’ workers pick up her credit card, tells them she’ll call ISIS on them




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AllDefDigital may have outdone themselves with their latest installment of their For The First Time series. Two white girls, Kate Quigley and Dana Moon, are captured kissing black men for “the first time.” Stepping up as the candidates are Teddy Ray and Slink Johnson, as the girls hilariously discuss their thoughts on conquering the quest.
“Black guys have really big lips, and one time I kissed this Filipino guy with huge lips and he slobbered all over my face. And I just don’t know if I wanna go there,” Kate pointed out. Meanwhile, Dana thinks black guys are intimidated by her because she “got that a**.”
Going in for the kill, Teddy controls his urge to pass gas while smooching with Dana, and things get hot and heavy with Kate and Slink. Forewarning Kate about a tradition “in his culture,” Slink grabs a handful of Kate’s derriere. Dana, in the end, concludes the Teddy’s “got game.” Slink called the experience “thrilling,” and “sensational,” and handed Kate some cash for the deed.
We’re not sure if this is either of these ladies’ actual “first time” kissing black guys, but the video is still quite entertaining. Press play below:
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