The Pale, Patriarchal People Were All Over Las Vegas Like White On Rice
Ilana Mercer • October 5, 2017 A man, Sonny Melton, 29, died, shielding his wife from the bullets.
Another commandeered a truck to drive victims of the Oct. 1 massacre in Las Vegas to the hospital.
At
first, Vanessa, a concertgoer, fled the Vegas venue, which was being
sprayed with bullets from high-velocity rifles. Then, she turned and ran
back. She credits her professional sense of duty as a nurse. We all
know it was Vanessa’s heart that enabled her to push past the fear and
place herself in the crosshairs.
From her hospital bed, Addison Short profusely thanked a stranger
who had helped her escape the confines of the country music concert in
the Vegas Village. She was hobbled by a gunshot to the leg. The first
words Addison uttered to the ego in the anchor’s chair quizzing her were
words of gratitude for her rescuer. Short also gave thanks for having a
minor injury.
“April”
is a girl who stopped her car to pick-up a bloodied young Canadian
couple. The young man had been shot in the head. He’s fine. Heartbroken
as he and his girlfriend are, they’re still a vision of wholesomeness;
Canadian clones of the Americans attending the Route 91 Harvest
festival.
Heather Gooze, 43, cradled
young Jordan McIldoon, 23, in her arms until he went limp. She, a
bartender who attended the concert; he a Canadian mechanic from Maple
Ridge, British Columbia. He loved the Vancouver Canucks and his
girlfriend, who was at the three-day country music happening, as well.
As
she spoke to CNN’s John Berman and Poppy Harlow, Heather’s moral
resplendence only accentuated the depravity of the two notorious,
fake-news pornographers.
“No,
ma’am, I didn’t run.” A cowboy hat clutched to his chest, Brian
Mckinnon recounted how his best friend petered out in his arms. Only
after his friend had passed did Brian flee. But then he stopped in his
tracks, went back, put his pal’s signature hat back on and waited beside
him.
They
may never know his name, but a man they’d never met shielded two young
women from bullets. He was shot as he hovered over them, protectively,
his blood oozing on to their shirts. Anthony Rabone, an off-duty
firefighter and paramedic, secured his girlfriend, stabilized his
brother who had sustained a chest wound, and then charged back into the
concert killing field.
Vanessa,
aforementioned, captured the Vegas valor on display that day: There
were so many citizens, she said—ordinary people, doctors, cops,
paramedics, off-duty nurses—everyone was just communicating and working
together. It was completely horrible, but also utterly amazing.
Even the medics interviewed could not help but effuse about the unusually fabulous folks they were treating.
Men
moved into leadership roles quickly, using barricade gates, maintenance
ladders and banners to carry the injured out. Many of these men do the
dirty jobs that Mike Row dignified in his eponymous TV series, “Dirty Jobs.” They’re firemen, commercial fishermen (like the late Adrian Murfitt), heavy-duty mechanics (rest in peace Jordan McIldoon), and pipe-fitters, like 29-year-old Austin Davis, RIP, from Riverside County, California. Davis had gone to the festival with family friends.
Yes,
who goes to a concert with “family friends”—grown-up sons with
middle-aged moms, entire nuclear families together, young and old; teens
who don’t twerk their tushes (like Iggy Azlea’s primate-in-estrus act),
but belt out “God Bless America.” These fans are families, literally.
These are the people who pitched in during the massacre of 58
concertgoers (489 people were injured).
Those cow-kickin’ country music lovers in cowboy hats and Tony Lama boots are the finest folks on earth.
Let’s
not beat about the bush. Middle America, patriotic America, oddly
monochromatic America is the America we saw in Vegas in all its
splendor. The same America is berated daily, and dangerously, by the
envenomed coastal elites—in print, in cyberspace, and on the idiot’s
lantern.
It so happened that on Oct. 1, the elites’ favorite intellectual pygmy, Ta Nehisi Coates, was doing the rounds on MSNBC, promoting his singularly asinine monomania: To be white is to be racist by default and guilty of crimes against blacks and browns.
In
Ta Nullity’s telling, White America was responsible for the election of
a white supremacist. President Trump’s voters—indubitably
well-represented among the 22,000 people at the three-day country music
fest—were racists by virtue of being white. Around the same time, NFL
players crescendoed the hate by joining Mr. Coates’ progressive,
predatory coalition. The NFL signaled their contempt for ordinary
Americans by dissing their fans in a very public way.
The anti-white din from these elites is a daily affair.
The
same magnificent men whose mettle we saw in Vegas dominated the rescue
imagery in Texas. That Texas had such a good outcome following Hurricane
Harvey is to this cohort’s credit. A useless government agency called
FEMA or the Trump administration: These are not responsible for rescuing
Texas; it was ordinary Americans like the ones we’ve been celebrating
and eulogizing in Las Vegas.
The much-maligned pale, patriarchal people were all over the Lone Star state like white on rice. Watch the images.
Pretend all you like. Thank our brave men and “women rescuers” (wink)
of these multicultural United States (wink-wink) all you like. But the preponderance of pictures belies such platitudes.
Hand-on-heart
I can say that the larger-than-life personalities who died in Las Vegas
are the best of America, the very heart of America. They are what makes
America great.
When the people who make America great become a despised minority in the country they’ve made great—America will become … Puerto Rico.
Ilana Mercer has been writing a weekly paleolibertarian column since 1999, and is the author of The Trump Revolution: The Donald’s Creative Destruction Deconstructed (June, 2016) & Into the Cannibal’s Pot: Lessons for America From Post-Apartheid South Africa (2011). Follow her on Twitter, Facebook,Gab & YouTube
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