
By Steve Sailer
01/17/2023
Earlier: USC School Of Social Work Bans The Word "Field" Because Of Plantations, and A Skeptical Reader Says That Thereâs No Sign, After The Vester Flanagan Murders, Of Black America Showing Any âWhite Guiltâ-Type Emotion
From the New York Post in 2015:
The comments that became a reporterâs death sentence
By Marisa Schultz and Frank Rosario
August 28, 2015 1:01amROANOKE, Va. â The words are a part of everyday conversation â âswingingâ by an address and going out in the âfield.â
But in the twisted mind of Virginia gunman Vester Lee Flanagan II, they were pure racism â and saying them became a death sentence for Alison Parker.
The 24-year-old white reporter, who was murdered on live TV along with her cameraman, used the phrases as an intern at ÂWDBJ TV in Roanoke in 2012, according to an internal complaint filed by Flanagan, who was black.
âOne was something about âswingingâ by some place; the other was out in the âfield,âââ said the Jan. 21 report by assistant news director Greg Baldwin, which refers to Parker as Alison Bailey (her middle name).
Parker was never disciplined over the remarks, but Flanagan never forgot them.
Hours after gunning her and Adam Ward down during their broadcast Wednesday, Flanagan revealed in tweets that the comments were still fresh in his mind.
âAlison made racist comments,â Flanagan posted while he was on the run from cops.
âThey hired her after that??â he wrote.
But colleagues said that it was all in Flanaganâs head and that Parker was as far from racist as they come.
When blacks get fired and then murder their former white coworkers (as at the two beer company mass murders in 2010 and 2020), these days people feel it important to clear the names of the white victims from the charge of racism, which, apparently, would mean they had it coming.
⌠Flanagan made the accusations a month before he was fired in February 2013. The document was part of his unsuccessful discrimination lawsuit against the television station.
Trevor Fair, a 33-year-old cameraman at WDBJ for six years, said that the words Parker used are commonplace but that they would routinely set Flanagan off.
âWe would say stuff like, âThe reporterâs out in the field.â And he would look at us and say, âWhat are you saying, cotton fields? Thatâs racist,âââ Fair recounted.
âWeâd be like, âWhat?â We all know what that means, but he took it as cotton fields, and therefore weâre all racists.â