Friday, March 29, 2024

Curtis Report: Young, black, female … and expendable

Eight-year old Relisha Tenau Rudd was a homeless child that went missing in January in Washington. Her suspected kidnapper's body was found, to date she has not been. Source: Washington Metropolitan Police Department
Eight-year old Relisha Tenau Rudd was a homeless child that went missing in January in Washington. Her suspected kidnapper’s body was found, to date she has not been. Source: Washington Metropolitan Police Department

By Barry Curtis

The tragedy of life comes in many dismal forms, but one that continues to puzzle and baffle right minded people is the plight of young, black females the world over. The statistics are alarming and should trouble all races.

Here in the United States, according to the FBI, minority children make up 65% of all non-family abductions. Black kids make up 42% of that minority statistic and the majority of the kids that are missing are female (87%). This should send shutters down the spine of our black community.

To compound the worry, as I search the database of missing and exploited children in many states, no photos of black children even exist. For example, a recent search for children in Colorado on the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s database produced no black kids reported as missing in the entire state? If that doesn’t shout expendable, nothing does.

Black girls in the US are not even safe in the womb. The tragedy of black pregnancy is a national disgrace. Some 50% of all pregnancies to black women end in abortion. The tragedy is twofold; first by the usually young female, ending her pregnancy ends up being a life scarred with the ghost of the aborted child and of course the ultimate tragedy is the systematic killing of so many black babies. It is clear that early on, even black girls are taught that life is expendable.

Black or dark girls don’t fare much better around the globe. The sex slave industry is flooded with young black girls. The fact is that most sex slave operators kidnap and recruit from Africa and South America. Recently, we see in Nigeria the kidnapping of over 300 black Christian school girls by Muslim extremist to be sold as slaves. This is proof that Africa’s misery continues to compound.

The facts are grim and troubling. We can have hope that things will change and we should have hope. Hope however is not a strategy, it’s just a feeling. The remedy is not so simple either.

It is clear that we must teach our young black girls to value their body and that of the unborn. We must teach personal responsibility to young boys and girls. We must as a nation and group of nations combat the scourge of sex slaves and cut off the demand for such a sick and demonic practice. No other demographic is such a dire and troubling risk of sure suffrage and or death as a young, black female.

Barry Curtis can be reached at www.thecurtisreport.com.

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

online wholesale business for goods from
China