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Stephen A. Smith Believes Racism Is ‘Not as Prevalent as the Left Would Like Us to Believe’

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Stephen A. Smith, the bombastic ESPN personality who’s never shied away from stirring the pot, just dropped a truth bomb that’s got the progressive echo chamber in meltdown mode: racism in America is not as prevalent as the Left would like us to believe. Speaking on his show, Smith called out the relentless narrative peddled by Democrats and their media allies, arguing it’s exaggerated to keep voters in a perpetual state of grievance and dependency. This isn’t some fringe take from a right-wing podcaster—it’s coming from a Black man who’s built an empire in sports media, unafraid to buck the party line despite his past flirtations with liberal causes. The backlash was predictable: pearl-clutching from the likes of Joy Reid’s crowd, who paint any deviation from the script as betrayal. But Smith’s words cut through the noise, exposing how identity politics weaponizes division for electoral gain.

For the 2A community, this is a masterclass in pattern recognition. The same playbook Smith skewers—amplifying rare incidents into systemic crises—has been deployed against gun owners for decades. Remember how mass shootings, statistically outliers, get spun into epidemic hysteria to justify confiscation schemes? Just as the Left inflates racism stats to demonize white supremacy, they cherry-pick gun violence data (often ignoring black-on-black urban carnage) to frame law-abiding carriers as threats. Smith’s defiance highlights a growing rift: even high-profile Black voices are rejecting the victimhood industrial complex, which dovetails perfectly with 2A realities. FBI crime stats bear this out—interracial violence is minimal compared to intraracial, yet the narrative persists. Gun control advocates rely on fearmongering minorities into opposing self-defense rights, but as figures like Smith, Colion Noir, and Maj Toure gain traction, that grip weakens.

The implications for 2028? If Smith eyes a political run, his candor could peel off urban voters weary of the grift, bolstering pro-2A coalitions in swing states. Democrats’ overreliance on racial panic leaves them vulnerable; meanwhile, 2A advocates should amplify allies like Smith to reframe the debate around empowerment over entitlement. In a nation where 80 million gun owners span every demographic, busting these myths isn’t just smart politics—it’s existential for preserving our rights against the fear factory.

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