Cincinnati City Leader Caught Publicly Cheering for Vicious Beating of Whites, Wrote They Had It Coming

The article reports on Cincinnati City Councilwoman Victoria Parks, who sparked controversy after publicly expressing approval of a violent beating that occurred in Cincinnati. Parks posted on social media,stating,”They begged for that beat down! I am grateful for the whole story,” wich was widely criticized as celebrating violence. Republican Ohio Representative Phil Plummer called for her immediate resignation, condemning her defense of violent criminals. The incident has ignited debate about race relations and political responses to violence, with commentary suggesting that Parks’ attitude is influenced by past high-profile cases involving racial tensions, such as those of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and george Floyd. parks, who is nonpartisan but was endorsed by the Democratic Party, had already announced she would not seek re-election, but the controversy raises questions about the standards expected of public officials and the broader societal implications of condoning violence.


Our current political paradigm has elected officials unashamedly cheering for violence.

A city councilwoman landed herself in hot water when she applauded the barbarity that occurred in the streets of Cincinnati, Ohio, early Saturday morning.

Councilwoman Victoria Parks wrote via social media platform in reaction to the violence, “They begged for that beat down! I am grateful for the whole story,”

To drive the point home further — there is no leeway to interpret those comments otherwise — this is an elected official expressing joy in watching a vicious beating take place.

Her comments were screenshotted and later reposted to social media platform X.

Fox News confirmed through some investigation that this is an account belonging to a sitting city councilwoman. (Parks is “nonpartisan”; however, like other council members, she was endorsed by the Democratic Party.)

Ohio Republican Rep. Phil Plummer, who d the screenshot, called for her resignation, saying, Parks “must resign immediately! Defending violent criminals who viciously beat innocent people is disgusting.”

The screenshot showed another user, replying to Parks, almost in disbelief:

“You are on city council? And you make a statement like this?”

This is the norm of race relations.

The flames were stoked through the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and George Floyd.

A black city councilwoman can cheer violence against whites by other blacks because the names above — and the sensationalism from the media that followed — conditioned her and so many others into seeing the white race in its entirety as evil oppressors.

The victims and their families would receive interviews, news specials, and calls and meetings from every Democratic politician had the races been swapped in the Cincinnati beatings.

But whites are oppressors, and lashing out against your oppressor isn’t vicious and unjust.

It is good and righteous, as Parks comments clearly show.

Regarding the political ramifications of Park’s comments, Fox reported, she announced in January that she won’t be seeking re-election after her current term is up.

Should she be removed from office before that time is up? Just as important is the question of precedent. What do public officials and residents of Cincinnati believe to be the norm when they see violence unfold like this and the response Parks gave?




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