Sunday 1 March 2020

TYSON FURY VS DEONTAY WILDER II

Do not get me wrong: Tyson Fury is not #ourguy. Yet one cannot let last Saturday night/Sunday morning's heavyweight world championship boxing match pass without comment, for it is often innocuous bread-and-circus events like these that mark sea changes. In the blue corner was Deontay Wilder, an open black supremacist who entered the ring in a cross between the Black Panther superhero costume and one of the Knights who Say Ni! This was to celebrate Black History Month, and his ring walk took him past screens displaying pictures of prominent Negro troublemakers like Malcolm Little and Martin Luthah Kang while his butler rapped about 'black magic', 'black music', 'young, black and gifted', 'Black Lives Matter', 'everything black', 'black medicine', 'black Jesus' and I'm sure the words 'black 'blackety blackety blackety black' appeared at one point. Imagine the outcry had a white boxer celebrated his own people, even in a more nuanced and inoffensive manner than this. I do not begrudge Wilder celebrating the achievements of his own people, but perhaps he would have been better served with people who genuinely sought to elevate their own instead of dragging others down. Happily, Wilder and his entourage were roundly booed by the audience, who overwhelmingly supported his opponent during the fight, which shows how much SJW 'woke' politics is being rejected.

 


 

In the red corner was the aforementioned Tyson Fury, a White European of Irish traveller stock. In the past, he has addressed the Jewish Question and talked openly about the Zionist control of finance and the media. He was also steadfast in his defence of traditional values and berated the government for looking after immigrants while ignoring their own poor and homeless. But that Tyson Fury is seemingly dead. What was resurrected after his two-and-a-half-year layoff, supposedly because of depression, is seemingly a shill for globalism. Both Fury and Wilder have Jewish owners for as long as their contracts last: Bob Arum and Shelly Finkel respectively. Arum has promoted Fury as an ambassador for mental health, because all celebrities have to be an altruistic ambssador for some cause or other these days. Just as Arum has turned Fury into a white iconic figure for vacuous globalist consumerism, Finkel has encouraged Wilder's black supremacist rhetoric and anti-white hatred and tried to build him up as a role model for black youths. 

 

Onto the fight itself: it was probably the worst beating of a criminal Alabaman Negro since the halcyon days of the KKK. Wilder, who was charged with domestic violence and strangulation in 2013, was repeatedly pummelled until his trainer Mark Breland threw in the towel in the seventh, with Wilder trapped helpless in the corner. Wilder has since sacked and reinstated Breland because of his actions, despite Breland probably having saved both his future health and boxing career. Wilder stated that he 'wanted to go out on his shield', but a sustained beating like the one Wilder had taken, in which he was floored four times, is worse than being knocked out. One only has to look at Joe Calzaghe's beating of Jeff Lacy for evidence. Lacy was never the same fighter again. Wilder's fabled punching power never seemed to trouble the fully fit Fury, who more or less walked Wilder down and knocked him back and down at will. After a blow to the ear that floored him in the third, Wilder's equilibrium was completely shot and the ear bled profusely for the rest of the match. Fury indeed seemed to lick Wilder's blood in the sixth round in his typical theatrics.

 

 

 

One has to mention the referee. Black referees have been protecting Wilder for years now - the first bout against Luis Ortiz was particularly notorious, in which David Fields 'inexplicably' gave Wilder eleven seconds' extra recuperation time at the very beginning of the eighth round after Ortiz had battered Wilder helpless at the end of the seventh. In this fight, Kenny Bayless stopped Tyson Fury's onslaught in the fifth to deduct him a point for hitting on the break, after Tyson had knocked Wilder to the canvas with a vicious body shot. It meant Wilder could survive another couple of rounds. He was being given every opportunity to win. The fact is that both boxers had been hitting on the break and Wilder was guilty of excessive holding as he clung on for dear life, and it was noticeable that Bayless broke them every time Fury looked to work the inside, and whenever he warned them, he looked far more at Fury. At all other times, he was looking at Wilder, making sure his man was alright. If you don't believe me, watch the fight and his facial expressions. Out of the four times Wilder hit the canvas, Bayless ruled two of them as slips. The other two were too indisputable to go uncounted. Equally, Wilder used the ropes to stop himself from falling to the canvas in Round Five, which again went uncounted by Bayless despite requiring a standing count.

 

Ironically, Wilder has claimed Bayless was unfair to him. Floyd Mayweather Jr, another black supremacist, used to request Bayless as referee prior to drawing up contracts, as he knew Bayless would always be in his corner. So it was with Wilder, and I am not the only one to notice the favouritism and connect it to black supremacism. It would be interesting to find out with whom Bayless associates himself. Indeed, Wilder has been protected throughout his career by his handlers and by the WBC, whose version of the world heavyweight title he held for five years. As champion, Wilder was allowed to cherry-pick opponents, while ignoring serious contenders like Dillian Whyte, who was ranked at challenger status for over two years without the WBC mandating a bout for the title. In fairness, Wilder still does have the likes of Ortiz and Dominic Breazeale on his list of victories and quality in the heavyweight division is in limited supply. That said, he has certainly ducked Whyte and Anthony Joshua, and he called out Tyson Fury back when Fury was a shadow of his former self. Due to the controversy of the draw decision given by the corrupt judges in the first bout, Wilder found himself forced into a rematch with a fully fit Fury. And that was the reason he lost. A fully fit Fury is leagues above Wilder in class.

 

 

Still, this has not stopped Wilder and his black fans from churning out the excuses. Some fans have alleged that Fury's gloves were loaded - risible given that ref Bayless would have disqualified Fury straight away. Others have alleged Wilder was drugged. But the best was from Wilder himself, suggesting that the 40lb black supremacist superhero costume he wore for the ring walk had sapped his energy before the fight began. Imagine that, Black History Month being such a burden to the Negro. Strangely, Wilder claimed in an interview with Joe Rogan on 10th December 2018 that he wore a 45lb vest in training. Wilder needs his excuses, because he would never be able to accept that his boxing ability is limited. His punching power has compensated for this in the past, but against an intelligent boxer like Fury, it was rendered ineffective by Fury managing the distance throughout, pummelling Wilder with a ramrod jab with his longer reach outside of Wilder's range and then stepping inside him with uppercuts to the head and hooks to the body. He then leant on Wilder when Wilder looked to hold, sapping Wilder's energy. Fury also realised something at the very end of their first bout, that Wilder could not box on the back foot, so that's exactly where he put him. Fury went to the Kronk Gym to learn how to sit down on punches precisely to put Wilder on the back foot prior to the contest, and that's exactly where he put him throught the contest. Fury learns all the time; Wilder is seemingly incapable.

 

It will have hurt Wilder's pride as a black supremacist to have lost to a white man, particularly in such a fashion. Frankly, it was a one-man lynching. The Telegraph tried to steer the racial overtones away from what it was by talking of Fury coming from 'the traveller race'. Such gobbledygook is fooling no one. This was Black versus White because Deontay Wilder had made it so. And just as Joe Calzaghe had done against another black supremacist in Bernard Hopkins, he humiliated him, but even more emphatically. Boxing for too long has been set up as a stick with which to beat the white man, with many Whites having mentally lost before they even enter the ring due to the narrative of oppression that is constantly used as a weapon against them. In belonging to a protected minority group that can claim victimhood, Fury was free from those 'mind-forged manacles'. It is the same with the Easten Europeans that have been at the forefront of the sport since the fall of the Iron Curtain, dispelling the myth that boxing was the Negro's sport. Tyson Fury may not be the hero Whites need, but he does show what can be achieved by Whites once they break free of cancerous post-Marxian morality.

1 comment:

  1. They forgot to give him his vibranium gloves and shorts.

    ReplyDelete