RACISM

Why is America So Reluctant to Call These Murders White Terrorism?

An essay about the hate crime in Jacksonville, Florida, where a White gunman killed three Black people in a Dollar General

Allison Wiltz M.S.
4 min readAug 27, 2023

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Portrait of a woman with a confused facial expression | Photo by Ron Lach via Pexels

Once again, the Black community is grieving because of lives lost from a racist attack. Yesterday, on Saturday, August 26th, a young White man, Ryan Palmeter, armed with an AR-15 style rifle and handgun, opened fire in a Dollar General in Jacksonville, Florida, killing three Black people, two men and one woman. All the signs pointed to this being an act of white terrorism, yet you are unlikely to hear anyone use that terminology in describing the events that happened. Unfortunately, there is a reluctance to define crimes, no matter how heinous, as acts of terror when the suspects are White, even though that's clearly the intent behind the violence. Are we not human, do we not bleed? Are we not capable of being terrorized? Black people will never be safe in a nation in denial about the dangers they face.

In a news conference held early Saturday evening, Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters said, "This shooting was racially motivated, and he hated Black people." The shooter, described as a White man in his twenties who lived with his parents, wrote several manifestos. His…

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Allison Wiltz M.S.

Black womanist scholar and doctoral candidate from New Orleans, LA with bylines @ Momentum, Oprah Daily, ZORA, Cultured #WEOC Founder. allisonthedailywriter.com