Chicago White Woman Set on Fire on CTA Train

Here are some key moments in Illinois history that led up this tragedy:

1848 – Illinois voters approve a new state constitution which BANS blacks from entering Illinois

1853 – The Illinois state legislature passes the 1853 Black Law which enacts the constitutional ban on blacks entering Illinois which essentially becomes a White ethnostate

1854 – Republican Party founded in Wisconsin

1857 – Supreme Court rules in the Dred Scott decision that blacks are not citizens of the United States. The Dred Scott decision is highly controversial in Illinois and spurs the growth of the Republican Party

1858 – Lincoln-Douglas debates

Stephen Douglas accuses Lincoln of being a Black Republican and a radical abolitionist who supported racial equality. Douglas is reelected to the Senate by the Illinois state legislature

1860 – Abraham Lincoln wins the 1860 presidential election and becomes the first Republican president. South Carolina secedes from the United States

1861 – War Between the States begins

1863 – President Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation

1865 – Illinois is the first state to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment which abolishes slavery.

Illinois Black Codes repealed which opens up Illinois to black migration and settlement

1866 – Sen. Lyman Trumbell of Illinois introduces the Civil Rights Act of 1866 which becomes law after the House and Senate overturn President Andrew Johnson’s veto. It establishes black citizenship and is the first federal civil rights law

1867 – Illinois ratifies the Fourteenth Amendment which was formally ratified in 1868

1869 – Illinois ratifies the Fifteenth Amendment which was formally ratified in 1870.

1874 – Illinois bans segregation in public schools

Illinois repeals its anti-miscegenation law

1876 – John W. E. Thomas becomes the first black man elected to the Illinois House of Representatives

1885 – Illinois Civil Rights Act of 1885 bans segregation in public accommodations

1890 – Following the repeal of the Black Codes, free blacks from the South begin to migrate into Illinois where the black population grows to 57,028 in the 1890 Census

1896 – Illinois bans school segregation again

1908 – Springfield race riot

1910 – Chicago’s black population begins to swell during the Great Migration and grows from 44,000 in 1910 to 277,000 by 1940

1911 – Illinois bans segregation in cemeteries

1917 – Illinois passes a defamation statute which makes it “unlawful to “manufacture, sell or offer for sale, advertise or publish, present or exhibit in any public place any lithograph, moving picture, play, drama or sketch, which publication or exhibition portrays depravity, criminality, unchastity, or lack of virtue of a class of citizens, of any race, color, creed or religion…which exposes the citizens of any race, color, creed or religion to contempt, derision, or obloquy or which is productive of breach of the peace or riots.” Penalty: Misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of between $50 and $200.

1928 – Oscar Stanton De Priest becomes the first black man elected to Congress from Illinois

1933 – Illinois outlaws racial discrimination

Illinois bans racial discrimination in employment

1940 – Between 1940 and 1960, Chicago’s black population balloons from 278,000 to 813,000

1948Shelley vs. Kraemer bans restrictive covenants in housing

1956 – Illinois bans racial discrimination in health care

1957 – Illinois bans racial discrimination in housing

1958 – Illinois bans racial segregation in the Illinois National Guard

1964 – Congress passes the Civil Rights Act of 1964 after Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen of Illinois and several Republican senators provide the votes to overcome a 60 day filibuster by Southern Democrats. 23 out of 24 Illinois congressmen voted in support of it. Both U.S. senators from Illinois voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964

1966-1968 – Martin Luther King, Jr. leads the Chicago Freedom Movement to protest unfair housing practices

1968 – The Fair Housing Act of 1968 is passed to honor the memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. after his assassination

1980 – Chicago’s black population peaks at 1.2 million

1983 – Harold Washington becomes the first black mayor of Chicago

1992 – Carol Moseley-Braun becomes the first black U.S. senator from Illinois

2004 – Barack Obama elected to the U.S. Senate from Illinois

2008 – Barack Obama elected president

2012 – Barack Obama reelected president

2019 – Lori Lightfoot becomes mayor of Chicago

2020 – George Floyd killed in Minneapolis. Bethany MaGee changes her profile picture on Facebook to support Black Lives Matter

2023 – Brandon Johnson becomes mayor of Chicago

2025 – Bethany MaGee doused in gasoline and set on fire on a CTA train

“NS” activists will claim “IT’S THE JEWS.”

White Nationalists will claim this wouldn’t have happened in a White ethnostate.

The problem is that antebellum Illinois was the closest America ever came to creating a White ethnostate. It was dismantled from within, not by a Jewish conspiracy, but by White liberals in the Civil War and Reconstruction era who were incensed by the Dred Scott decision. Blacks were given citizenship. Slavery was abolished. The Black Codes were repealed. Blacks were ushered into Illinois and were being elected to political offices by the Gilded Age. Racial discrimination was also banned at the time.

Their descendants are still ruining Illinois today which is why a black career criminal with 72 prior arrests was free to douse a young White woman with gasoline and set her on fire on a CTA train. The same people voted for Barack Obama and Kamala Harris. Negrophilia is so deeply woven into the local culture that Bethany MaGee changed her profile picture to support Black Lives Matter in 2020.

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