In the meantime, here is an inspiring picture of an American citizen exercising his Second Amendment rights within the walls of his own home, something I have absolutely no problem with.
Nor I. Malcolm Little was a man deserving of infinitely more respect than that philandering, rabble-rousing, globalism-promoting, Jєω-loving Commie bastard Martin Luther King.
His espousal of his false religion (and belief in the NOI's fanciful fairy tales about Yaqub the Big-Headed Scientist) notwithstanding, Malcolm "X" was - at the very least - a man who loved his people, desired what was best for them, recognized (((who))) was really behind the world's major evils, and knew - and was never afraid to announce - the harsh truth that was so verboten to the neo-liberal world order: that sub-Saharan Africans and Europeans cannot live peaceably with one another, and that the best thing for black people was for them to break off from the dysfunctional caretaker relationship they have so long had with white America, and work at living among, and taking care of, themselves.
Naturally, he wasn't long for this world. And for all the promotion his name and image have gotten in the half-century since his murder (nowhere near as much as POS MLK, of course), his very sensible suggestions for addressing America's racial crisis, have, of course, never been allowed to gain traction.