Matt Walsh
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So things are looking appropriately dire for Anthony at this point.
But in case he needed yet another sign that this case is already going extremely poorly for Anthony and his legal team, take a look at some of the mainstream coverage of the trial this week.
The big story, according to corporate press, is that no black people were seated as members of the jury.
In jury selection, both prosecution and defense get to strike a number of potential jurors, as long as they have a non-racist reason for doing that.
And the defense is saying that the prosecution broke that rule.
Watch.
Now, they don't mention that the population of Collin County, where the jury was drawn from, is around 10 to 12 percent black.
So if you just randomly selected 12 people from Collin County, the odds are decent that no black people would be in your group.
In fact, the odds are around 25 percent.
They also don't mention that some of these potential black jurors managed to disqualify themselves, which we'll get to in a moment.
But first, we need to talk about the prosecution's stated reason for passing on several of the black potential jury members.
In this news report, you're simply told that some of them are teachers and that the prosecution is wary of having teachers on the jury since they work with students like Metcalf and Anthony.
Of course, the real reason is that teachers are mostly communists, and female teachers in particular have mostly had their brains rotted out by social justice propaganda.
Note that one teacher was allowed on the jury pool, although he doesn't deal with teenagers, so the prosecution allowed him to hear the case.
But in any event, the demented race hustlers who apparently still represent Carmelo Anthony put out this statement about the situation.
Quote, the Next Generation Action Network is outraged by today's jury selection process in the Carmelo Anthony trial.
The prosecution used its final strikes to remove the remaining qualified black jurors from the jury pool, raising serious concerns about fairness and equal justice.
We respect the court, but we will not remain silent.
NGAN will continue monitoring this case and informing the public every step of the way.
Every person deserves a fair trial and confidence that justice is being administered without bias."