—Sylvester Loving, B1Daily
America has a violence problem it refuses to name.
For decades, the country has constructed a racial mythology around sexual violence—one that casts Black men as inherent threats while quietly ignoring what the data has said all along: the majority of rapes in the United States are committed by white men. This is not a radical claim. It is a statistical fact drawn from national victimization surveys, offender identification data, and long-term crime trends.
And yet, the lie persists.
Why? Because admitting the truth would force America to confront something far more unsettling than crime—it would require confronting white supremacist pathology embedded in its institutions, media, and cultural self-image.
The Data America Doesn’t Want to Talk About
Federal victimization data consistently shows three things:
- The overwhelming majority of sexual assault perpetrators are male
- Most victims are assaulted by someone they know
- Most reported perpetrators are of the same race as their victims

Since white women make up the majority of sexual assault victims in the United States, the logical and unavoidable outcome is this: white men account for the largest share of identified sexual violence offenders.
This reality shatters the propaganda narrative that sexual violence is an external threat brought by “others.” Interracial rape is statistically rare. Stranger rape is uncommon. The danger is not lurking in dark alleys—it is embedded in homes, workplaces, churches, schools, fraternities, police departments, and military ranks.
In other words, it is institutional.
White Supremacy Is Not Just Hate — It’s Protection
White supremacy is often framed as extremist rhetoric or overt bigotry. But its most dangerous form is quieter. It is the system that decides whose violence is scrutinized and whose is excused.
When white men commit violence, the language softens:
- “A troubled individual”
- “A misunderstanding”
- “A promising future ruined”
- “An isolated incident”
When Black or brown men are accused—often without conviction—the language hardens into collective guilt.

This is not accidental. It is the ideological function of white supremacy: to externalize danger while internalizing innocence.
Sexual violence exposes this pathology better than almost any other crime because it happens overwhelmingly in private spaces, under the protection of familiarity and power. And power in America has a color.
Pathological Violence and the Culture of Entitlement
Sexual violence is not random. It follows access.
White men disproportionately occupy positions of authority—bosses, officers, teachers, coaches, politicians. These roles come with credibility, institutional backing, and insulation from consequences. Survivors know this. That is why rape remains one of the most underreported crimes in the country.
The same system that claims to fear violence is remarkably effective at burying it when it implicates the dominant group.
This is why white supremacist violence cannot be understood only through mass shootings or extremist groups. It also manifests as:
- Workplace harassment ignored
- Assault allegations silenced
- Victims disbelieved
- Perpetrators protected
It is violence normalized through power.

The Myth That Enables More Violence
America’s refusal to confront who actually commits sexual violence has consequences.
By racializing crime falsely, the country:
- Fuels racist policing instead of prevention
- Diverts resources away from domestic and institutional abuse
- Reinforces myths that leave survivors unprotected
- Allows perpetrators to hide behind respectability
The obsession with criminalizing Blackness has done nothing to stop rape. Because rape was never coming from where America was pointing.

This Is Not About Blame — It’s About Truth
Stating that most sexual violence in America is committed by white men is not an accusation against all white men. It is an indictment of a system that protects some violence while demonizing others.
White supremacy is not just about who is hated. It is about who is allowed to harm without consequence.
Until America is willing to confront that reality—until it stops outsourcing its fear and starts examining its power—sexual violence will remain exactly where it is: widespread, underreported, and structurally protected.
The data is clear.
The silence is intentional.
And the violence continues because of it.
—Sylvester Loving, B1Daily




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