Even if blacks were the upmost high citizens, you guys would still hate blacks, it was proven in the early 1900s when blacks were successful in spite of segregation. There isn't a difference between a black person or a Nigga to some of you.
I think it's frustrating that people who hold to this worldview don't fully commit to it. If somebody is going to subscribe to the idea that no matter how civilized, a black person will always be evil, and no matter how trashy, a white person will always be good, then fine. But you can't turn around an pretend that this worldview all about behavior, actions, and pattern recognition.
Chud was acting like a nigger. This has been pointed out in this thread and elsewhere over and over again. The need to be a social nuisance, a past criminal record, the pursuit of wealth and clout while not contributing much of anything to society, glorification of violence. All of this resembles the extremely misguided honor system found in street culture, where niggers will instigate, shoot people, and go to jail with a smile on their face and a feeling of doing the right thing in their soul.
If you want to sit back and say Chud and the irl streamer nonsense he engaged in is good, that it demonstrates a white man finally fighting back against the black menace, fine. But the hypocrisy shouldn't be lost in the process. Chud is, in effect, "fighting" niggers by acting like one. To say that is good is to forfeit the right to claim whites are above the shit-flinging, street-culture savagery. It's good when whites do it, bad when blacks do it, so any sense of objective morals disappears.
And let's be honest, that kind of worldview doesn't hold up under scrutiny. Nobody using common sense would say some white hood rat pedo serial killer is better for society than a wealthy black man who attends church, has a family, and is active in the community just because the former is white. Extreme example, sure, but that's the kind of absurdity one has to hold to under the, "all whites are good/better than black people, no matter what" framework.