#Man captured on video painting ‘Wight Lives Matter’ graffiti
“#Man captured on video painting ‘Wight Lives Matter’ graffiti”
A man was recently caught attempting to spray-paint “White Lives Matter,” on his own fence — only he spelled “white,” wrong.
“This can’t be real,” laughs a neighbor, calling a woman to come join her as she films the man, on his knees, finishing the blundered fence mural that reads: “Wight Lives Matter.”
RaShawn Hicks, 20, captured the failed graffiti activism in Sunbury, Pennsylvania around 6 p.m. Saturday. He and his family were in hysterics over their neighbor’s inability to spell the word “white.”
RaShawn uploaded the now-viral video to his TikTok, where it has since garnered nearly 500,000 views.
“This can’t be real,” his family can be heard saying — amid fits of giggles — in the clip, which elicited 14,000 responses from the TikTok community.
“My inner grammar police is screamminggg,” comments one viewer.
Others noted that the way the man drew “lives” makes it read more like a popular fruit.
“Finally! Someone is standing up for the white limes!” jokes one TikTok viewer. “This is a movement I can get behind.”
“I also thought it said white limes at first,” another viewer agrees.
After realizing his spelling mistake later on, the unnamed man attempted to fix his mural, but the damage was done and he couldn’t rework it, RaShawn tells Jam Press.
“The man lives in that house. He tried to fix his mistake on the fence but we let the idiot keep his awful grammar up,” RaShawn says.
This “Wight Lives Matter” debacle is an extreme offshoot of the “All Lives Matter” refrain often used by those who oppose the Black Lives Matter movement and the idea that “only” black lives matter.
On Juneteenth, a pair of Atlanta friends were disturbed when they received signs saying “All Lives Matter,” instead of the ones they’d ordered saying “Black Lives Matter,” from the online company Vistaprint.
“Companies are being very vocal about their stance right now and in being in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, so this felt like very, very clear attempts to undermine . . . the message we’re trying to put out,” Sania Chandrani, 23, who was organizing a Black Lives Matter fund-raiser with her friend, tells BuzzFeed of the experience.
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