This is a cartoon from the last issue of Charlie Hebdo before the attack (the one with Houellebecq on the cover) of which I acquired a scan. It's by "Tignous". (Bernard Verlhac—1957–7 January 2015.)

Here's what the cartoon says—my translation.

New York: Two police officers executed in reprisals for the assassination of two American blacks. KKK member: "I don't give a f*ck, they're not white."

May I say that this picture of America's race relations is a wrong-headed as the WSJ's picture of French anti-clericalism below?

Tignous seemed to feel that there are two American races, the white and non-white, and there exists a large segment of racist whites—who don't shave or wash—who would dismiss the murder of Wenjian and Ramos on that basis.

That's wrong. In fact, as John Derbyshire has been writing for years,

One thing I have learned, I think, in fifteen years in the U.S.A. is that there are actually only two races here: black, and nonblack.

Which is to say that there are lots of blacks who would consider a Hispanic or Asian police officer just as non-black as a white one, and VDARE.com readers take the murder of Wenjian and Ramos quite as seriously as the murders of white police.

Of course, while Verlhac's view of the recent riots was the far Left one—the implications of the words "executed in reprisals for the assassination of two American blacks" are the same as the they would be in English—it wasn't entirely his fault: he had nothing to go on but the American Main Stream media.

Oh, well, de mortuis, I suppose. Verlhac was killed by Muslims who hated him for the same reasons they hate me—as Wenjian and Ramos were.

But it's typical that the man who did that cartoon above was part of an initiative to "promote tolerance through illustration."