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It’s not as if you could go to Google right now, search the word “racism,” and get more results than there are people on the planet. You never hear people talking about racism, much less systemic racism. “One of the main factors and one of the key factors that a lot of people don’t want to talk about is that it’s racism,” howled Ms. Reid then dragged a scowling black woman named Derrica Wilson of the Black and Missing Foundation and a scowling Injun woman named Lynette Grey Bull of something called Not Our Native Daughters to use Gabby Petito’s dead body as a soapbox on which to stand and openly whine that the world’s Missing Sistas weren’t getting as much airtime. “Why not the same media attention when people of color go missing?” “It goes without saying that no family should ever have to endure that kind of pain,” Reid stated before slam-dunking her half-inflated basketball straight through the Race Hoop. On Monday, the stubbornly joyless Joy Reid of MSNBC declared that the intense media coverage of Petito’s disappearance and eventual discovery was an example of “missing white woman syndrome,” a phrase she credited to the “late and great” black female reporter Gwen Ifill. It took only one day for 22-year-old Gabby Petito’s remains to be found in Wyoming’s Bridger-Teton National Forest before a black broadcaster with a national platform accused the girl’s freshly dead corpse of enjoying white privilege. Derrica Wilson of the “Black and Missing Foundation” says the Gabby Petito case is just more systemic racism.