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2 snipers shoot 11 cops in Dallas, 4 dead
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Ish Gebor: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by CelticWarrioress: [qb] Troll Patrol,Zarahan, Sorry poor wittle special snowflakes, I'm simply telling the truth about your Anti-White butts & what you are thinking. Yeah you gave your fake condolences and that's just what they are fake, we all know your crew hates Whites. BTW troll Patrol nope he wasn't White but was Hispanic. [/qb][/QUOTE]At least one thing you said was true, he was Hispanic. The remaining part was a lie, a Southern white lie, typical Southern white lie! This way of lying was also how your ancestors managed to lynch black males left and right. Because of YOUR typical white lies, on which you insist founded on your myths. Truth be told, and the world will know about it. This is the origin of racial profiling: [QUOTE]"Slavery by Another Name is a 90-minute documentary that challenges one of Americans’ most cherished assumptions: the belief that slavery in this country ended with the Emancipation Proclamation. The film tells how even as chattel slavery came to an end in the South in 1865, thousands of African Americans were pulled back into forced labor with shocking force and brutality. It was a system in which men, often guilty of no crime at all, were arrested, compelled to work without pay, repeatedly bought and sold, and coerced to do the bidding of masters. Tolerated by both the North and South, forced labor lasted well into the 20th century. For most Americans this is entirely new history. Slavery by Another Name gives voice to the largely forgotten victims and perpetrators of forced labor and features their descendants living today."[/QUOTE] http://www.pbs.org/tpt/slavery-by-another-name/home/ http://www.pbs.org/show/slavery-another-name/ Kentucky Town Re-Examines Its Racial History [QUOTE]In 1919, more than 200 black men worked in Corbin, expanding the railroad yard and paving streets. But racial violence and labor strife were rampant across the country as soldiers streamed home from World War I. In what came to be known as Red Summer, white mobs shot and lynched dozens of blacks in more than two dozen locales from Chicago to the Mississippi Delta. [...] I stared at the will and as the shock drained away, a question began to form. I had been in the area for several days. For the first time it occurred to me that, in all the time I had been there, I had not seen a single African-American. Yet here in front of me was proof that at one time blacks had lived here. Were they still here? If not, when had they left and why? I walked out of the museum with the questions nagging me. Over the next few days as I drove to my different appointments, I kept searching for even one black face. Tourism was one of the pillars of the local economy and the area was dotted with hotels, restaurants, and concert halls for country music fans. The people shopping in the stores were white. The people behind the counters were white. The people working in the motels were white. I began checking the people in cars as they passed. All white. On my last day, I finally asked the person I was interviewing if there were any blacks in the area. "Oh no," she said, "the Klan keeps them out." When I got back to Washington, D.C., I decided to take a closer look. Using 1990 census data I had downloaded from the Internet, I sorted the information from Arkansas to see how many counties had a black population of less than one percent. I soon had a list that included about a third of all Arkansas counties. I thought that Arkansas, as a slave-holding state, would have a more even distribution of its black population. Perhaps I had been mistaken. I collected census data for other southern states. Tennessee. Georgia. North Carolina. Kentucky. Texas. Each time I found some counties that were either all white or populated by so few blacks as to be virtually all white. This was not what I had expected. It was pure coincidence that, on one of the days that I was going over the census data in my office at Cox Newspapers in Washington, a woman from the Atlanta bureau was visiting. As we chatted I told her about the odd distribution of blacks in some southern states. She launched into a story about her brother, who is a cook. He had been recently hired as a chef in a restaurant in Forsyth County just outside of Atlanta. On the day she visited him there, she said the Klan was holding a rally on the courthouse lawn. She explained how all the blacks had been run out of the county around the turn of the century and had been kept out ever since. I went back to my census tables and found Forsyth County. In 1990, there were twelve blacks living in a county of over 40,000 people. [...] [/QUOTE] http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7772527 [/QB][/QUOTE]
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