Nearly 100 recent homicides linked to users of racist site white supremacist site

Discussion in 'In the News' started by Sirius Dogon, Apr 19, 2014.

  1. Morning Star

    Morning Star Well-Known Member

    Whoa there man...I think you have some things mixed up here. Harding was the same person his opponents believed have a great-great grandmother who's black.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_G._Harding#Civil_rights.2C_labor_disputes_and_strikes

     
  2. Gorath

    Gorath Well-Known Member

  3. Morning Star

    Morning Star Well-Known Member

    There were some rumors as to whether he did have some affiliations with the Ku Klux Klan, but it surely didn't get reflected upon his views and such. I wouldn't be surprised if he did partake in it, but the History Channel lately...it's really the HC anymore.

     
  4. Gorath

    Gorath Well-Known Member

    President Harding was sworn in in the Green Room of the White House. I think Harding was affiliated before he was elected.
     
  5. Morning Star

    Morning Star Well-Known Member

    That's most likely true. Good point.

     
  6. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

    Parents outraged after white supremacists plant racist Easter eggs

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news...e-supremacy-groups-plan/#.U1VB03oSWHE.twitter

    Residents in a Richmond, Va., neighborhood are outraged after finding hate-filled, racist notes hidden inside plastic Easter eggs in their yards.

    The Smiths were having an egg hunt with their 3-year-old son Sunday afternoon at their home in West End when they came across the notes, easter-eggs-filled-with-racist-notes” a local ABC affiliate reported.

    “My husband noticed the last Easter egg, and I knew it wasn’t one that we put out,” Jackie Smitheaster-eggs-filled-with-racist-notes” target told the station.

    Inside the egg was a note titled, ” ‘Diversity’ = White Genocide,” with a message that read, “Mass immigration and forced assimilation of non-whites into our lands is genocide.”

    The note also provided links to WhiteManMarch.com and WhiteGenocideProject.com.

    “I think it’s absurd,” said husband Brandon Smith, who went door-to-door to alert other parents of the notes. Several more were found in people’s yards.

    “We don’t want other kids around here who can read being like, ‘Hey mommy what’s the million man white march or what’s the genocide project?’ Most of us don’t want to explain genocide to our 6-year-olds,” Mrs. Smitheaster-eggs-filled-with-racist-notes” told the station.

    Henrico Police are investigating the incident, as well as the websites involved.

    The White Man March is an online event scheduled for the third Saturday of every month, and its purpose is to show “that White people are united in their love for their race and in their opposition to its destruction,” its website said.

    The White Genocide Project aims “to bring awareness to the planet about the ongoing program of genocide against White people,” that group’s website said
     
  7. MilkandCoffee

    MilkandCoffee Well-Known Member

    No one likes a taste of their own medicine....
     
  8. Sirius Dogon

    Sirius Dogon New Member

    KKK Forms Neighborhood Watch Group In Pennsylvania

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...h-group_n_5186525.html?utm_hp_ref=mostpopular

    In response to a string of recent break-ins, the Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan has given a local Pennsylvania chapter the go-ahead to form a neighborhood watch group.

    “You can sleep tonight knowing the Klan is awake!” read fliers promoting the neighborhood watch group in Fairview Township. The leaflets appeared on the doorsteps of homes along Ridge Road on April 18, PennLive reports.

    [​IMG]

    “It’s just like any neighborhood watch program. It’s not targeting any specific ethnicity. We would report anything we see to law enforcement,” Frank Ancona, the organization’s imperial wizard and president, told PennLive. “We don’t hate people. We are an organization who looks out for our race. We believe in racial separation. God created each species after its kind and saw that it was good.”

    According to its website, the organization -- headquartered in Park Hills, Mo., with local chapters in every state but Hawaii -- is a "non-violent" and "law abiding group" composed entirely of white Christians. The group claims to have “been misunderstood for years.”

    From the website's Who We Are section:

    A call to the Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan was not immediately returned.

    Similar fliers promoting KKK neighborhood watch programs appeared in other states across the country this past year year. In July 2013, recruitment fliers with the same slogan as the Pennsylvania leaflets appeared on doorsteps in Springfield, Mo. In January 2014, the same flyer was spotted in driveways in Virginia.

    "We picked ours up out of our driveway and threw it in the trash," Virginia resident Sarah Peachee told NBC 12. "We weren't interested in even reading about it."
     
  9. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    I just caught this on NPR today driving home. Insane! What I found interesting and hopeful was that there were white parents complaining about it. That shows that their support is not universal nor tacit among members of the U.S. white community. The fact that they used Easter as the occasion for this shows that whoever is in charge of their strategy and tactics is a complete idiot. They're probably their own worst enemy.
     
  10. Gorath

    Gorath Well-Known Member

    These groups would use anything to attract people into their group. They'll use scripture, politics, and other things. They even used cartoon characters like Pokemon to attract children. To do this on Easter Sunday is not only an act of desperation, but a sign that their numbers are dwindling. Some members(and members of other gangs, too) are even serving in the military to learn the skills of combat(weapons and explosives). Some are recruits and a few are ranking officers. The recruitment offices are pressured to fill quotas and a few slip by even if they have a criminal record. If a gang member joins the military, they are to give up all ties to that life. But these recruits are duty bound to their gang.
     
  11. Bookworm616

    Bookworm616 Well-Known Member

    This is a really shitty thing to say and it's no less racist than some white person spouting off about black people.

    With thinking like this, race relations will never get better. SMH.
     
  12. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    What on earth are you talking about?
     
  13. Bookworm616

    Bookworm616 Well-Known Member

    So, the part I put in bold didn't clue you in on what I was talking about? :smt017

    He basically implied that he thinks if white people aren't in the Klan, they secretly support the Klan and its mission by his statement of being surprised that the US white community wasn't universally or tacitly supportive of the KKK.

    That's an offensive thought and puts a generally negative light on the entire US white community.

    His thinking is severely flawed and I pointed it out.

    Follow me? :p
     
  14. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    I think you're reaching a little on that one. I think like most discrimination in this country most people turn a blind eye, they don't get involved if it doesn't concern them. So its not that one may necessarily secretly support them but one may just use the popular mantra "if it ain't me why should I be concerned"
    Follow me? :D
     
  15. Bookworm616

    Bookworm616 Well-Known Member

    So what you're saying is whites are damned if we do, damned if we don't.
     
  16. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    No that's what you're saying. What I am saying is we live in a country where people take me me me position and it is nice to see people speak out and stand up against where if we had to be honest have turned a blind eye to.
    There's a reason why you see so many of these white supremicist groups popping up and being unchallenged because a lot of people have adopted the attitude "If its not happening to me or hurting me then oh well"
    How quickly would your neighbors rally together if some anti-American group popped up in your area.
     
  17. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    Sorry, that is not what I was saying at all. What I was saying is that I found it encouraging and hopeful that white residents were the people criticizing the racists, and that is evidence that the Klan does not enjoy the support of all of the white community. Given that the Klan claims to speak for all white people and represent white interests, having their efforts opposed by someone they are "helping" speaks volumes. I said that the presence of whites opposing the Klan shows that their support is NOT universal NOR tacit among the entire white community. At no time did I use the word "surprised" that you incorrectly and unfairly attributed to me. I said it was "interesting" and "hopeful". It is both of these things to me, because they are not the face you normally see in coverage of racism and race relations in the media.

    In issues of race in this country, the media generally presents a few stock characters: 1) angry minority; 2) racist white; 3) white person who says they have never ever been racist and there's no racism so why don't blacks stop complaining. It is rare to see depictions of white people fighting racism on their own. Anti-racist whites are almost always radical progressives, whites who live in the black community, etc, and rarely rank-and-file everyday white residents who find it disgusting. Eradicating racism will take the work and support of everyday people like this, because political activists cannot do it alone.

    "I just caught this on NPR today driving home. Insane! What I found interesting and hopeful was that there were white parents complaining about it. That shows that their support is not universal nor tacit among members of the U.S. white community. The fact that they used Easter as the occasion for this shows that whoever is in charge of their strategy and tactics is a complete idiot. They're probably their own worst enemy."
     
    Last edited: Apr 24, 2014
  18. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    It's almost like they are selecting characters to fit their own preconceived biases. The angry black person and the racist white are supposed to represent the extremes and then the racism denier is thrown in subtly as the "reasonable" position, undermine black claims and to look anti-racist by their juxtaposition against the white racist, all the while also undermining the black person's claims of racism as well. The last view can be particularly insidious because it's the one that makes people feel like, as long as they're not in the Klan or anything, they couldn't possibly be racist.
     
  19. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    You sure?

    [HDYT]iqUNpvuaVCA[/HDYT]

    These people look very welcoming. Imagine if a white hate group went neighbor to neighbor with their 'soldiers' spreading their message, kinda like the Easter egg turds did.

    And if you think it's just B&W, there are strong factions in the USA that believe ONLY Hispanics belong here in America.

    [HDYT]n82HGZQpmBs[/HDYT]

    So I think it is very dangerous to assume that it is only one racist/racialist group out here.
     
  20. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    You know what the difference is? Black hate groups are fucking benign. They don't actually hurt anyone for the most part. They don't kill fucking kids in the name of black superiority. Take the blinders off.
     

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