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Grex > Agora46 > #150: How dare the NAACP tell me who I can or cannot endorse | |
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| 25 new of 57 responses total. |
edina
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response 33 of 57:
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Aug 13 16:42 UTC 2003 |
Here in DC, I rarely notice color - I go home to Tecumseh and someone who is
black seems to stand out.
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tod
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response 34 of 57:
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Aug 13 17:30 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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happyboy
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response 35 of 57:
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Aug 13 19:11 UTC 2003 |
re:30 *they* probably don't really care what *you* think,
stinky
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polytarp
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response 36 of 57:
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Aug 14 10:25 UTC 2003 |
There aren't many Negroes in Cobourg, but, you know what, I saw one just
to-day, some Negroe with a white kid: What the fuck else are the Negroes
going to do, but get white friends?
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tod
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response 37 of 57:
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Aug 14 16:46 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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jep
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response 38 of 57:
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Aug 17 03:21 UTC 2003 |
re resp:28: I speculated about someone doing that a half dozen years
ago; a descendant of white South Africans applying for African
American scholarships. How did it work out for your friend?
re resp:33: I've talked to two black co-workers about moving to
Clinton or Tecumseh. I warned them both that Clinton is almost 100%
white, and Tecumseh is nearly so. In 6 years of having kids go to
Clinton schools, I knew only one black student in Clinton.
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i
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response 39 of 57:
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Aug 17 07:31 UTC 2003 |
Yes, but do Clinton/Tecumseh have the, ah, "racially pure" social
heritage of the Brighton/Howell/Fowlerville corridor?
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jep
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response 40 of 57:
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Aug 17 12:52 UTC 2003 |
I vaguely remember hearing something about the KKK around Brighton,
several years ago. I've never heard anything like that about Clinton
or Tecumseh.
But, dangit, I wouldn't necessarily be surprised if I did hear
something along those lines someday. People choose to live where
they're comfortable, and if people move to an all-white town, it's
often because that's how they want to live. It's hardly impossible to
believe that, in an all-white town, there are those who will go to
extremes to keep their town all-white.
I don't know of any bigotry near where I live, but I haven't looked
for it. My brother lives in Pulaski, Tennessee, the town where the
KKK was formed, and in the area where many of it's originators lived.
I've never seen any bigotry there, either. Not myself I haven't.
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dcat
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response 41 of 57:
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Aug 17 21:14 UTC 2003 |
The original KKK or the 20th-century KKK? The original post-Civil-War KKK
was not the same 'organization' that exists now.
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jep
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response 42 of 57:
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Aug 17 23:45 UTC 2003 |
The KKK to which I referred was founded a year or two after the end of
the Civil War in Pulaski, TN.
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bru
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response 43 of 57:
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Aug 18 01:32 UTC 2003 |
1924 at 4-6 million nationally, and 115,000 in Alabama The KKK wa founded
on stoner mountain Georgia in 1915 after the founders watched "Birth of a
Nation.
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oval
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response 44 of 57:
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Aug 18 14:35 UTC 2003 |
i can't remeber jep, and i'm not in contact with him anymore to ask
unfortunately. i *think* he did get some grant money, after some hassel about
whether his skin color would prevent this.
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tod
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response 45 of 57:
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Aug 18 20:04 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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albaugh
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response 46 of 57:
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Aug 19 21:57 UTC 2003 |
"Stoner" Mountain - Freudian slip? ;-)
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tod
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response 47 of 57:
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Aug 20 03:33 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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gull
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response 48 of 57:
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Aug 20 15:44 UTC 2003 |
I saw a motel near Coram, Montana called 'Stoner's Inn'.
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tod
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response 49 of 57:
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Aug 20 19:09 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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gull
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response 50 of 57:
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Aug 21 13:28 UTC 2003 |
I found that hilarious when I was out there. My friend, who has lived
in the area all his life, had never seen the humor until then.
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mcnally
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response 51 of 57:
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Aug 23 07:08 UTC 2003 |
Hmmm.. I decided, while driving across the country this year, that the
prize in the hotly-contested convenience-store division of this year's
"What the hell were they thinking when they named that?" contest should
go to South Dakota's "Kum-and-Go" stores, edging out last year's winner,
Minnesota's "Pump-n-Munch" chain..
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tod
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response 52 of 57:
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Aug 23 13:16 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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gull
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response 53 of 57:
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Aug 24 02:33 UTC 2003 |
Re #51: I found that pretty funny, too. They're in Iowa as well.
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flem
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response 54 of 57:
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Aug 26 18:42 UTC 2003 |
Haha. I want to own a Pump-n-Munch someday. I'd put it right next to Jody
Moroni's Sausage Kingdom. :)
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polygon
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response 55 of 57:
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Sep 10 16:51 UTC 2003 |
Re 41 and others about the KKK: The name Ku Klux Klan has been used in
three separate waves, with no organizational continuity.
The original post-Civil-War KKK started as a social organization of
ex-Confederate soldiers, evolved into a para-military one, and was crushed
by federal troops.
In 1915, the movie "Birth of a Nation" romanticized the original KKK and
tremendously exaggerated its role in ending Reconstruction. As a direct
result of the movie, a "new" KKK was organized, and it had millions of
members all over the country, not just in the South, reaching a kind of
peak in 1924. The sculptor of Mount Rushmore was a member. Though
certainly racist, it was much less violent than the earlier and later
incarnations. The founders swindled the membership out of reportedly
millions of dollars. It died out by the 1930s.
In the 1950s and 1960s, another new, secretive, and violent KKK was
established, in response to the civil rights movement. However, there
were and are numerous schisms and competing organizations each of which
claim to be the "real" KKK.
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remmers
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response 56 of 57:
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Sep 10 20:03 UTC 2003 |
According to my father, who lived and worked in Indiana during the
1920s, the second KKK incarnation controlled Indiana politics for
a number of years.
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gull
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response 57 of 57:
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Sep 11 02:45 UTC 2003 |
The book _Them: Adventures With Extremists_ talks a bit about the current
political disagreements between different KKK groups.
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