On Aug 11, 10:39Â pm, "robw" comcast.net> wrote:
> It's going,down just like I said.
>
> Details on how we'll know it's you will be worked out in Sept.
>
> "HarryNadds"
gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:8d33b475-34c0-440a-bd74-bb061a8d3a25@m3g2000hsc.googlegroups.com...
> On Aug 10, 4:31 pm, "robw" comcast.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>> He wants as many as possible in Houston in Sept. so everyone can have fun
>> dogpiling your ass.
>
>> Any other questions you gutless cunt?
>
>> "HarryNadds" gmail.com> wrote in message
>
>
>>> On Aug 10, 7:24 am, "Michael Laudahn eOpposition"
>
>>> your.earliest.convenience> wrote:
>>>> PEARL, Miss. (AP) - They're not exactly rooting for Barack Obama, but
>>>> prominent white supremacists anticipate a boost to their cause if he
>> becomes
>>>> the first black president. His election, they say, would trigger a
>>>> backlash - whites rising up, a revolution of sorts - that they think
> is
>> long
>>>> overdue.
>
>>>> He'd be a "visual aid," says former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke, in
>>>> trying to bring others around to their view that whites have lost
>> control of
>>>> America. Obama's election, says another, would jar whites into action,
>>>> writing letters, handing out pamphlets rather than sitting around
>>>> complaining.
>
>>>> While most Americans have little or no direct contact with white
>>>> supremacists, organizations such as the Anti-Defamation League and the
>>>> Southern Poverty Law Center keep close tabs; the law center estimates
>> some
>>>> 200,000 people nationwide are active in such groups. These observers
>> think
>>>> the prospect of a white revolution is fantasy.
>
>>>> White supremacists - many call themselves nationalists or "White
>> activists,"
>>>> with a capital W - have had limited political success: Duke served in
>> the
>>>> Louisiana Legislature. And the public has periodically been unsettled
> by
>>>> their public events, like the effort by uniformed Nazis to march
> through
>>>> Skokie, Ill., the annual Aryan Nations meetings in Idaho and elsewhere
>> or
>>>> the FBI's clashes with armed white supremacists in several Western
>>>> compounds.
>
>>>> Richard Barrett is a 65-year-old lawyer who traveled the country for
> 40
>>>> years advocating what he perceives as the white side in racial
> issues -
>> like
>>>> his public support for a white teenager who hung a noose in a Jena,
> La.,
>>>> school yard.
>
>>>> Barrett is convinced Democratic Sen. Obama will defeat Republican Sen.
>> John
>>>> McCain in November.
>
>>>> And that could cause an upheaval, Barrett, a leader in the Nationalist
>>>> Movement, told The Associated Press in an interview at his rural
>> Mississippi
>>>> home.
>
>>>> "Instead of this so-called civil rights bill, for example, that says
> you
>>>> have to give preferences to minorities, I think the American people
> are
>>>> going - once they see the 'Obamanation' - they're going to demand a
>> tweaking
>>>> of that and say, 'You have to put the majority into office,'" Barrett
>> said.
>
>>>> Across the United States, some white supremacists are saying an Obama
>>>> presidency could create a racial backlash that will give their groups
> a
>>>> boost.
>
>>>> Barrett is evasive about his ideology and tries to keep reporters from
>> using
>>>> "buzz words" to describe him. He doesn't call himself a white
>> supremacist,
>>>> although the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law
> Center
>> do.
>
>>>> The law center tracks the Nationalist Movement, the Klan and
> like-minded
>>>> groups from its Montgomery, Ala., headquarters. The center's
> "Hatewatch"
>>>> newsletter reported in June that some neo-Nazis, Klansmen and
>> anti-Semites
>>>> are saying an Obama presidency could prompt a race war, which many on
>> the
>>>> "radical right" believe whites would win.
>
>>>> Although not all white supremacists agree, "large numbers of these
>> people
>>>> really seem to think that an Obama election would benefit them
> hugely,"
>> Mark
>>>> Potok, the center's intelligence director, said in an interview. He
>> called
>>>> that view "essentially a fantasy."
>
>>>> Duke, the former Klan leader, posted an essay on his Web site in June
>>>> titled, "Obama Wins Demo Nomination: A Black Flag for White America."
>
>>>> Obama "will be a clear signal for millions of our people," Duke wrote.
>>>> "Obama is a visual aid for White Americans who just don't get it yet
>> that we
>>>> have lost control of our country, and unless we get it back we are
>> heading
>>>> for complete annihilation as a people."
>
>>>> Jason Robb, a Harrison, Ark., attorney who represents the Klan's
> Knights
>>>> Party, describes himself as a "white nationalist."
>
>>>> "It doesn't really matter if Obama wins the election or McCain wins
> the
>>>> election," Robb said in an interview. "Neither of them are going to
> try
>> to
>>>> fight to preserve the white race or heritage."
>
>>>> Robb said, however, that Obama's election could prompt more whites to
>> get
>>>> involved in politics by distributing pamphlets or writing letters to
>>>> editors.
>
>>>> Although the South has had more racial violence than most of the
>> country,
>>>> Randy Blazak, a sociology professor at Oregon's Portland State
>> University,
>>>> says white supremacists live all over the United States. Blazak, who
> has
>>>> studied skinheads for two decades, calls white supremacists a
>>>> counterculture, not a movement, contending the latter term overstates
>> their
>>>> numbers.
>
>>>> Blazak said white supremacists thrive on fear of changing race
>> relations,
>>>> the women's movement and gay rights. Blazak said white working class
>> people
>>>> in particular long for a "Leave It To Beaver" society.
>
>>>> "Those were the 'good old days' for straight, white males. But for
>> everyone
>>>> else, it was a pretty raw deal," Blazak said.
>
>>>> Barrett, a New York City native who moved to Mississippi in 1966, said
>> the
>>>> Nationalist Movement has members in 36 states, but he won't say how
>> many. He
>>>> compares today's skinheads to the minutemen of the American
> Revolution.
>
>>>> "The Revolution, if you will, in 1776 brought the 13 colonies together
>>>> against the king. And the same thing can happen now against Martin
>> Luther
>>>> King, with the 50 states," Barrett said, if Obama's elected.
>
>>>> Barrett says he is a Democrat but won't say whether he's voting for
>> Obama.
>>>> He'll only say he won't support McCain, Libertarian Bob Barr or
>> independent
>>>> Ralph Nader.
>
>>>> Charles Evers, brother of Medgar Evers, the Mississippi NAACP leader
>> killed
>>>> by a sniper in 1963, chuckles when told about Barrett's assertions.
>
>>>> "See, Richard doesn't really mean what he says. It's popular for him
> to
>> say
>>>> it. That's the way he makes a living," said Evers, who hosts a talk
> show
>> on
>>>> WMPR-FM in Jackson. "Same as Jesse Jackson, some more of our black
>>>> revolutionaries who make a living off of keeping things emotional."
>
>>>> Although a longtime Republican, Evers supports Obama. He says the
>> Democrat
>>>> is more qualified than McCain.
>
>>>> Evers, whose office has photos of him with Robert Kennedy, Richard
>> Nixon,
>>>> George W. Bush and other politicians, said he sees broad, multiracial
>>>> support for Obama, even in parts of the South where the white
>> establishment
>>>> dug in to try to preserve racial segregation decades ago.
>
>>>> "I think we're past that stage," Evers said. "I don't think the
> majority
>> of
>>>> white people are thinking that way anymore."
>
>>>> Kim Edwards of Matteson, Ill., a black woman who traveled to
> Mississippi
>>>> with a racially mixed group so her son could play in a baseball
>> tournament,
>>>> is more skeptical. Edwards worries that extremists want Obama to be
>> elected
>>>> so they can assassinate him.
>
>>>> "I'm really concerned for his safety," said Edwards, who plans to vote
>> for
>>>> Obama. "I'm concerned that once he gets in office that he won't be
>>>> recognized as an American president."
>
>>>> However, former Mississippi Gov. William Winter, a white Democrat who
>> served
>>>> on President Clinton's commission on racial reconciliation, doesn't
>> foresee
>>>> widespread white backlash if Obama is elected.
>
>>>> "We are a diverse country," said Winter, who supports Obama. "We are
>> made up
>>>> of people of every conceivable racial background."
>
>
>>>> --
>>>> Give us back our countries: Stop the criminal multiculturalism
> ideology
>>>> enforced upon the white world against the will of its peoples, leading
>> to
>>>> mass immigration from the third-world: Mul-cul + pol-corr = lethal
>> mixture
>>>> for the white world. And give us back our freedom: Dismantle all
>>>> surveillance technology.
>
>>> I'm hearing very, very few White males making favorable comments about
>>> Obama. GOP
>>> should be on suicide watch for allowing illegal alien-loving McCain to
>>> be their
>>> candidate.
>
>>> mitch
>
>
>>> - Show quoted text -
>
>> What is the Messiah's stance on illegal immigration??- Hide quoted text -
>
>> - Show quoted text -
>
> Sure tough guy. How will you know who I am? You gonna sic your pet
> nigga on every tall,dark,handsome cracker that walks down the street??
> Are you willing to get your pet coon sent to the promised land just so
> you can make a "point"? What'll you say when the cracker your nigga
> attempts to "pound his head into the curb" decides to pop a cap in
> your boy then posts the video on You-Tube? Will we get to see a video
> of you crying like a 6 year old girl over your negro lover having his
> privates blown off?? You know, most Texans don't take kindly to having
> some fucking negro attacking them. This is a concealed carry ...
>
> read more »- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
You are really beginning to bore me. It's the same threats from you
over and over. Are'nt you getting tired of the same juvenile,childish
posts every day?? I think you have a SERIOUS mental imbalance. You are
treading on very thin ice. You are on the verge of making a very big
mistake just to prove some childish point.