Friday, November 30, 2007

Typical Antifa Hypocrites!

This is from the Cyber-Ghetto (One People's Project)....What a bunch of hypocrites in true commie/anarchist/anti-racist fashion! Calling for more & more big centralized government while always trying to pass themselves off as radicals, anti-Establishment, anti-government, etc, ad nauseam! These morons are part of the very New World Order & the very System they THINK they are so against! "More hate crime laws"..Don't make me laugh! They might as well be screaming, " More draconian, anti-White, Big Brother, UNCONSTITUTIONAL laws!" Read & weep as these pathetic niggers, fake anarchists, & fake revolutionaries state their "case" below:



HATE HAS ITS CONSEQUENCES...AND SO WILL HATE CRIMES



Written by One People's Project
Wednesday, 21 November 2007
Last Friday, we participated in the march Al Sharpton called to encourage the Justice Department to deal with hate crimes more forcefully, and we were very pleased with the turnout. Given the report following the march that hate crimes have risen over the past two years it is about that time that this march happened. There's more coming though. We were out there passing out our newsletter that informed people of the American Renaissance Conference in February as well as reproduced the Bill White Rogues' Gallery entry, just so folks can know who it was that threatened the Jena Six and Leonard Pitts. You know, in case someone wanted to seek justice for them, right? Seriously, with 2008 being an election year, and all the racists ratcheting it up a few notches, this march is far from being the last effort against hatemongers, and we are going to be on the frontlines, we can promise you that.One People's ProjectWASHNGTON, DC - Thousands of people from around the country came out to the nation's capital to demand more action to beat back hate crimes on Nov. 16. The rallies and events, organized by local leaders and the Rev. Al Sharpton's National Action Network, came just days before the FBI released a report stating that hate crimes had risen over the past two years. Sharpton, Martin Luther King III and comedian Steve Harvey led a group of mostly African Americans in a march on the Justice Center and rally at Freedom Plaza demanding that the Justice Department address the concerns that have come about in the wake of recent cases where African Americans have been attacked and unfairly prosecuted. In the past two months three such cases have captured national attention. The Jena Six case was on the front pages after a massive march in Jena, LA, but the march came just days after another incident in Logan, WV where a black woman was sexually assaulted by six whites and although one of them reportedly said to the woman, "This is what we do to n----s around here," hate crime charges were not being pursued. The DC march comes just a few weeks after Georgia teen Genarlow Wilson was released after two years in jail when a appellate court ruled that a ten-year sentence for having oral sex performed on him by 15-year-old white teen when he was 17 was cruel and unusual punishment. Joining the National Action Network on the march were various groups, including People's Organization For Progress, the local chapter of SEIU, International Socialist Organization, Code Pink, two black motorcycle clubs, Wheels of Soul from Philadelphia, PA and Black Jack out of Raleigh, NC, the Guardian Angels, International A.N.S.W.E.R. and representatives of Flint, MI government, to name a few. Organizers said there were 100 busloads of protesters.At the beginning of the week following the rally and march, the FBI released a report detailing exactly how bad hate crimes have become. According to the report, Police across the nation reported 7,722 criminal incidents in 2006 targeting victims or property as a result of bias against a race, religion, sexual orientation, ethnic or national origin or physical or mental disability. That was up 7.8 percent from 7,163 incidents reported in 2005, the year the anti-immigrant Minuteman Project started. More than half the incidents were motivated by racial prejudice, and the majority of offenders were white at 58.6 percent. Blacks made up the next highest group at 20.6, followed by 12.9 unknown or other races.As expected, conservatives tried to downplay the findings. On Tuesday's edition of Fox News Channel's Live Desk with E.D. Hill, the host had Greg Gutfeld, the host of Fox News Channel's Red Eye with Greg Gutfeld, comment on the story, to which he opined that most of the crimes were cases of vandalism while few were of violent nature. "It ain't nothing," he said, noting further that most crimes are committed by people the victim knows, and if one wants to avoid being a victim, "Stay home."While the FBI report notes the most frequent hate crimes in 2006 were indeed property damage or vandalism, at 2,911 offenses, The next highest were violent acts which was closely behind at 2357 offenses. This includes 3 murders, 6 rapes, 860 aggravated assaults, 1,447 simple assaults and 41 arsons. Intimidation followed that number at 2,046 offenses.On Saturday there was a rally and concert calling to stop hate crimes and police brutality sponsored by the Hip Hop Caucus. Among those performing were Go-Go bands such as Backyard, ABM, TCB, Familiar Faces, Uncalled 4 Experience, Mambo Sauce, What Band, Hip Hop artist and activist, M1of dead prez, and Latin rock band The Locos.

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