On Apr 22, 10:07=A0pm, DorE <90835x...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> This Revolution Will Not Be Televised
> 2008-04-22
>
> Cover up: "Brown Pride" graffitti in Colorado
>
> "Get out while you can," says [Fulton's] friend. "I'm moving to an
> American
> neighborhood."
>
> By Ian Jobling
>
> On the night of April 12, vandals tagged three homes, a mailbox, a
> dumpster, and 15 vehicles in a Denver suburb with the words "BROWN
> PRIDE," a Hispanic racialist slogan. Slapstick Politics, a Denver
> blog, notes that the Denver Post, which printed the photograph to the
> right, merely stated that the neighborhood had been tagged with
> graffiti, without mentioning what the graffiti said or speculating
> about its meaning or source. Even more egregiously, a local TV news
> re****t photographed the graffiti in such a way that you couldn't read
> it. The re****t speculates that the vandalism may have been gang-
> related, but does not mention that it was certainly Hispanic-related.
>
> The blogger, El Presidente, asks, "If `White Pride' or anti-Semitic
> symbols had been spraypainted over quite a large swath of property
> would the local MSM have conveniently ignored this fact?
>
> You have to follow that train of thought a bit further if you really
> want to understand what's going on here and to appreciate the full
> measure of the media's perfidy. If someone had tagged a neighborhood
> with "White Pride," the story would not only have been put on the
> front page of Denver newspapers and been picked up by the national
> media, but the vandalism would have been interpreted as the expression
> of a desire for racial domination and ethnic cleansing, a terrifying
> prospect. In short, the media did their best to sweep a threat of
> ethnic cleansing under the rug. We only know it happened because a
> story on vandalism has to be accompanied by a photograph.
>
> Given the media's willful blindness to events like these, we cannot
> gauge the extent of Hispanic ethnic cleansing in America, just as we
> cannot know much about racial conflict. How common are events like
> these? In what other ways are whites insulted, abused, and bullied
> into leaving their neighborhoods? We have no idea.
>
> That's what's so spooky about what's happening to America. Many of us
> know vaguely that something immense and profound is occurring, a
> demographic eclipse, but we know very little about how the
> transformation manifests itself in everyday life. It seems that this
> revolution will not be televised.
>
> This incident reminded me of a powerful story in the Orange County
> Register from two years ago that provides a glimpse of our racial
> reality. It deals with white flight from the city of Orange, although
> the term "white" is not mentioned once in the article. No racially
> based hostility is mentioned, although the whites were the victims of
> plenty of crime and incivility. Here are some extracts:
>
> [Carol] Fulton sits on her front ****ch, pensive and surveying the
> neighborhood. It has changed drastically, she says.
>
> The familiar smells and sounds of backyard barbecues are replaced by
> mariachi music and the honking horn of a shaved-ice cart. Fulton sees
> unfamiliar cars and people streaming onto the street.
>
> Overcrowding caused by boarding homes-more than two leases on the same
> property-is an issue that city officials and residents have grappled
> with for years. "This used to be a fun neighborhood," says Fulton, 56.
> "Kids stayed outside until 10 or 11 p.m. I figured we'd live here
> until we died. We never in 100,000 years thought it would change."
>
> On most days, Fulton caps off the night at 10 with a cigarette in her
> garage. But these nights, she does it with the door closed.
>
> The neighborhood transformation was subtle at first.
>
> Some families moved away and a more transient community began to
> develop. Unfamiliar faces filtered in and out of several houses.
>
> By the late '80s and early '90s, longtime residents complained about a
> parking crunch caused by dozens of people crammed into the
> neighborhood's first boarding house-the big house they called "the
> Fortress." The city eventually required parking permits, and the
> problems subsided.
>
> In the late '90s, Fulton caught people peering into her rooms,
> urinating in her yard and making catcalls at her.
>
> It was common knowledge that there were multiple families and dozens
> of men, mainly day laborers, living in the homes, she says.
>
> Sourcehttp://inverted-world.com/
One must note that the three losers still contending for the
presidency go to great
lenghts to ignore the illegal alien problem.
ted
http://www.numbersusa.com/
NumbersUSA


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