View Full Version : PROOF the commies are in Ferguson
General of Darkness
18th August 2014, 11:18 PM
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Bu970VfCEAAZdvD.jpg:large
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Bu9zJKeIIAAa4Jt.jpg:large
And here he is in California at some other recruiting event:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZxAnkdnyOKE
PatColo
18th August 2014, 11:40 PM
Jewish Activists Created Communism - Truthtellers.org (http://www.truthtellers.org/alerts/jewishactivistscommunism.html)
Ponce
18th August 2014, 11:46 PM
Not the Jews, THE ZIONIST...........as long as they keep on using the word "Jew" instead of Zionist they will be working for them.
V
PatColo
19th August 2014, 12:12 AM
^
zionism was invented in the late 19th century, decades AFTER the commie manifesto, ;)
Jewish Talmudic Quotes - Facts Are Facts - Rense.com (http://rense.com/general86/talmd.htm)
all observant jooz must obey the teachings of the talmud...
Over a hundred locales expelled jews before “Zionism” was even a factor. Why? (http://theuglytruth.wordpress.com/2014/08/15/over-a-hundred-locales-expelled-jews-before-zionism-was-even-a-factor-why/)
Horn
19th August 2014, 12:21 AM
Your running into that same problem wall the anarchists have when using the term Anarchy, Pat.
Everything must have its politically correct terminology, even whores or escorts must be called hired adult companions nowadays.
Voluntarism, or you won't receive payment processing from Visa and Mastercard.
EE_
19th August 2014, 08:03 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uo4L88OeIU#t=229
Shami-Amourae
19th August 2014, 08:14 AM
^
zionism was invented in the late 19th century, decades AFTER the commie manifesto, ;)
Jewish Talmudic Quotes - Facts Are Facts - Rense.com (http://rense.com/general86/talmd.htm)
all observant jooz must obey the teachings of the talmud...
Over a hundred locales expelled jews before “Zionism” was even a factor. Why? (http://theuglytruth.wordpress.com/2014/08/15/over-a-hundred-locales-expelled-jews-before-zionism-was-even-a-factor-why/)
Good point. I do think there are good Jews trying to do the right thing but they are a minority like Nationalist Whites. Most White people are gullible as fuck and allow any Jew to boss them around and control them. Whites are just as guilty for their unlimited amounts of gullibility and no sense of a spine.
Jews are only able to do what they do since of complete complicity of these White traitors. White people are worse than Jews, since at least Jews look out for their own. Whites as a whole only care about destroying and hating their own people.
Shami-Amourae
19th August 2014, 08:22 AM
DEATH WISH? Media Draws Map to Home of Ferguson Police Officer Who Shot Mike Brown | The Gateway Pundit (http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2014/08/death-wish-media-draws-map-to-home-of-ferguson-police-officer-who-shot-mike-brown/)
http://3-ps.googleusercontent.com/h/www.thegatewaypundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/xcnn-darren-wilson.jpg.pagespeed.ic.4a0FxxOl8n.jpg
Is the media trying to get Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson lynched?
CNN broadcast a report Friday that showed the house, including the street number, of the Ferguson police officer who police say shot Mike Brown. The officer has been in hiding due to death threats since the shooting last Saturday. His name, Darren Wilson, was just released Friday morning.
palani
19th August 2014, 08:41 AM
If they are not present now certainly here is evidence that they will be present there on Wednesday
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2014/08/18/white-house-takes-stock-of-the-situation-in-ferguson/
Obama: Attorney General Holder to go to Ferguson Wednesday
President Obama said Monday that Attorney General Eric Holder will travel to Ferguson, Mo., Wednesday, to meet with federal officials investigating the death of an unarmed black teenager who was shot and killed by a police officer Aug. 9.
Holder will meet with members of the Department of Justice and FBI who are conducting a federal investigation into the death of 18-year-old Michael Brown. Brown's death has sparked days of protests that, after nightfall, have turned into violent clashes between demonstrators and police in Ferguson, a suburb of St. Louis.
"Let's seek to heal rather than wound each other," Obama said, in his second set of remarks on the situation in the past five days.
Obama said Holder will also meet "with other leaders in the community who’s support is so critical to bringing about peace and calm in Ferguson."
In carefully calibrated remarks that echoed comments and a written statement on the situation the president delivered last week, Obama called for people to seek out their "shared humanity" and to remain calm.
"While I understand the passions and the anger that arise over the death of Michael Brown, giving into that anger by looting or carrying guns, and even attacking the police, only serves to raise tensions and stir chaos. It undermines rather than advancing justice," Obama said.
Obama said constitutional rights, including freedom of assembly and the press, must be "vigilantly safeguarded" and that there is "no excuse for excessive force by police or any action that denies people the right to protest peacefully."
And the president said he is personally committed to helping ensure that young people of color are not left behind.
"I’ve said this before: In too many communities around the country, a gulf of mistrust exists between local residents and law enforcement. In too many communities, too many young men of color are left behind, and seen only as objects of fear," Obama said.
Obama also said it is likely "useful to review" federal anti-terrorism grants that have led to local police departments around the country receiving military equipment like the material that has been deployed in Ferguson.
Asking ... As-King .... inquiring minds would love to have these answered TRUTHFULLY!!!
http://www.coloradogold.com/archive/President_Obama-1306.html
Four simple questions from an attorney in New Jersey, were sent to me by e-mail and they are very illuminating.
"1. Back in 1961, people of color were called negroes, so how can the Obama birth certificate state he is "African-American, when the term wasn't even used at that time?
"2. The birth certificate that the White House released, lists Obama's birth as August 4, 1961, and lists Barack Hussein Obama as his father. No big deal, right? At the time of Obama's birth, it also shows Obama's father is aged 25 years old, and that Obama's father was born in "Kenya, East Africa." This wouldn't seem like anything of concern, except for the fact that Kenya did not even exist until 1963, two whole years after Obama's birth, and 27 years after his father's birth. How could Obama's father have been born in a country that did not yet exist? Up and until Kenya was formed in 1963, it was known as the "British East Africa Protectorate."
"3. On the birth certificate released by the White House, the listed place of birth is "Kapi'olani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital." This cannot be, because the hospital(s) in question in 1961, were called "Kauikeolani Children's Hospital.," and "Kapi'olani Maternity Home," respectively. The name did not change to Kapi'olani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital until 1978, when these two hospitals merged. How can this particular name of the hospital be on a birth certificate dated 1961, if the name had not yet been applied until 1978?
"4. Perhaps a clue comes from Obama's book on his father. He states how proud he is of his father fighting in WW II. I'm not a math genius, so I may need some help from you. Barack Obama's "birth certificate" says his father was 25 years old when Obama was born. That should have put his father's date of birth approximately 1936 - if my math holds (honest I did that without a calculator). Now we need a non-revised history book - one that hasn't been altered to satisfy the author's goals - to verify that WW II was basically between 1939 and 1945. Just how many 3 year olds fight in wars? Even in the latest stages of WW II his father wouldn't have been more than 9 years old. Does that mean Mr. Obama is a liar, or simply chooses to alter the facts to justify his imagination or political purposes?"
cheka.
7th May 2016, 10:40 PM
hey now....you nigs are special (#3 in hate crime ranking)....but not chosen (#1 in hate crime ranking). know your place -
http://ww1.hdnux.com/photos/42/40/26/9045432/3/premium_landscape.jpg
http://media2.fdncms.com/riverfronttimes/imager/u/blog/2611957/gazaprotestraydowns32715.jpg
Two days before a panel discussion on Ferguson, Palestine and the Ayotzinapa student massacre was set to kick off, the event's host, the Missouri History Museum, handed the panel's organizers an abrupt ultimatum: Remove Palestine from the agenda, or find a new location for the event.
Organizers refused to budge, the event was canceled and about 100 people protested outside the museum last week to accuse the St. Louis institution of "silencing" Palestinian voices. The event was later rescheduled at a different location.
Though the museum disputes accusations that it engaged in censorship, emails obtained by Daily RFT show that on the same day officials canceled the event, the museum's president, Frances Levine, was fielding concerned emails from the Jewish Community Relations Council of St. Louis. Further email correspondence reveal the that the museum specifically pressured an organizer to eliminate Palestine from the discussion panel.
See also: Missouri History Museum Cancels Ferguson Event Over Inclusion of Palestine
Last week, museum officials offered several explanations for why the March 19 event, titled "Ferguson to Ayotzinapa to Palestine: Solidarity and Collaborative Action," was too problematic for the museum to host.
A press release issued by the museum contended that the event was initially proposed without any mention of Palestine (the event was called originally called "From Ayotzinapa to Ferguson"), and that the addition represented a "significant change" to the terms agreed upon by the museum. Levine said she "recognized the complexity of the issue" of the Israeli-Palestine conflict and therefore directed her programming staff to review whether the event's format met the museum's standards.
Melanie Adams, the museum's managing director of community education and events, stated that it wasn't Palestine itself that was the problem, but rather any addition that "really diluted further from the original intent of program."
But emails obtained through a Sunshine request by St. Louis Jewish Voice for Peace clearly show that two local Jewish groups were disturbed by attempts to compare the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with the recent social upheavals in Ferguson and Ayotzinapa. These emails seem to have jump-started the process that would eventually lead to the event's cancelation.
In an email sent around 1 p.m. on March 17, Batya Abramson-Goldstein, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council, wrote to Levine that she was fielding emails and phone calls "expressing dismay at the upcoming History Museum program."
"I can understand the dismay," Abramson-Goldstein wrote.
Levine wrote back almost immediately: "Batya I will have to check with the programming staff. I don't know about this."
In her next email, Abramson-Goldstein thanked Levine and continued, "The conflating of the issues is disturbing. The parallels being made, likewise. The panel is seen as 'stacked.' The plan to base a documentary on the event raises the level of concern RE the harm this program may cause."
Later that same afternoon, Adams told one of the event's student organizers that she didn't know Palestine had been added to the agenda, even though it was her office that approved the "Ferguson to Ayotzinapa to Palestine" fliers on February 23.
"The conflict we are running into is the comparison between the events in Ferguson and the actions of the Palestinians," Adams wrote in an email to Sourik Beltran, the Washington University student who originally proposed the event.
Adams continued: "Some people see these events as comparing applies/oranges. I understand that you are presenting them as movements related to issues of social justice and how diverse communities can work together to achieve social justice for all people. There is concern that they might not be perceived that way."
Early the next morning, Adams relayed the result of her discussion with Beltran to the JCRC's Abramson-Goldstein.
"At this point I have given them two options," Adams wrote. "Remove the Palestine group from the program or find another location. Based on their initial response I think they are going to find another location. I will let you know when I hear from him."
By Wednesday morning, the event's description had been removed from the Missouri History Museum website.
Arielle Klagsbrun, a member of St. Louis Jewish Voice for Peace, believes the content and timing of the emails prove the Missouri History Museum gave in to demands from the JCRC.
"This is a trend we see in the mainstream Jewish community, where they try to talk about what's going on in Israel and Palestine as a nuanced situation, but they silence the Palestinian experience," she says. "The way the JCRC frames discourse around the issue of Israel and Palestine is to put focus on the Israeli perspective."
Abramson-Goldstein flatly rejects Klagsbrun's interpretation of the emails. She points out that she never explicitly asked the museum to cancel the event. She insists she was merely passing along concerns from her community.
"It's unfortunate and it's unnecessary," Abramson-Goldstein says of the continued controversy around the event's cancellation. "It's not helpful to the cause of Ferguson, which was ostensibly the motivation for this program. And certainly I think it's not helpful to understanding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."
The JCRC wasn't the only Jewish organization that has previously expressed concerns about combining Ferguson and Palestine in one event. On March 18 Adams also emailed Karen Aroesty, director of the St. Louis chapter of the Anti-Defamation League, to inform her about the event's cancellation and upcoming protest.
"However the decision was made to cancel the program, I very much appreciate the allyship," Aroesty responded. "This is a tough time on so many levels, whatever you need from me, don't hesitate to call."
The ADL, an international anti-racism organization based in the U.S., has made no secret of its opinion regarding comparisons between Ferguson and the Israel-Palestine conflict. In a January op-ed, ADL deputy national director Kenneth Jacobson dubbed the comparison "the latest strategy being used by those who make a career of assaulting the good name of the State of Israel."
Aroesty tells Daily RFT that she didn't know about the event before Adams contacted her, but maintains "Palestine and Ferguson should not be conflated."
"I feel like the Palestine issue kind of hijacked the Ferguson issue and the Ayotzinapa issue," she says. "Each of them deserved special attention. That said, the capacity of the activist community to work together on issues they deem important, I find valuable."
Aroesty and Abramson-Goldstein say they their organizations are willing to work with the Missouri History Museum on a future program that focuses on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the emails show that Adams reached out to both on March 19 to schedule a lunch meeting with Levine.
A museum spokeswoman said she didn't know which individuals or organizations would represent the Palestinian side in the future event.
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