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5128


Date: July 08, 2017 at 21:40:46
From: Skywise, [DNS_Address]
Subject: derp....(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
[5161] [5162] [5163] [5164] [5165] [5166] [5167] [5129] [5151] [5158] [5152] [5137]


5161


Date: July 12, 2017 at 23:45:48
From: russia, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....(NT)


no problem in moscow


Responses:
[5162] [5163] [5164] [5165] [5166] [5167]


5162


Date: July 13, 2017 at 01:10:07
From: mr bopp, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


you're more paranoid than ever...think tor will hide you? lol...


Responses:
[5163] [5164] [5165] [5166] [5167]


5163


Date: July 13, 2017 at 07:34:24
From: russia, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


think i give a fuck


Responses:
[5164] [5165] [5166] [5167]


5164


Date: July 13, 2017 at 09:26:02
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


apparently you do..


Responses:
[5165] [5166] [5167]


5165


Date: July 13, 2017 at 16:15:56
From: russia, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


http://curezone.com/upload/Members/trapper/2017/1495463128979.jpg


Responses:
[5166] [5167]


5166


Date: July 14, 2017 at 12:43:00
From: Nasirah, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


Trapper? ... The less glamorous side of white supremacy ;-)


Responses:
[5167]


5167


Date: July 14, 2017 at 17:31:03
From: russia, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: derp....


god sees all humans the same.


Responses:
None


5129


Date: July 09, 2017 at 03:31:19
From: Nasirah, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: The KKK rally outnumbered by counterprotesters

URL: The KKK rally in Charlottesville was outnumbered by counterprotesters


Reflects what's going on in the US with racists unashamedly coming out the
woodwork because of Trump...


Responses:
[5151] [5158] [5152] [5137]


5151


Date: July 10, 2017 at 00:00:21
From: LaMan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Coming out of what woodwork? Oregon's been #1 since settled

URL: https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/06/04/us/portland-killings-racist-laws-oregon.html


#1 in racism, KKK, you name it, even today with the
black population hovering around what, 10% and well over
150 years worth of covert and overt racism, change is
slow to come if ever. Makes sense though now, could
never figure out why those lily white cousins of mine
all flocked there back in the 90's from their
predominantly white enclaves near LA, til I see their
copious FB posts and pictures that are 100% white with
never EVER a hint of color. No thanks.

So see? Not all about rednecks in the South, and up
there it was actually CODIFIED into law, they could
barely handle ratifying the 14th and 15th amendments
until just a few years ago...

They have the proud distinction of starting out as the
only 100% white state, that's generation after
generation of racists straight out the womb.


Responses:
[5158] [5152]


5158


Date: July 11, 2017 at 00:37:51
From: Johnl, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Coming out of what woodwork? Oregon's been #1 since settled


I came to Portland as a minority shortly after the Ethiopian-skinhead incident in 1988, and will have lived here for 28 years this coming December. While the racial prejudice is at a subconscious level, living in social isolation among Portland whites is much better than the constant psyops/electronic harassment I got in LA and Oakland/San Jose. The economic crisis could really heat up racial prejudices. I avoid a lot of problems by staying single and uninvolved.

Portland is unique in that besides psyops/electronics, it also has astral portal dreams (induced by UFO’s?).


Responses:
None


5152


Date: July 10, 2017 at 00:04:03
From: LaMan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Wapo was better though


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Retropolis

When Portland banned blacks: Oregon’s
shameful history as an ‘all-white’ state

By DeNeen L. Brown

June 7, 2017 at 10:23 AM

A Ku Klux Klan parade, East Main Street
in Ashland, Ore., in the 1920s. (Oregon
Historical Society)

In 1844, all black people were ordered to
get out of Oregon Country, the expansive
territory under American rule that
stretched from the Pacific coast to the
Rocky Mountains.

Those who refused to leave could be
severely whipped, the provisional
government law declared, by “not less
than twenty or more than thirty-nine
stripes” to be repeated every six months
until they left.

Oregon Country’s provisional government,
which was led by Peter Burnett, a former
slaver holder who came west from Missouri
by wagon train, passed the law in 1844 —
15 years before Oregon became a state.
The law allowed slave holders to keep
their slaves for a maximum of three
years. After the grace period, all black
people — those considered freed or
enslaved — were required to leave Oregon
Country. Black women were given three
years to get out; black men were required
to leave in two.

The law became known as the “Peter
Burnett Lash Law.” Burnett, who also
opposed Chinese migration to Oregon
Country, would later become the first
American governor of California.

The “Lash Law” was quickly amended and
then repealed. No black people were ever
lashed under the law.

But the act would become the first of
three “exclusion laws” that shaped the
Pacific Northwest, banning any additional
black people from coming to Oregon
Country. Those laws created what one
African American professor calls “a very
hostile environment” that has long made
Oregon and its largest city, Portland, a
stronghold for white supremacists
like Jeremy Joseph Christian, the man
accused of  killing two men and severely
wounding another on a light-rail train
last month.

Few people are aware of Oregon’s history
of blatant racism, including its refusal
to ratify the 14th and 15th Amendments of
the Constitution.

Related: Hunting down runaway slaves: The
cruel ads of Andrew Jackson and ‘the
master class’

In 1848, the territorial government
passed a law making it illegal for any
“Negro or Mullatto” to live in Oregon
Country. In 1850, under the Oregon
Donation Land Act, “whites and half breed
Indians” were granted 650 acres of land
from the government. But any other person
of color was excluded from claiming land
in Oregon. In 1851, Jacob Vanderpool, the
black owner of a saloon, restaurant and
boarding home, was actually expelled from
Oregon territory.

“The exclusion laws were primarily
intended to prevent blacks from settling
in Oregon, not to kick out those who were
already here,” according to Salem Public
Library records. But Vanderpool’s
neighbor “reported him for the crime of
being black in Oregon, and Judge Thomas
Nelson gave him thirty days to leave the
territory.”

The Oregon constitution excluded blacks.

In 1857, as Oregon sought to become a
state, it wrote the exclusion of blacks
into its constitution: “No free negro or
mulatto, not residing in this State at
the time of the adoption of this
constitution, shall ever come, reside, or
be within this State, or hold any real
estate, or make any contract, or maintain
any suit therein; and the Legislative
Assembly shall provide by penal laws for
the removal by public officers of all
such free negroes and mulattoes, and for
their effectual exclusion from the State,
and for the punishment of persons who
shall bring them into the State, or
employ or harbor them therein.”

When Oregon entered the Union in 1859 —
it did so as a “whites-only” state. The
original state constitution banned
slavery, but also excluded nonwhites from
living there.

“Oregon is the only state in the United
States that actually began as literally
whites-only,” said Winston Grady-Willis,
director of Portland State University’s
School of Gender, Race and Nations. “Even
though there was subsequent legislation
that challenged those statutes, the
statutes were not removed from the books
until 1922.”

Grady-Willis added: “It’s really
important for folks to understand this
notion of Oregon as this lily-white state
sets the tone and is important
structurally for the remainder of history
of not only the state, but cities like
Portland as well.”

Related: ‘Life or death for black
travelers’: How fear led to ‘The Negro
Motorist Green-Book’

Portland’s reputation as a progressive
city is largely a myth, he said. Portland
remains the whitest, large city in United
States. According to a July 2015 Census
report, the city of 612,206  people, was
77.6 percent white; and 5.8 percent
black. Grady-Willis called it “a key
 site for Klan activity.”

This is the historical backdrop for the
charges against Christian, 35, who
allegedly verbally abused two women on
the train,  including one wearing a
hijab, and then attacked the men who came
to their aid.

During a brief court hearing Tuesday,
Christian was unapologetic:

“You call it terrorism,” Christian said
in court. “I call it patriotism.”

Watch more!

The man accused of murdering two men who
tried to stop him from shouting religious
slurs on a Portland train, appeared in
court on May 30. Jeremy Christian shouted
"free speech or die, Portland" during his
arraignment. (Reuters)

Oregon has a defiant history of resisting
federal laws that gave black people
rights.

Karen Gibson,  associate professor in
Portland State’s Toulan School of Urban
Studies and Planning, said Oregon
rescinded its initial ratification of the
14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
which granted citizenship to “all persons
born or naturalized in the United
States,” including former slaves.

Oregon was one of just six states that
refused to ratify the 15th Amendment,
which gave black men the right to vote.

Oregon did not ratify the 15th amendment
until 1959 — one hundred years after the
state joined the Union. It was a symbolic
adoption as part of its centennial
celebration. It did not re-ratify the
14th amendment until 1973.

“Many of the white settlers who came here
came for the Oregon Land Donation Act.
This place was intentionally settled by
whites for whites,” Gibson said.

“They did not want slavery here. They
didn’t want land taken over by large
plantations so they didn’t have to
compete with bonded labor. But they also
thought blacks were inferior. That is
still here. White supremacy is about
that: the beliefs that whites were
supreme.”

Darrell Millner, professor emeritus in
Portland State’s Black Studies
Department, said many early Oregon
settlers were opposed to slavery “not
because of what it did to blacks but
because of what it did to them. Slavery
represented a competition they did not
wish to work against.”

Millner said Oregon became a place where
“many practices we associate with the Jim
Crow South were legal here.” In the
1920s, Oregon had the largest Ku Klux
Klan organization west of the Mississippi
River. In 1922, Walter Pierce, a member
of the Ku Klux Klan, was elected governor
of Oregon. Pierce served as a member of
the U.S. House of Representatives from
1932 to 1942.

Meeting of the KKK, probably in Portland,
Ore., in the 1920s. (Oregon Historical
Society)

Oregon’s hostility toward blacks remains
part of the state’s culture.

“In the 1980s and ’90s, Oregon became a
destination for the largest skinhead
movement in the country,” Millner said.
“Their objective was to achieve something
pioneers tried to achieve here and that
was to create a white homeland.”

Millner said that in the 1980s and 1990s,
“in Oregon and especially in Portland, it
was very dangerous to be a person of
color.

An infamous racial attack occurred in
Portland in 1988, when an Ethiopian
immigrant was fatally beaten by three
white supremacists skinheads on the
streets of Portland. Mulugeta Seraw was a
student at Portland State University. He
was killed by three white supremacistswho
were members of the White Aryan
Resistance who beat him with a baseball
bat.

In 1990, the Southern Poverty Law Center
and the Anti-Defamation League won a
lawsuit against the White Aryan
Resistance on behalf of Seraw’s family.

Millner said he has lived in Oregon 47
years. When he heard about the stabbings
on the train last month he said he was
disturbed but not surprised.

“It reinforced the subterranean awareness
all people of color in Oregon have that
something like that could happen to them
at any time and in place,” he said. “That
is reflective of what people of color in
Oregon live with. It is on a subconscious
level daily. You are constantly aware
that is a possibility.”


Responses:
None


5137


Date: July 09, 2017 at 10:08:45
From: Akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: The KKK rally outnumbered by counterprotesters


"racists unashamedly coming out the
woodwork" .... that may be a good thing.


Responses:
None


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