General Nathan Bedford Forrest Billboard in Selma

#27
#27
WGAF?

Next.

I said she has the right to be racist, the right to make racist comments, the right to erect the billboard. But, for her and her group to assert that a racist sentiment was not intended is absolutely unconvincing, in light of the facts.
 
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#28
#28
I said she has the right to be racist, the right to make racist comments, the right to erect the billboard. But, for her and her group to assert that a racist sentiment was not intended is absolutely unconvincing, in light of the facts.

If she wasn't asked and didn't have to defend then there wouldn't be an issue.
 
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#30
#30
Well, just as she has a right to be racist, we have the right to ask questions and to call persons racists. Funny how that works.

Don't forget insinuation, assumption, and general dumbassery.

But those aren't my words..just drivel from de Lucasoil Productsincky's Articles of Conjunctive Behaviorism & Peirce Arrow Parallelism in Modern Society.
 
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#31
#31
Don't forget insinuation, assumption, and general dumbassery.

But those aren't my words..just drivel from de Lucasoil Productsincky's Articles of Conjunctive Behaviorism & Peirce Arrow Parallelism in Modern Society.

I wonder what his title was before he had to make it academic?
 
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#33
#33
Don't forget insinuation, assumption, and general dumbassery.

But those aren't my words..just drivel from de Lucasoil Productsincky's Articles of Conjunctive Behaviorism & Peirce Arrow Parallelism in Modern Society.

You're certainly in a creative spirit this morning. Is this your natural reaction when defending obviously racist persons? Or, is this just a Sunday morning thing?
 
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#34
#34
264A708B00000578-2984137-_Despicable_-m-43_1425746973989.jpg


KKK founder remembered in billboard at the foot of Selma bridge | Daily Mail Online

People are demanding it be taken down. Sure it bears Forrest's image it doesn't necessarily mention the KKK....

What's the "keep the skeer on em" about? And it does say "friends of forest". I don't think that means this group is a bunch of nature lovers.
 
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#35
#35
What's the "keep the skeer on em" about? And it does say "friends of forest". I don't think that means this group is a bunch of nature lovers.

Yes, and Pat is certainly no alchemist. But, of course, "wizardess" is not supposed to imply any Klan sentiment. Nope. Just a bunch of history buffs offering tours.
 
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#36
#36
Yes, and Pat is certainly no alchemist. But, of course, "wizardess" is not supposed to imply any Klan sentiment. Nope. Just a bunch of history buffs offering tours.

I just Googled her. She apparently likes to refer to her hometown as "Zimbabwe on the Alabamy".
 
#43
#43
It's bad to make broad sweeping generalizations, but sometimes white people do the dumbest things.
 
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#45
#45
Remember this?
*Obama has as much trouble with numbers as he has with maps. Last March, on the anniversary of the Bloody Sunday march in Selma, Alabama, he claimed his parents united as a direct result of the civil rights movement:

“There was something stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma, Alabama, because some folks are willing to march across a bridge. So they got together and Barack Obama Jr. was born.”---Obama

Obama was born in 1961. The Selma march took place in 1965. His spokesman, Bill Burton, later explained that Obama was “speaking metaphorically about the civil rights movement as a whole.” (Sure he was)

He and Biden, lol.
 
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#46
#46
What's surprising about this particular sign; it is almost completely obscured by a thick grove of trees.
I'm astonished it's getting huge media attention because most people can't see the Forest for the trees.
 
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#49
#49
What's surprising about this particular sign; it is almost completely obscured by a thick grove of trees.
I'm astonished it's getting huge media attention because most people can't see the Forest for the trees.

Hmmmmmmm
 
#50
#50
Nathan Bedford Forrest, like Andy Jackson, was a great man. Nathan was not a big man, but like Andy Jackson, nobody started any crap with him.

Forrest, in his later years, became a devout Christian.

In his final speech, in Memphis, to a group of blacks, Forrest was handed a bouquet of flowers by a black woman.

Forrest Park, in Memphis, is where Nathan and his wife, Mary Ann, are buried. The Memphis communists changed the name of Forrest Park to 'health sciences park'.
 
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