In the famous Dred Scott case, Justice Roger B. Taney wrote that blacks in American society, as constituted in 1857 “had no rights which the white man was bound to respect. A recent Michigan Court of Appeals decision on libel said the same thing, in reverse, about whites.
Journalist James Edwards (right) of the radio show The Political Cesspool, a white Southerner of Dissident Right sympathies, sued the Detroit News after Bankole Thompson, a Gambian immigrant who writes for the News, called Edwards a leader of Ku Klux Klan.
Thompson, who is black, was until 2015, the editor of the Michigan Chronicle, which has been a black paper for black people since 1936.[Bankole Thompson resigns from Michigan Chronicle, By Bill Shea, Crain’s Detroit Business, June 25, 2015]
I mention all this blackness because the complaint against Edwards by Media Matters, the SPLC, and similar organizations is that he’s a white guy, doing a radio show for white people. The SPLC doesn’t seem to feel that journalism by people like Edwards is legitimate, and criticizes politicians for appearing on his show [Glenn McConnell Appeared on White Nationalist Radio Show, ‘Political Cesspool,’ in 2007, March 28, 2014] and giving Edwards press credentials [Radio show host with racist, anti-Semitic legacy given press credentials for Trump rally, March 2, 2016]
http://www.vdare.com/articles/the-fulford-file-edwards-vs-detroit-news-court-ends-libel-protection-for-whites
Yes, Virgil, blacks really do hate you with the intensity of 1000 Krakatoa eruptions
Yes, Virgil, blacks really do hate you with the intensity of 1000 Krakatoa eruptions
H/T John Derbyshire:
The veteran, name of James Dempsey, had some kind of breathing failure. He called for help, but the nurses were slow responding. When they did respond, they didn't do the proper procedures — chest compression and so on — and had trouble working Mr Dempsey's oxygen equipment. The situation struck them as funny. When they stopped chortling over Mr Dempsey's bed, he had died.
The family sued the facility. In a deposition, the nursing supervisor claimed that all proper procedures were followed and Mr Dempsey was treated with respect. The family, however, had planted a video camera in Mr Dempsey's room. It contradicted everything she said. After some very lengthy legal procedures — the case went all the way up to the state courts — the family got the video and it's been showing on YouTube.
Mr Dempsey was white; the nurses are black. This is how it will be for many of us whites "at the hour of our death": ignored, mishandled, laughed over as we struggle for our last breaths, by personnel of other races who have been raised from childhood to hate us as privileged oppressors, and who are too stupid, ill-trained, or indifferent to operate life-saving equipment.
I can't resist the temptation to add "at least they didn't cut his heart out." That's morbid and tasteless, though. Besides, it might give people ideas.
Our society has made the bed with decades of relentless anti-white propaganda; and we, alone and helpless "at the hour of our death," will be lying in it.