Starr
11-10-2005, 06:54 AM
Can some of our people get any more stupid? The multi-culti loving vomit a few of these people are spewing is truly nauseating:
KINGSTON - A white supremacist's planned rally in front of Kingston High School has prompted the mayor and city lawmakers to call for racial tolerance and a student at the school to organize a "Peace Day" rally for the day before Hal Turner's Nov. 19 demonstration.
The student, ninth-grader Carina Pappalardo, 15, says she will hold her rally when school lets out on Nov. 18, a Friday, at the same spot on Broadway where Turner, an Internet radio host who has made inflammatory remarks about blacks and Jews, plans to stage a protest at noon the next day.
Turner says his rally is a response to recent assaults at the school in which white students were injured and black students were arrested.
PAPPALARDO, who initially planned to hold her rally at the same time as Turner's but was dissuaded by her parents, hopes students of all races join her event, wear rainbow colors, carry anti-racism signs and send a message of unity to anyone seeking to divide students and the community.
The teen concedes there is racial tension in the high school but believes it can be overcome.(I guess by "overcome" what she means is that the niggers can go on beating the crap out of white students, who just need to learn to shut up and take it.)
"We want people to show up and support the peace," she said. "It will just be people of all races, coming together."(I wonder how many times she has come together in more ways than one with the nigger bucks that she seems to love so much:eek: )
KINGSTON Police Chief Gerald Keller wants Pappalardo to call off her rally because he doesn't want the situation to become any more volatile and because his department already will be overtaxed by preparing for and covering Turner's rally.(translation: niggers will be niggers and they will most likely go wild and riot and we don't want to deal with it.)
"We (the police department) are in agreement with the sentiment that we do not welcome racism in this community," Keller said. "We understand what the message is, but we are asking people to stay away from demonstrating."
Asked if he expects violence at Turner's rally, Keller said: "We are taking that possibility into our planning considerations. Anything can happen in a situation like this."
TUNRER HAS written a letter to Keller promising that neither he nor demonstrators who support him will cause trouble in Kingston.
"It is my desire to make certain the rally is 100 percent peaceful and law-abiding, and I hope that this letter reinforces that desire," Turner wrote.
A group that opposes Turner, One People's Project, has said it will attend the rally if Turner goes through with his plan.
KINGSTON Mayor James Sottile, who already has urged the public to stay away from Turner's rally, is calling on parents to spend time with their children that day discussing the importance of harmonious living in a diverse community.(Yes, spend some time telling your kids how much they need to love everyone and then send them out to learn firsthand the joys that come with living in a diverse community:rolleyes: )
"On Nov. 19, at noon, I would urge parents to bring kids in their homes, spend time with children, and bring them together and talk to them about how it is OK to be different," Sottile said. "Sit down with them and look them in the eyes and talk about diversity. In the end, these people are going to leave this community. Let's not buy into it. We are above it."
THE KINGSTON Common Council, meanwhile, expects to hold a special session next week at which a resolution declaring Nov. 19 "Tolerance Day" is to be adopted. The measure is being introduced by council Majority Leader Bill Reynolds.
"We all have to work together, live together, that is how you building a community," said Reynolds, D-Ward 7. "We should not listen to an out-of-town person who has a political agenda and wants to wreak havoc at our expense."
KINGSTON school district Superintendent Gerard Gretzinger, meanwhile, hopes to minimize the risk of conflict on Nov. 19 by canceling or relocating events that were to take place at the high school that day.
And students who don't need to be at such events should stay home, he suggested.
"We are asking people to stay home with their children on that day," Gretzinger said.
ALDERMAN Clinton Brown, D-Ward 4, said he will walk the city's streets this weekend and deliver a similar message to children and their parents.
"I am going to (contact) as many people as I can, and families, to tell them about the importance of keeping away from this rally and keeping their cool," said Brown, whose ward includes Midtown neighborhoods.
Brown, who is African-American, said he understands there are racial problems at the high school but doesn't believe they are worse than when he went there in the 1970s.
"Race is always going to be an issue in our society," Brown said. "But I don't buy into the fact that it is that bad at the high school."
www.zwire.com
Edit: I guess it would have made more sense to put this in race relations. Oh well.:o
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KINGSTON - A white supremacist's planned rally in front of Kingston High School has prompted the mayor and city lawmakers to call for racial tolerance and a student at the school to organize a "Peace Day" rally for the day before Hal Turner's Nov. 19 demonstration.
The student, ninth-grader Carina Pappalardo, 15, says she will hold her rally when school lets out on Nov. 18, a Friday, at the same spot on Broadway where Turner, an Internet radio host who has made inflammatory remarks about blacks and Jews, plans to stage a protest at noon the next day.
Turner says his rally is a response to recent assaults at the school in which white students were injured and black students were arrested.
PAPPALARDO, who initially planned to hold her rally at the same time as Turner's but was dissuaded by her parents, hopes students of all races join her event, wear rainbow colors, carry anti-racism signs and send a message of unity to anyone seeking to divide students and the community.
The teen concedes there is racial tension in the high school but believes it can be overcome.(I guess by "overcome" what she means is that the niggers can go on beating the crap out of white students, who just need to learn to shut up and take it.)
"We want people to show up and support the peace," she said. "It will just be people of all races, coming together."(I wonder how many times she has come together in more ways than one with the nigger bucks that she seems to love so much:eek: )
KINGSTON Police Chief Gerald Keller wants Pappalardo to call off her rally because he doesn't want the situation to become any more volatile and because his department already will be overtaxed by preparing for and covering Turner's rally.(translation: niggers will be niggers and they will most likely go wild and riot and we don't want to deal with it.)
"We (the police department) are in agreement with the sentiment that we do not welcome racism in this community," Keller said. "We understand what the message is, but we are asking people to stay away from demonstrating."
Asked if he expects violence at Turner's rally, Keller said: "We are taking that possibility into our planning considerations. Anything can happen in a situation like this."
TUNRER HAS written a letter to Keller promising that neither he nor demonstrators who support him will cause trouble in Kingston.
"It is my desire to make certain the rally is 100 percent peaceful and law-abiding, and I hope that this letter reinforces that desire," Turner wrote.
A group that opposes Turner, One People's Project, has said it will attend the rally if Turner goes through with his plan.
KINGSTON Mayor James Sottile, who already has urged the public to stay away from Turner's rally, is calling on parents to spend time with their children that day discussing the importance of harmonious living in a diverse community.(Yes, spend some time telling your kids how much they need to love everyone and then send them out to learn firsthand the joys that come with living in a diverse community:rolleyes: )
"On Nov. 19, at noon, I would urge parents to bring kids in their homes, spend time with children, and bring them together and talk to them about how it is OK to be different," Sottile said. "Sit down with them and look them in the eyes and talk about diversity. In the end, these people are going to leave this community. Let's not buy into it. We are above it."
THE KINGSTON Common Council, meanwhile, expects to hold a special session next week at which a resolution declaring Nov. 19 "Tolerance Day" is to be adopted. The measure is being introduced by council Majority Leader Bill Reynolds.
"We all have to work together, live together, that is how you building a community," said Reynolds, D-Ward 7. "We should not listen to an out-of-town person who has a political agenda and wants to wreak havoc at our expense."
KINGSTON school district Superintendent Gerard Gretzinger, meanwhile, hopes to minimize the risk of conflict on Nov. 19 by canceling or relocating events that were to take place at the high school that day.
And students who don't need to be at such events should stay home, he suggested.
"We are asking people to stay home with their children on that day," Gretzinger said.
ALDERMAN Clinton Brown, D-Ward 4, said he will walk the city's streets this weekend and deliver a similar message to children and their parents.
"I am going to (contact) as many people as I can, and families, to tell them about the importance of keeping away from this rally and keeping their cool," said Brown, whose ward includes Midtown neighborhoods.
Brown, who is African-American, said he understands there are racial problems at the high school but doesn't believe they are worse than when he went there in the 1970s.
"Race is always going to be an issue in our society," Brown said. "But I don't buy into the fact that it is that bad at the high school."
www.zwire.com
Edit: I guess it would have made more sense to put this in race relations. Oh well.:o
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