Do you live in Virginia?!?! If so do me a favor and piss on your State Capitol!

Reign in Acai

Of Elephant and Man
Jun 25, 2003
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Favela of My Dismay
RICHMOND, Va. - Meeting on the grounds of the former Confederate Capitol, the Virginia General Assembly voted unanimously Saturday to express "profound regret" for the state's role in slavery.


Sponsors of the resolution say they know of no other state that has apologized for slavery, although Missouri lawmakers are considering such a measure. The resolution does not carry the weight of law but sends an important symbolic message, supporters said.

"This session will be remembered for a lot of things, but 20 years hence I suspect one of those things will be the fact that we came together and passed this resolution," said Delegate A. Donald McEachin, a Democrat who sponsored it in the House of Delegates.

The resolution passed the House 96-0 and cleared the 40-member Senate on a unanimous voice vote. It does not require Gov. Timothy M. Kaine's approval.

The measure also expressed regret for "the exploitation of Native Americans."

The resolution was introduced as Virginia begins its celebration of the 400th anniversary of Jamestown, where the first Africans arrived in 1619. Richmond, home to a popular boulevard lined with statues of Confederate heroes, later became another point of arrival for Africans and a slave-trade hub.

The resolution says government-sanctioned slavery "ranks as the most horrendous of all depredations of human rights and violations of our founding ideals in our nation's history, and the abolition of slavery was followed by systematic discrimination, enforced segregation, and other insidious institutions and practices toward Americans of African descent that were rooted in racism, racial bias, and racial misunderstanding."

In Virginia, black voter turnout was suppressed with a poll tax and literacy tests before those practices were struck down by federal courts, and state leaders responded to federally ordered school desegregation with a "Massive Resistance" movement in the 1950s and early '60s. Some communities created exclusive whites-only schools.

The apology is the latest in a series of strides Virginia has made in overcoming its segregationist past. Virginia was the first state to elect a black governor — L. Douglas Wilder in 1989 — and the Legislature took a step toward atoning for Massive Resistance in 2004 by creating a scholarship fund for blacks whose schools were shut down between 1954 and 1964.

Among those voting for the measure was Delegate Frank D. Hargrove, an 80-year-old Republican who infuriated black leaders last month by saying "black citizens should get over" slavery.

After enduring a barrage of criticism, Hargrove successfully co-sponsored a resolution calling on Virginia to celebrate "Juneteenth," a holiday
commemorating the end of slavery in the United States.

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This is Bullshit!!! What more does the white race have to do to appease these negars?!?! We allow them to walk amongst us in a petting zoo arrangement that messes with my sinuses from the foul odor that they drag across the concrete plantation known as Los Galapagos. We allow them to dine at our restaurants and eat white food that was cultivated by horse pulled plows that they failed to properly pull 15 decades prior. We allow them in to our white schools to cozy up against our blonde and blue eyed daughters who are purer than the driven snow in which their matching white skin treads upon. We allow them to fuck our socialites in profitable pornography. We allow them to disease our sports with their 4.2 40 yd dashes which times are set, with their advantageously limber dorsal danglers. What more do they want!??!?!

FUCK OFF!!!! :mad:
 
coincidentally, I'm listening to Sigrblot.

From the book of Sigrblot, Chapter Five (Crisis of Faith), Verse 3:
"We have explored, triumphed and ruled – such is the way of man. Now we are to apologize, to stand in debt to those once conquered? For collective guilt we should stand and watch our heritage raped, to do nothing as our future follow the cattle down the valley of death? Hah! I owe nothing to anyone but my own race. In the end I will probably not have changed anything – but rather spit in the shepherd’s eye than to follow his cain."

uh-huh
 
O.K i just did some investigating. Plough is merely a variant of plow.

plough /plaʊ/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[plou] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–noun, verb (used with object), verb (used without object) Chiefly British.


:mad:


M
 
MajestikMøøse;5920034 said:
coincidentally, I'm listening to Sigrblot.

From the book of Sigrblot, Chapter Five (Crisis of Faith), Verse 3:
"We have explored, triumphed and ruled – such is the way of man. Now we are to apologize, to stand in debt to those once conquered? For collective guilt we should stand and watch our heritage raped, to do nothing as our future follow the cattle down the valley of death? Hah! I owe nothing to anyone but my own race. In the end I will probably not have changed anything – but rather spit in the shepherd’s eye than to follow his cain."

uh-huh


Matt upload that song at once!!!! I beggeth thee. :cool:
 
dude, when will african americans just let this go? get over it already. the ones living today have NOTHING to do with what happened over 100 years ago. NOTHING!
 
Chiefly British.

:headbang: Hence the [/godsavethequeen]

Yeah Jerry, you're gonna love the cover of this Sigrblot album :tickled:

poster_sigrblot01.jpg


cue the 9/11 jokes... :loco:
 
^^ although we are not affected by this here, I wholly agree with you. I would be pretty much pissed if someone came crying at me for something that happened hundreds of years ago and made me feel guilty for that.

damn Jayk... post was directed at J.
 
:headbang: Hence the [/godsavethequeen]

Yeah Jerry, you're gonna love the cover of this Sigrblot album :tickled:

poster_sigrblot01.jpg


cue the 9/11 jokes... :loco:

Oh bro, I'm not offended what so ever by that cover. :)

Well I'm off to go purchase some jewel cases. I recently purchased 3 albums where the seller shipped the cd bareback. Ridiculous. :erk:
 
^^ although we are not affected by this here, I wholly agree with you. I would be pretty much pissed if someone came crying at me for something that happened hundreds of years ago and made me feel guilty for that.

damn Jayk... post was directed at J.

dude, you have no idea how truly bad it is. there was a lawsuit in some state a few years by some black suing for reparations because slavery was responsible for their lot in life.

can we say LAZY! fuck man, it's just like Jack Nicholson said in The Departed:

"That's what the my pals don't realize. If I got one thing against the black chappies, it's this - no one gives it to you. You have to take it."
 
Private corporations were also complicit in slavery. On March 8, 2000, Reuters News Service reported that Deadria Farmer-Paellmann, a recent law school graduate, initiated a one-woman campaign making a historic demand for restitution and apologies from modern companies that played a direct role in enslaving Africans. Aetna Inc. was her first target because of their practice of writing life insurance policies on the lives of enslaved Africans with slave owners as the beneficiaries. In response to Farmer-Paellmann's demand, Aetna Inc. issued an unprecedented public apology, and the "corporate restitution movement" was born.

By 2002, nine (9) lawsuits were filed around the country coordinated by Farmer-Paellmann and the Restitution Study Group -- a New York non-profit. The cases were consolidated under 28 U.S.C. § 1407 to multidistrict litigation in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The litigation included 20 plaintiffs demanding restitution from 20 companies from the banking, insurance, textile, railroad, and tobacco industries. The district court dismissed the lawsuits with prejudice, and the claimants appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. On December 13, 2006, that Court, in an opinion written by Judge Richard Posner, modified the district court's judgment to be a dismissal without prejudice, affirmed the majority of the district court's judgment, and reversed the portion of the district court's judgment dismissing the plaintiffs' consumer protection claims, remanding the case for further proceedings consistent with its opinion [1].

In October 2000, California passed a Slavery Era Disclosure Law requiring insurance companies doing business there to report on their role in slavery. The disclosure legislation, introduced by Senator Tom Hayden, is the prototype for similar laws passed in 12 states around the United States.

The NAACP has called for more of such legislation at local and corporate levels. It quotes Dennis C. Hayes, CEO of the NAACP, as saying, "Absolutely, we will be pursuing reparations from companies that have historical ties to slavery and engaging all parties to come to the table."[1] Brown University, whose founding family was involved in the slave trade, has also established a committee to explore the issue of reparations.

In December of 2005, a boycott was called by a coalition of reparations groups under the sponsorship of the Restitution Study Group. The boycott targets the student loan products of banks complicit in slavery -- particularly those in the Farmer-Paellmann litigation. Students are choosing from hundreds of other banks to finance their student loans.."[2]
 
Seems the negros are getting a bit too brave in their demands. They're exploiting the plight of their ancestors to make a few dollars.
 
:lol: Krig

I would bomb the White House before paying a fucking cent towards reparations. I have never heard a more ridiculous idea that is actually taken seriously by people.
 
One good thing about Utah: The only negars are here for the purpose of the white mans entertainment, they play for the Utah Jazz.