The Real Agenda at Charlottesville, Et Al.

longknife

Diamond Member
Sep 21, 2012
42,221
13,088
2,250
Sin City
This is the summation of a very high-level analysis of Charlottesville.

...We do not need to search for previous comparisons in order to evaluate the present circumstance. We need only pay attention to the NPR or other media focus to observe the complete absence of any attention to the question of who was responsible for allowing matters to get out of control and the correlatively intense focus on what the presidentā€™s reaction says about the nation. Then we may clearly apprehend that the game here is to disorient the society, repudiate the peopleā€™s express hopes, and pave the way for a United States disconnected from the peopleā€™s legitimate authority. It is not Trump that they hate; it is us!
From Professor W. Allen, Emeritus, Michigan State.
 
White Supremacists stage flash mob in Charlottesville...
mad.gif

Charlottesville outrage: White Supremacists stage flash mob
Monday 9th October, 2017 - Two months after sparking nationwide outrage and clashes, dozens of White nationalist protesters returned to the U.S. town of Charlottesville on Saturday night.
Violent clashes broke out in August this year after White Supremacists locked horns with counter-protesters, leading to the death of a counter-demonstrator, 32-year-old Heather Heyer. Heyer was killed after a participant rammed his car into a group of counter-protesters at high speed. On Saturday, protesters held a brief torch-lit rally organized by far-right figure Richard Spencer. About 50 protesters were said to have gathered for a rally in Emancipation Park by the statue of Confederate General Robert E Lee - which was the same venue chosen by the ā€˜Unite the Rightā€™ protesters in August. The group was expressing its opposition to plans of removal of the statue that has now been covered up as a legal challenge to its removal continues.

However, after the violence in Charlottesville in August, many local governments acted to remove Confederate monuments. Protesters late on Saturday chanted slogans like ā€˜You will not replace usā€™ and ā€˜we will be backā€™ and some in the group were heard chanting ā€˜the south will rise againā€™ and ā€˜Russia is our friendā€™ in videos that immediately went viral on social media sites. The organizer Spencer even live streamed a video of the rally showing the group of protesters wearing suit coats, white collared shirts and khakis and holding torches. Spencer, who is the founder of a right-wing website and think-tank said that Charlottesville had become a symbol of the suppression of free speech and destruction of historical monuments. He has previously made a series of controversial comments at public events, including allegedly advocating "peaceful" ethnic cleansing.

cus1507487293.jpg

Ignorant-assed rednecks on parade​

Meanwhile, in the live video, another speaker was heard saying that he was there to "represent white America's interests.ā€ He also criticised the local community and the media. Another speaker said, ā€œHello, Charlottesville. We have a message. We're back and we're going to keep coming back.ā€ Spencer and his supporters also alleged in the video that Charlottesville residents should "get used to the alt-right. You're going to have to get used to white identity." According to the police, the group left the park shortly before 8 pm local time, boarded a tour bus and departed from the city. Police cars reportedly followed the tour bus to make sure the group was leaving the city.

Police said in a statement, "Our department is conferring with city leadership and the Commonwealth Attorney's office to determine what legal action may be taken in response to this event.ā€ Meanwhile, Mayor Mike Signer said the small group's appearance at the statue of a Confederate general was a ā€œdespicable visit.ā€ Signer said in a blunt message, "Another despicable visit by neo-Nazi cowards. You're not welcome here! Go home!" The Mayor added that officials were looking at legal ways to prevent further events.

Further, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe said on Twitter, "We are monitoring this situation as we continue to oppose these racists and their message of hate." Later, in a tweet, Spencer said the group "came in peace" and called Saturday's march ā€œCharlottesville 3.0," saying it "was a success and it was a lot of fun.ā€ He said in a post-march testimonial, "We came. We triggered. We left. We did an in-and-out flash mob." Charlottesville Vice Mayor Wes Bellamy meanwhile reacted, ā€œItā€™s clear that these white supremacists are using torches, fire, and hate speech to intimidate our citizens. Thatā€™s a crime.ā€ Since May this year, the U.S. has been gripped by a national debate on whether to remove Confederate symbols from the U.S. civil war because of their association with slavery.

Charlottesville outrage White Supremacists stage flash mob
 
This is the summation of a very high-level analysis of Charlottesville.

...We do not need to search for previous comparisons in order to evaluate the present circumstance. We need only pay attention to the NPR or other media focus to observe the complete absence of any attention to the question of who was responsible for allowing matters to get out of control and the correlatively intense focus on what the presidentā€™s reaction says about the nation. Then we may clearly apprehend that the game here is to disorient the society, repudiate the peopleā€™s express hopes, and pave the way for a United States disconnected from the peopleā€™s legitimate authority. It is not Trump that they hate; it is us!
From Professor W. Allen, Emeritus, Michigan State.
You will need to translate that from Gibberish into English.
 
Longknife was quite clear in the summation.

The Alt Right argument is that the MSM and the mainstream GOP and Dems hate the "real" America.

Their error on the Alt Right is the wrong conclusion that they are the "real" America.
 

New Topics

Forum List

Back
Top