Victims of 'racist' home fire set blaze themselves
Fraud, not racism, blamed in fire
Couple indicted in fraud scheme now face attempted murder charges
Fake hate crime alert: Leftists vandalize Denver Democrat HQ; Dems smeared Obamacare foes
Calif. Professor Charged with Hate Crime Hoax
I think it was 2004 when Alicia Hardin, a 19 year old female negro sent letters to 2 other negro students and a hispanic with racial slurs and threats. This took place at a somewhat conservative college, Trinity International University. The incident sent 200 negro students off to a motel. After an FBI investigation it was discovered that the girl was the one who sent the letters.
Later on Mizz Hardin claimed she did not send the letter, and that the police forced her to confess.
Of course, the reknowned racist "Reverend" Jesse Jackson mouthed up emanated the following:
“It was painful to talk with the students. They feel there are targets on their back because they are black, because they are involved in interracial dating relationships.”
Well now, Gregory Waybright, president of the university. said Friday that there was no mention of interracial dating in the letters.
At the age of 12 or 13, Hardin was arrested for battery and criminal damage to property.
She claims she wrote the letters because she was unhappy at the university and wanted to go to a college in Miss.
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The imbecile left like to say that these hoaxes are done to bring awareness of racism on campuses. I say, what a joke. These hoaxes are done out of pure hate, seeking to make something which rarely happens seem as if it's a huge problem. The fact is, far, far more hate crimes are committed against whites than against non-whites. They go unreported by the liberal media. The sad truth is that those crying racism are far more often than not the racists.
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2002 - Arizona State University student charged on suspicion of hoaxing anti-Muslim hate crimes. The student said he was upset Muslims were being treated unfairly after September 11.
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2006 - Two negros firefighters said they found nooses on their firefighting equipment. So the president of the Jacksonville NAACP, Isiah Rumlin writes a letter stating the Chief said he had a good source claiming that the nooses were put there by the "victims" Rumlin says he wants the chief investigated.
Well Isiah, wouldn't it be better just to wait to see what the truth is? Or, perhaps you're a liberal and are glued to your own "truth."
Police released a report that shows Rufus Smith, the negro firefighter who found both nooses did not pass the lie detector test. But did Lt. Matt Cipriani, who is white and worked the previous shift.
The other negro firefighter working the same shift as Smith, Roderick Laws, refused to take the polygraph.
Smith was offered a chance to retake the test, which he initially agreed to, but then changed his mind.
Cipriani retook the polygraph, which he failed the second time.
Later, Laws' attorney said Laws will no longer cooperate with the investigation.
An investigation went on for 9 months. Many interviews and polygraphs. Case closed without conclusion. Perhaps Mr. Rumlin slipped in and put the nooses there. I wonder if he'd submit to a polygraph?
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Many more to come . . . . .
This came from National Review:
National Review - September 14, 1998 - Jon Sanders
Mr. Sanders is a research fellow for the Pope Center for Higher Education Reform in Research Triangle Park, N.C. He is the editor of Clarion, the monthly journal on higher education published by the Pope Center.
At Duke University last November, a group of students hanged from a tree a black doll bearing a sign that read "Duke hasn't changed." They also covered with black paint the nearby Class of 1948 granite bench. The site of the mock lynching was the gathering place for members of the Black Student Alliance, who had been planning a protest outside the office of Duke President Nan Keohane.
The identities of the perpetrators -- evidently white racists --were unknown for nearly a week, and the campus reaction to the incident was one of horror and dismay. The Chronicle, Duke's student newspaper, published a letter from undergraduate Stephen Poon denouncing the episode as a "racial crime." Members of the BSA claimed that it showed how tense race relations were on campus.
Several days later the truth was out: the perpetrators were not racist whites, but blacks looking to create an impression of racism on campus. Instead of being condemned, the guilty parties were unconditionally defended by their ideological kin: "The idea behind the act," wrote Worokya Diomande in the Chronicle, "is being overlooked (as is usually the case). The University has not changed. Blacks are allowed to be enrolled here, but the idea is the equivalent of the transition from field slave to house slave."
There is a new trend on college campuses: not of hate crimes, but of students and faculty creating make-believe racist and anti-gay incidents to illustrate, as the phrase goes, "that hate could happen here," and of students, faculty, and administrators using the fictional crimes as "evidence" of the urgency of their multicultural agenda.
At Eastern New Mexico University, threatening posters started appearing around campus last September. "Are you sick of queers polluting this great land with there [sic] filth?" asked the error-ridden fliers. "I thought so. Want to do something? Join the Fist of God. With his might, we can ride [sic] the world of there [sic] sickness. Ask around. We'll find you." The poster identified eight people on campus as homosexual and concluded: "Take us seriously, or we'll begin executing one queer a week following this list."
The four men and four women listed soon received threatening e-mail messages and letters. Shortly after the posters appeared, the person whose name topped the list, a lesbian teaching assistant named Miranda Prather, was attacked in her home. She told police a masked assailant had slashed her cheek with a kitchen knife.
In the ensuing investigation, police examined surveillance footage of a nearby laundromat where the threatening fliers had been posted. Their search was ultimately successful, and they were able to identify the culprit as . . . Miranda Prather. Later, they found a knife in Miss Prather's apartment that matched the wounds in her cheek.
As in the Duke case, however, no one seemed to care that the "hate crime" was a hoax. Elizabeth Jarnagin, an editorial writer for the Amarillo Globe-News, continued to decry anti-gay bigotry. "Let me tell you about polluting with filth," Miss Jarnagin intoned to the poster-writer, after Prather had been exposed. "Hatred is polluting with filth. Instilling terror is polluting with filth. Bigotry is polluting with filth. . . . Few of us are as blatant about it as the Fist of God. Yet hatred and intolerance are there."
At the University of Georgia, this year, resident advisor Jerry Kennedy found the door of his dormitory room on fire. Everyone concluded that a bigot had been responsible: Kennedy was openly homosexual, and his door was covered with gay-activist literature. The Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Student Union sent a letter to University President Michael Adams asking him to address the incident by creating a hate-crime task force and obtaining a faculty advisor for the LGBSU. Meanwhile, LGBSU members wrote messages in chalk around the Tate Student Center, including "Stop burning down our doors" and "Are you next?"
The attacks on Kennedy, meanwhile, did not stop. After the third time his door was set afire, Kennedy said he thought it was "strange that somebody, in order to get to me, would risk the lives of at least five hundred people [in the dormitory]." Asked what he thought of the LBGSU's response, Kennedy said, "It makes me feel like I'm doing the right thing, and I appreciate the support."
Shortly thereafter, the official student newspaper the Red & Black learned that Kennedy had been the target of 9 of the 15 hate crimes reported on campus since 1995 -- not just the fires, but threatening phone calls and incidents of criminal trespassing. The head of the campus police said: "He's certainly had more [harassment] than anyone else I've known of." Kennedy was arrested and charged with two counts of arson and four false reports of a crime, and a student who had been suspected of setting one of the fires was exonerated. A faculty member, dealing in race discrimination told the Red and Black that she "hoped the Kennedy case would not hinder dialogue about homosexuality."
Tuesday, August 25. 2009
Better Do Something About These Hate Crimes, Yo.
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