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There is no escape - David Duke

Thread ID: 13790 | Posts: 6 | Started: 2004-05-19

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Ed Toner [OP]

2004-05-19 20:26 | User Profile

[url]http://www.duke.org/dukereport/08-01.shtml[/url]

There is no Escape!

By David Duke European-American Unity and Rights Organization, National President

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There is no escape from the terror of the future.

You can run away for a while.

But the terror will catch up to you.

It will destroy you and everything you love.

For more articles like this, subscribe to the David Duke Report. Click here.

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No, I am not talking about a new Hollywood horror movie. I am talking about America. America is changing from the land of our forefathers to a place where we are no longer at home in spirit, and where our families are no longer safe in their own homes.

New Orleans has become increasingly like Haiti since the 1960's Civil Rights movement integrated the schools. Since then, White civil rights have steadily disappeared..........................


weisbrot

2004-05-19 21:17 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Ed Toner] New Orleans has become increasingly like Haiti since the 1960's Civil Rights movement integrated the schools. Since then, White civil rights have steadily disappeared..........................[/QUOTE]

He's not kidding about New Orleans. It's a depressing experience.

Not long ago there I had to go through some of the areas Duke talks about, in the NE part of the city close-in. Later I had some time before my flight and noodled around through the Quarter and then out St. Charles through the Garden District. It was like visiting two continents in one hour. There are some astonishingly beautiful sights, but the memory of Claiborne Avenue dampens the enjoyment.

Every city nowadays has similar surprises, but there are few where the tragedy of a lost culture is more readily apparent even to the infrequent visitor. New Orleans has plummeted over the last five-ten years; when passing through in my younger days I used to think that maybe white folks had created this misery through slavery. I think now that they only imported it, to the detriment of future generations. It's enough to make a man lament Booth's lucky shot, and all those empty Liberian barges.


JoseyWales

2004-05-20 00:13 | User Profile

[QUOTE=weisbrot]...New Orleans has plummeted over the last five-ten years; when passing through in my younger days I used to think that maybe white folks had created this misery through slavery. I think now that they only imported it, to the detriment of future generations. It's enough to make a man lament Booth's lucky shot, and all those empty Liberian barges.[/QUOTE]

Yes, we did import far too much in the way of the "dark continent" and yes, Lincoln once spoke about returning the darkies to whence they came. However, that was not to be as he was just another politician who said what whatever he needed to say to effect things in his favor. i believe it was the prospect of negro citizenship that drove booth to kill lincoln. somehow, the darkies (fredrick douglas ?) talked ole abe out of the idea and along with the unwillingness to spend the money for such adventures after the war, the end result was millions of heathens turned loose on a population of whites that had just seen a large portion of the adult male population killed.


Valley Forge

2004-05-20 00:35 | User Profile

[QUOTE=weisbrot]He's not kidding about New Orleans. It's a depressing experience.

Not long ago there I had to go through some of the areas Duke talks about, in the NE part of the city close-in. Later I had some time before my flight and noodled around through the Quarter and then out St. Charles through the Garden District. It was like visiting two continents in one hour. There are some astonishingly beautiful sights, but the memory of Claiborne Avenue dampens the enjoyment.

Every city nowadays has similar surprises, but there are few where the tragedy of a lost culture is more readily apparent even to the infrequent visitor. New Orleans has plummeted over the last five-ten years; when passing through in my younger days I used to think that maybe white folks had created this misery through slavery. I think now that they only imported it, to the detriment of future generations. It's enough to make a man lament Booth's lucky shot, and all those empty Liberian barges.[/QUOTE]

My comments on the state of New Orleans on another thread. Comparing inner city New Orleans to Haiti may be overly generous.


...if you visit New Orleans these days you're taking a chance on getting killed. Whatever you do, don't do it. It's a literal jungle, a wasteland. (I'm sure the EURO conference will be held somewhere in White suburbia). A couple of weeks ago near the Jazz and Heritage festival, a fourteen year old negro shot and killed a respected White artist for his wallet. And in February, some teen aged negroes murdered a tourist in broad daylight on St. Charles Avenue a couple of blocks from mansions that sell for seven figures. The person was in town for a few days for Mardi Gras. It's not just sickening; it's grotesque what the nigs are doing to this city that once deserved to be called the Jewel of the South.

Things weren't that much better in New Orleans in the 80s and 90s when I was a kid and a young man, but they were definitely much better than they are now. And in 30s, 40s, and 50s, things were probably even better. Back then, New Orleans was a probably a pretty damn nice place to live – just like Miami, New York, and southern California during those decades. And when Blacks were slaves and had no rights at all, things were probably even better.


Ed Toner

2004-05-20 01:21 | User Profile

This was my first experience with New Orleans, circa 1950.

God be with the days!

[url]http://tinyurl.com/ywc2k[/url]


cltncblondeeagle

2004-05-23 12:50 | User Profile

[color=blue]Wait I was in New Orleans in Decemeber 2002. We were only there for one day. We saw the French Quarter somewhat, rode the Cajun Queen, saw the 1812 fortifications, and then had dinner at Bubba Gumps. But since we stayed in groups of maybe 4 or 5 whites we had no problems here. Who is we you may as. A bus load of retirees from the local power company here in Charlotte and I was the youngest one on there.[/color]