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Old 12-24-2020, 11:07 PM   #2146
Redhot1960
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<-- Racist?

20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKB0H_SFoAg
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Old 12-25-2020, 07:45 AM   #2147
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<-- Racist, just ask them. 6

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alIHRpcLNn4
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Old 12-25-2020, 09:30 AM   #2148
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So you’re the champion of the black man, IFFYY?

You’re just the pot calling the kettle (whatever it is you people call them)

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
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Old 12-25-2020, 09:44 AM   #2149
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider View Post
So you’re the champion of the black man, IFFYY?

You’re just the pot calling the kettle (whatever it is you people call them)

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
More accusations? Borderline outting !

HOES HUMMER! Yes admin is AWARE! merry christmas
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Old 12-25-2020, 11:45 AM   #2150
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Stalking has its consequences, buB

Redhot has promoted racist opinions since long before he was even redhot.

You on the other hand are just playing “Gotcha.”

Please point that RTM button. It’s all you have left.

Meanwhile, quit hijacking Redhot’s insightful thread and find someone else to stalk. .
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Old 12-25-2020, 01:01 PM   #2151
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider View Post
So you’re the champion of the black man, IFFYY?

You’re just the pot calling the kettle (whatever it is you people call them)

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
What do you think I would call them, iffin I was unrestrained by the rules?
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Old 12-25-2020, 02:02 PM   #2152
Redhot1960
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider View Post
Stalking has its consequences, buB

Redhot has promoted racist opinions since long before he was even redhot.

You on the other hand are just playing “Gotcha.”

Please point that RTM button. It’s all you have left.

Meanwhile, quit hijacking Redhot’s insightful thread and find someone else to stalk. .
You're funny ShitEater. <--Racist

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Old 12-25-2020, 07:55 PM   #2153
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<-- Racist

some history. 3 hrs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYrznlDTE_M
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Old 12-26-2020, 11:36 AM   #2154
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former Kansas attorney general for Amistad Project talks about what is evidence.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vic4LpJKFNg
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Old 12-26-2020, 06:52 PM   #2155
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1:01:00

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv0fzZzppMk
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Old 12-27-2020, 09:48 AM   #2156
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<-- Racist

49
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jz3x148BtdU
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Old 12-27-2020, 10:05 AM   #2157
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You still butt hurt, Pepe?

Get over it man, and join the REAL AMERICA!

But first, please get your microchip.


HAHSSHSHSHAHAHAHAHAHSHSHSHZ
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Old 12-27-2020, 11:31 AM   #2158
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Some more forgotten history <-- Racist https://www.acton.org/publications/t...nish-civil-war

Every November 6, the Roman Catholic Church in Spain commemorates the saints martyred by the Communists during the Spanish Civil War. During the Red Terror of the 1930s, Communists killed more than 6,800 bishops, priests, monks, and religious. Yet outside Spain, their story is largely forgotten.

1931: Red Terror began before the civil war

Local elections were held on April 12, 1931. Monarchist candidatures won the overwhelming number of seats contested nationwide (40,324 city councilmen), but 41 of the 51 capitals of provinces were taken by the pro-Republic side (38 for the Republican-Socialist Coalition, with the Socialist Party as one of its members, and three for the Catalan nationalist party known as “Esquerra Republicana” – the “Republican Left” in Catalan).

The results in most province capitals were understood by the monarchists (particularly generals Dámaso Berenguer and José Sanjurjo) as a defeat. Two days later, the Republic was proclaimed, and the monarch Alfonso XIII, of the House of Bourbon, left Spain because he wanted to avoid a Civil War. Niceto Alcalá-Zamora became president.

This new political era was also the beginning of a wave of anti-clerical violence derived from laicism. On May 10, the monarchists opened a new center of political agitation in Madrid, the Círculo Monárquico Independiente (Independent Monarchist Circle), which was immediately subjected to massive riots. As a result, from May 11-13, many churches throughout the nation were burned, beginning in Madrid but expanding to cities like Seville, Cordoba, Murcia, and Malaga.

Malaga was home to one of the worst cases of “anti-clerical phenomena.” Its military governor did not intervene until midday on May 12, when he ordered the police to withdraw from the fray. In a few days, thousands of buildings – and even classical works of art from painters such as Francisco de Zurbaran and Alonso Cano – were burned.

The Communist Party organized many of these acts of arson – which the provisional government did nothing to stop. The minister of the Interior, Miguel Maura, refused to a send in the Civil Guard. The government’s views were summed up by the minister of War at that time, Manuel Azaña, who declared, “All the convents of Spain are not worth the life of one Republican.”

Anti-Christian persecution takes place only after economic resources are collectivised into the hands of secular statists.

In October, the Socialist Party won the legislative elections: 445 of 470 Congress of Deputies seats belonged to left-wing parties, and Manuel Azaña was invested as the head of State. Two months later, the Parliament passed a constitution that banned religious orders, Catholic education, or religious cemeteries.

1934: Revolution in Asturias

Three years later, left-wing actors such as the Communist Party, the Socialist Party, the General Union of Workers (in Spanish, “Unión General de Trabajadores,” or UGT), the Iberian Anarchist Federation, and the National Confederation of Labour organized a general strike between October 5 and 19 to protest against centrist President Alejandro Lerroux. He had appointed members of the Catholic and conservative party CEDA to three ministerial positions. The regions of Asturias and Catalonia were the centers of that strike, which is sometimes called the “Revolution of Asturias.” While the village of Mieres was the “focus of insurrectional movement,” protesters (mainly miners that took almost all the region) proclaimed the Asturian Socialist Republic in Oviedo.

This period sparked a new era of anti-Christian persecution. In Asturias, 34 religious were murdered and 58 religious buildings were burned. In Turron, the nine religious who were associated with Christian schools were tortured and killed. Half-a-dozen male students of Oviedo seminary, from the ages of 18 to 21, were murdered. The same fate awaited parish priests in tiny villages like Rebolledo and Valdecuna. The brutality convinced Generals Francisco Franco and Manuel Goded to send the Spanish Foreign Legion and Moroccan colonial troops to that northern region, and the Socialist movement was defeated.

But the most serious persecution was yet to come.

1936-1939: The Popular Front and the Spanish Civil War

The “Popular Front” – a coalition of left-wing parties including the Socialist Party, Esquerra Republicana, and the Communist Party – took power in 1936, through election fraud according to historians Álvarez Tardío and Villa García. That heralded an era of lawlessness. Leftist forces organized illegal demonstrations intended to foment revolutionary discontent. All respect for private property was abandoned. “Police delegates” – who had previously served as socialist activists – led the arbitrary arrest of many right-wing politicians, the forcible dissolution of rightist and monarchist groups, and an escalation of political violence during these months. This triggered a military uprising on July 18, 1936, promoted in part by Franco and General Emilio Mola.

During that time, the areas still ruled by the Republican side were the scenes of dramatic religious persecution. Some 6,832 religious were murdered between 1936 and 1939 – including 13 bishops and 4,184 priests. As many as 20,000 churches were destroyed, many of them before the war commenced.

One of the deadliest massacres came in the autumn of 1936. At least 5,000 citizens were killed in the city of Paracuellos del Jarama (Madrid) by order of Madrid Committee of Defence, which was ruled by communists. People, especially women, were murdered for attending Mass. Anyone associated with the political opposition was liquidated. The former General Secretary of Communist Party, Santiago Carrillo, who would go on to serve as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Spain before ending his life as a “democratic socialist,” is believed to bear much of the responsibility for these massacres.

Anti-Christian terror accompanied the socialist or Communist domination of any region, until the Spanish Civil War ended in 1939 with Franco’s dictatorship.

Today: Still coming to grips with Spain’s Red Terror

Beginning with the Papacy of John Paul II, a total of 1,725 Spanish martyrs of Communist religious persecution have been beatified as saints. During the 2007 beatification of some 498 martyrs of the Spanish Civil War, church authorities set aside November 6 as their official liturgical holiday.

Those who contend for religious liberty, a touchstone of Western culture, must remember those key events, which have been subjected to decades of obscurity thanks to the mainstream media and the Spanish educational system. Marxist regimes and cadres were the vanguard of the intolerant secularism again percolating throughout our culture. Anti-Christian persecution takes place only after economic resources are collectivised into the hands of secular statists. Yet collectivism and militant atheism are growing as the prime threats to those of any faith, including faith in our common Western civilisation.
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Old 12-27-2020, 12:06 PM   #2159
dilbert firestorm
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Originally Posted by Redhot1960 View Post
Some more forgotten history <-- Racist https://www.acton.org/publications/t...nish-civil-war

Every November 6, the Roman Catholic Church in Spain commemorates the saints martyred by the Communists during the Spanish Civil War. During the Red Terror of the 1930s, Communists killed more than 6,800 bishops, priests, monks, and religious. Yet outside Spain, their story is largely forgotten.

1931: Red Terror began before the civil war

Local elections were held on April 12, 1931. Monarchist candidatures won the overwhelming number of seats contested nationwide (40,324 city councilmen), but 41 of the 51 capitals of provinces were taken by the pro-Republic side (38 for the Republican-Socialist Coalition, with the Socialist Party as one of its members, and three for the Catalan nationalist party known as “Esquerra Republicana” – the “Republican Left” in Catalan).

The results in most province capitals were understood by the monarchists (particularly generals Dámaso Berenguer and José Sanjurjo) as a defeat. Two days later, the Republic was proclaimed, and the monarch Alfonso XIII, of the House of Bourbon, left Spain because he wanted to avoid a Civil War. Niceto Alcalá-Zamora became president.

This new political era was also the beginning of a wave of anti-clerical violence derived from laicism. On May 10, the monarchists opened a new center of political agitation in Madrid, the Círculo Monárquico Independiente (Independent Monarchist Circle), which was immediately subjected to massive riots. As a result, from May 11-13, many churches throughout the nation were burned, beginning in Madrid but expanding to cities like Seville, Cordoba, Murcia, and Malaga.

Malaga was home to one of the worst cases of “anti-clerical phenomena.” Its military governor did not intervene until midday on May 12, when he ordered the police to withdraw from the fray. In a few days, thousands of buildings – and even classical works of art from painters such as Francisco de Zurbaran and Alonso Cano – were burned.

The Communist Party organized many of these acts of arson – which the provisional government did nothing to stop. The minister of the Interior, Miguel Maura, refused to a send in the Civil Guard. The government’s views were summed up by the minister of War at that time, Manuel Azaña, who declared, “All the convents of Spain are not worth the life of one Republican.”

Anti-Christian persecution takes place only after economic resources are collectivised into the hands of secular statists.

In October, the Socialist Party won the legislative elections: 445 of 470 Congress of Deputies seats belonged to left-wing parties, and Manuel Azaña was invested as the head of State. Two months later, the Parliament passed a constitution that banned religious orders, Catholic education, or religious cemeteries.

1934: Revolution in Asturias

Three years later, left-wing actors such as the Communist Party, the Socialist Party, the General Union of Workers (in Spanish, “Unión General de Trabajadores,” or UGT), the Iberian Anarchist Federation, and the National Confederation of Labour organized a general strike between October 5 and 19 to protest against centrist President Alejandro Lerroux. He had appointed members of the Catholic and conservative party CEDA to three ministerial positions. The regions of Asturias and Catalonia were the centers of that strike, which is sometimes called the “Revolution of Asturias.” While the village of Mieres was the “focus of insurrectional movement,” protesters (mainly miners that took almost all the region) proclaimed the Asturian Socialist Republic in Oviedo.

This period sparked a new era of anti-Christian persecution. In Asturias, 34 religious were murdered and 58 religious buildings were burned. In Turron, the nine religious who were associated with Christian schools were tortured and killed. Half-a-dozen male students of Oviedo seminary, from the ages of 18 to 21, were murdered. The same fate awaited parish priests in tiny villages like Rebolledo and Valdecuna. The brutality convinced Generals Francisco Franco and Manuel Goded to send the Spanish Foreign Legion and Moroccan colonial troops to that northern region, and the Socialist movement was defeated.

But the most serious persecution was yet to come.

1936-1939: The Popular Front and the Spanish Civil War

The “Popular Front” – a coalition of left-wing parties including the Socialist Party, Esquerra Republicana, and the Communist Party – took power in 1936, through election fraud according to historians Álvarez Tardío and Villa García. That heralded an era of lawlessness. Leftist forces organized illegal demonstrations intended to foment revolutionary discontent. All respect for private property was abandoned. “Police delegates” – who had previously served as socialist activists – led the arbitrary arrest of many right-wing politicians, the forcible dissolution of rightist and monarchist groups, and an escalation of political violence during these months. This triggered a military uprising on July 18, 1936, promoted in part by Franco and General Emilio Mola.

During that time, the areas still ruled by the Republican side were the scenes of dramatic religious persecution. Some 6,832 religious were murdered between 1936 and 1939 – including 13 bishops and 4,184 priests. As many as 20,000 churches were destroyed, many of them before the war commenced.

One of the deadliest massacres came in the autumn of 1936. At least 5,000 citizens were killed in the city of Paracuellos del Jarama (Madrid) by order of Madrid Committee of Defence, which was ruled by communists. People, especially women, were murdered for attending Mass. Anyone associated with the political opposition was liquidated. The former General Secretary of Communist Party, Santiago Carrillo, who would go on to serve as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Spain before ending his life as a “democratic socialist,” is believed to bear much of the responsibility for these massacres.

Anti-Christian terror accompanied the socialist or Communist domination of any region, until the Spanish Civil War ended in 1939 with Franco’s dictatorship.

Today: Still coming to grips with Spain’s Red Terror

Beginning with the Papacy of John Paul II, a total of 1,725 Spanish martyrs of Communist religious persecution have been beatified as saints. During the 2007 beatification of some 498 martyrs of the Spanish Civil War, church authorities set aside November 6 as their official liturgical holiday.

Those who contend for religious liberty, a touchstone of Western culture, must remember those key events, which have been subjected to decades of obscurity thanks to the mainstream media and the Spanish educational system. Marxist regimes and cadres were the vanguard of the intolerant secularism again percolating throughout our culture. Anti-Christian persecution takes place only after economic resources are collectivised into the hands of secular statists. Yet collectivism and militant atheism are growing as the prime threats to those of any faith, including faith in our common Western civilisation.
interesting. great read.

knew the spanish civil war was bad. but I didn't know that the run up to the civil war was just as bad, it triggered a response from Spain's military.

the take away here is that the left didn't have complete control in 1930's Spain. they forgot to take control of the military. they would have gotten alot further if not for the military intervention.

you see the same thing happen with Venezuela, only this time, the left has control of the military.
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Old 12-27-2020, 01:32 PM   #2160
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And Spain still has more accessible health care than we do.
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