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NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: fuck you bro ()
Date: December 11, 2019 12:53AM

last time i tuned in a black family fresh from Georgia was suing because Mannassass didn't let him be in football (due to terrible grades) - they were suing saying Virginia owed him his life and $400 Million for ruining his "career"

Today they are suing TO GET RID OF A WHITE SCHOOL STAFFER (teacher or principle) who NAACP says made a "racist comment"

WELL ACCORDING TO NAACP EVERYTHING OUT OF A WHITE PERSON'S MOUTH, AND TRUMP, IS RACIST

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: fuck you bro ()
Date: December 11, 2019 12:54AM

i don't see "mannassass" stuff often but when i do: NAACP is there every time running lawsuits or "securing non-profit" (business run solely on federal money) status

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: fuck you bro ()
Date: December 11, 2019 01:01AM

I've seen it happen in fairfax (including proposals offered that are copied from cities - and designed to nigger the schools)

THE POINT

THESE ARE PLANNED ACTIONS BY THE BLACK CONGRESSIONAL CAUCUS / NAACP

they are making "lawsuit lists" at their meetings and in private and telling niggers to pursue them.

they are trying to get black members in government to control government so they can simply steal the money instead of running frivolous AND UNTRUE LAWSUITS

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: December 24, 2019 02:40PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: I Dont Blame Them ()
Date: December 24, 2019 04:24PM

They need to sue God for making snow white

Please stop these songs will you
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WhyWhiteNotColoredChristmas.png

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Mike hunttt ()
Date: December 25, 2019 06:41AM

Fucking NIGGERS

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Mama McCoon ()
Date: December 25, 2019 07:00AM

Mike hunttt Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Fucking NIGGERS


Niggers dindu nuffin

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Mike hunttt ()
Date: December 25, 2019 07:42AM

Hairy mistress McCoon!

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: December 31, 2019 08:14PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: January 05, 2020 06:07PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: January 05, 2020 06:49PM

.

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: January 05, 2020 07:11PM

dd

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: January 07, 2020 10:03PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Barrickman ()
Date: January 08, 2020 12:52AM

Amazon to seize the land of freed slaves’ descendants to lay power lines
By Nick Barrickman and Alex González

Local residents inform the International Amazon Workers Voice that Amazon is attempting to seize 50 acres of land owned by elderly working class descendants of slaves in Northern Virginia, pave over the residents’ homes, and build power lines.

The soil that Amazon plans to cover with asphalt contains the sweat of slaves and the blood of Civil War soldiers. The residents’ ancestors, who worked the land as slaves, took possession of these plots after being freed by the Emancipation Proclamation and liberated by the Union Army during the American Civil War. American capitalism has come full-circle: the government is stealing land from the descendants of slaves and giving it to one of the world’s most powerful corporations.

A representative of a community group called the Alliance to Save Carver Road (ASCR) told the IAWV, “The homeowners have been there for generations. Many of the properties were purchased by freed slaves. After emancipation, the slaves that worked that area were allowed to purchase property. A number of the property owners are descendants of those freed slaves.”

Last month, Amazon subsidiary VAData, working in collusion with local government agencies and utility company Dominion Virginia Power, announced plans to construct 230,000 volt power lines running through the semi-rural community of Carver Road just outside of Gainesville, in order to power nearby internet data centers.


The Alliance to Save Carver Road
The power lines will also pave over parts of the Manassas Civil War battlefield area. The area in which the community is located, about an hour west of Washington D.C., was the site of the First and Second Battles of Manassas, two key battles of the Civil War of 1861-65. Local reports show that the power lines will be paid for by utility company customers.

The Prince William County Board of Supervisors rejected an alternative route which would have gone through a wealthy area. The rejected route was also estimated at $167 million while the one traveling through Carver Road was estimated at $62 million. Deeming the additional expenses too costly, the corporate giant proceeded to cut a path through the historic community to save money.

The ASCR representative said, “Amazon was able to use a loophole in the county rules to site their data center in an area that was not zoned for data centers. If they were in the designated area, there would not need to be any new power lines. Those designated areas have sufficient power. The county is complicit,” she added, speaking on the role the government has played in helping the company strong-arm the community.

The state of Virginia has awarded Amazon millions in tax breaks and grants to construct its warehouses and data centers throughout the state, even as it throws families out of homes to make way for these properties and subjects its employees to illegal forms of exploitation. As the case of Carver Road reveals, its abuse of the workforce goes well beyond the four walls of its facilities.


Asked how the slated construction would affect Carver’s properties, the ASCR representative replied, “There is a school that would be impacted. The construction does not directly cross the school building, but there is a school nearby. Property values would plummet. You cannot use the property. In my case, I have tenants. They have already told me that they want out of the lease if the lines come through.”

“There have been no studies of what Dominion is doing,” she noted. “They have not looked at the economic impact [to] our community, or the environment or our property rights. They have not contacted any of us to discuss any of this… They did a very cursory review of Carver Road.

“Some property owners are not familiar how this will impact them. The elderly are not comprehending what is going on.” The representative of the Alliance to Save Carver Road stated that many of Carver’s residents are retired or on fixed income.

Amazon locates dozens of its sprawling internet data centers in northern Virginia to house its enormous web infrastructure. On a given day, nearly 70 percent of the world’s internet traffic passes through the region, a third of which is filtered through Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) numerous facilities. The region has also become something of a focal point for the nexus existing between the internet giant and the US federal government’s surveillance agencies.

The local government, sensing the growing anger among residents, postponed the planned demolition, which will likely still go forward in the near future. Last week, the Prince William County Board of Supervisors, the same body which approved the plan to destroy the community, voted to give $30,000 in county discretionary funds to the residents to aid in their legal effort against the corporate giant.

This posturing is entirely cynical. The funds given by the county, roughly equal to the amount of money Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos makes in a single minute, are a face-saving gesture to absolve the government of responsibility for the legal nightmare into which the residents have been thrown. The sum of $30,000 equals less than what Amazon’s brigade of corporate attorneys are paid in a single day.

The power lines would pass near the federally-protected Manassas Battlefield National Park, home to numerous battle grounds from the American Civil War. One such site, Buckland Mills, would be filled in with concrete to clear space for the power lines.
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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Barrickman ()
Date: January 08, 2020 12:53AM

Republicans in the post-Civil War Reconstruction era failed to establish a a general program to breakup the plantations and distribute the land to the former slaves throughout the South.

The ex-slaves, however uneducated at that time, represented, a massive formation of petite-bourgeois agrarian entrepreneurs. Without land, they were reduced to semi-slave status.

In order to secure the political support of the Deep South, the Northern capitalists "redeemed" the Southern ruling elites

These facts belie the claim that "American capitalism has come full-circle" - the land grab in Carver Road by Amazon notwithstanding.

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: k ()
Date: January 09, 2020 01:54PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: A Gonzalez ()
Date: January 09, 2020 09:46PM

The 109th annual convention of the NAACP recently approved a resolution supporting statehood for Puerto Rico. The text refers to a similar statement adopted by its previous annual convention a year ago and ratified by its National Board of Directors in October 2017.

This resolution is a disservice to the struggle for decolonization in Puerto Rico and for equality for everyone in the United States. It should be critically examined by all groups committed to social justice in the United States to better understand Puerto Rico’s situation and what a truly just and democratic response to it could and should be.

The resolution is based on the results of a plebiscite sponsored by the administration of Governor Ricardo Rosselló in June 2017, in which statehood received 97 percent of the votes cast. But it fails to consider that only 23 percent of eligible voters participated in this plebiscite. The ballyhooed 97 percent vote for statehood corresponds to around 22 percent of eligible voters. Supporters of other status options (independence, free association, a modification of the present status) denounced this plebiscite. Their call for voters to boycott this plebiscite was evidently successful.

The 2017 plebiscite was the fifth held by the government of Puerto Rico. Previous plebiscites were held in 1967, 1993, 1998 and 2012. The statehood option received 39 percent of the votes in 1967; 46.3 percent in 1993; 46.5 percent in 1998. In 2012, under statehood governor Luis Fortuño, it received 61.3 percent, but if the nearly 500,000 blank and defaced protest votes cast are counted as rejecting the options included on the ballot, the percentage of votes for statehood drops to 44 percent, close to the 46 percent received in 1993 and 1998. No overwhelming mandate for statehood exists, contrary to what the NAACP’s resolution suggests. Why did the NAACP ignore so many in Puerto Rico that prefer options other than statehood?

However, consensus does exist in Puerto Rico that the present colonial status is unacceptable, which includes supporters of independence, free association and statehood. This is what the NAACP should have focused on, instead of endorsing statehood. It should have called for the decolonization of Puerto Rico. It should have called on Congress to respect Puerto Rico’s right to self-determination. The government of Puerto Rico sponsored all the aforementioned plebiscites. Since Puerto Rico was seized during the Spanish-American War of 1898, not once–let us say that again–not once has Congress consulted Puerto Ricans on what status they prefer, be it independence, statehood or types of association with the United States.

It is sad, and offensive, that the NAACP gave such a warm welcome to Governor Pedro Rosselló and adopted a resolution to his liking. Governor Rosselló has distinguished himself as proponent of labor law reforms that erase worker’s rights. His administration is busy closing hundreds of schools in Puerto Rico, slashing in half the budget of the University of Puerto Rico and launching a brutal attack on public sector unions inspired by the recent U.S. Supreme Court Janus decision. Are these policies the NAACP wants to be associated with? Is this what it stands for in the United States?

After adopting the recent resolution endorsing statehood, the NAACP issued a “Puerto Rico self-determination statement” that states “Puerto Rico should be free to decide its preferred option in a fair and inclusive manner.” This is a welcome statement, but it does not seem to rescind support for one status option. The NAACP should take measures to reaffirm its clarification as its central position: Puerto Rico’s right “to decide its preferred option in a fair and inclusive manner.”

But what does “a fair and inclusive manner” entail? The resolution adopted by the convention and the statement issued afterwards rightly denounce the inadequate response of the Federal government to the catastrophe caused by Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico. But this does not go nearly far enough regarding the failings of the Federal government in Puerto Rico. A true process of self-determination should call on Congress to address Puerto Rico’s economic plight. It should urge Congress to adopt measures enabling Puerto Rico’s economic reconstruction.

For well over a century, Congress has perpetuated a colonial relationship in which Puerto Rico’s economy has been a source of major profits for U.S. corporations but has never functioned to provide employment for most of its workforce. A shocking 55 percent of Puerto Rico’s children live in poverty, with Puerto Rico’s overall poverty rate at 45 percent. Its per capital income is half of that of the poorest state. Unable to obtain employment on the island, millions have migrated to the United States, often joining African-Americans and other Latinos among the discriminated and exploited sectors of the U.S. working class.

Congress has further aggravated Puerto Rico’s situation by eliminating economic incentives, such as phasing out certain federal tax benefits. Make no mistake: these measures were never sufficient to promote economic development or employment. But Congress replaced them with literally nothing. Meanwhile, Congress has maintained the cap on some federal programs in Puerto Rico and has continued making the island subject to expensive U.S. coastal shipping laws. As in other countries and jurisdictions, including many major cities in the United States, economic stagnation led to growing government debt and fiscal crisis, which in turn is used to impose public sector cuts that most adversely affect working people and the poor.

In the case of Puerto Rico, these austerity measures are now imposed by a federally appointed, that is to say, unelected Fiscal Oversight Board created by the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act. Puerto Rico’s debt was unpayable before Hurricane Maria. To collect it now, after close to $90 billion in damages caused by the storm, is criminal. The austerity measures inflicted by the Federal board will only prolong Puerto Rico’s economic depression.

Therefore, real respect of Puerto Rico’s right “to decide its preferred option in a fair and inclusive manner” should include the demand that Congress revoke PROMESA; maintain the stay on claims by creditors on Puerto Rico’s public debts; recognize that the doctrines of change of situation and state of necessity justify canceling Puerto Rico’s public debt; assign sizable funding for Puerto Rico’s economic reconstruction, and take action for Puerto Rico’s decolonization.

In many ways these demands are not unique. Extreme as it is, Puerto Rico’s current condition cannot come as a complete surprise to people in the United States, and African-Americans in particular. Exploitation or neglect of the poor, deficit reduction as an excuse for cuts in public spending, unelected boards acting to destroy labor and social gains in the context of debt crises, are hardly exclusive to Puerto Rico.

Congress has often ignored and overlooked, indeed provoked and propitiated, much injustice in the United States (affecting workers, women, African-Americans, Native Americans, immigrants, among others).

The federal response to disasters in the United States, such as Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, has been slow, inadequate and discriminatory before.

Cuts in public spending and jobs, often by unelected boards, has been the formula applied against working people in dozens of budget crises, from New York City in the mid-1970s to Detroit in the recent past, and perhaps coming next to your city or state.

Working and poor people in the United States face the impact of decades of corporate tax, fiscal, social and economic policies, to which we now add the racist and universally reactionary agenda of the Trump administration. Like Puerto Rico, they also need a vast program of economic reconstruction, geared toward job creation and meeting basic social needs. (We discussed this in our Open Letter to the People of the United States–from Puerto Rico, a month after Hurricane María.)

The struggles of these communities in Puerto Rico and the United States must advance together. U.S. struggles for economic, social and political justice, as well as to end discrimination based on race, religion, gender and sexuality, affects Puerto Rico directly, not the least because millions of Puerto Ricans live and work in the United States. Their circumstances cannot be divorced from those of other working, Latino, Native-American and African-American communities in the United States. And the struggles for justice in the United States must include decolonization and national self-determination for Puerto Rico, and at least partial reparation for the misdeeds of colonial rule.

We hope that the NAACP resolves to reflect on and rectify its position in this direction.

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Mike hunttt ()
Date: January 12, 2020 07:06AM

Cull the herd. More money for planned parenthood

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: osdlkfj ()
Date: June 23, 2020 03:28PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: lsdfk ()
Date: June 25, 2020 03:14PM

d

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: Bumper upper ()
Date: June 26, 2020 04:01PM

To those bumping this racist post.

You are racists.

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Re: NAACP is suing Mannassass Whites NON-STOP - today several NAACP lawsuits aired
Posted by: F **** Y*** ()
Date: June 27, 2020 10:35AM

Niggs are gonna nig, and ain’t never gonna change.

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