Friday, July 3, 2020

White Supremacist Ideas Have Historical Roots In U.S. Christianity

White Supremacist Ideas Have Historical Roots In U.S. Christianity 

https://www.bitchute.com/video/DEO1imK29ptV/

This one line sums it all up - 500 people come out – men, women, and children. Men
were holding the Freedom Riders back, and the women were hitting them
with their purses and holding their children up to claw their faces." -- We lost our composure right here -- Attack Chilren!

Quote the Commie -- When a young Southern Baptist pastor named Alan Cross arrived in
Montgomery, Alabama in January 2000, he knew it was where Martin Luther
King, Jr. had his first church and where Rosa Parks launched her famous bus
boycott, but he didn't know some other details of the city's role in civil rights
history.
The more he learned, the more troubled he became by one event in particular:
the savage attack in May 1961 on a busload of Black and white "Freedom
Riders" who had traveled defiantly together to Montgomery in a challenge to
segregation. Over the next 15 years, Cross, who is white, would regularly
take people to the old Greyhound depot in Montgomery to highlight what
happened that spring day.
"They pull in right here, on the side," Cross says, standing in front of the
depot. "And it was quiet when they got here. But then once they start getting
off the bus, around 500 people come out – men, women, and children. Men
were holding the Freedom Riders back, and the women were hitting them
with their purses and holding their children up to claw their faces." Some of
the men carried lead pipes and baseball bats. Two of the Freedom Riders, the
civil rights activist John Lewis and a white ally, James Zwerg, were beaten
unconscious

Cover is -- Me Myself and I -- The Three Amigos

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