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|    Message 47,114 of 48,889    |
|    Daniel Cook to All    |
|    Unhappy Kwanzaa - the media are still fa    |
|    19 Jan 21 00:09:45    |
      XPost: alt.usa.candidat.barack.obama, alt.politics.white-power,        alk.politics.misc       XPost: alt.politics.democrats       From: dcook@jmb.com              It's that time of year again. You know what time I mean - the       time when the media promote that fake holiday created by a       crazed california felon who wanted to create racial discord.       That's right - Kwanzaa.              Do a news search and you'll find hundreds of articles about       wonderful Kwanzaa celebrations held all over America. Good luck       finding a single one that mentions the sorry fact that the       holiday's creator was imprisoned for torturing a couple of       African-American women.              You'll have to go here to my original article on Kwanzaa to find       that. The article originally ran in FrontPage Magazine back in       1998. It's easily found on the Internet by any journalist       willing to do the tiniest bit of research into Kwanzaa. I like       to run it this time every year as a corrective to all of the       dreadful journalism that occurs in every report of Kwanzaa.       If the media told the truth about Kwanzaa in these articles,       then every right-thinking American would realize it's a fraud.       Instead we get the same silly endorsement of this "African"       feast that has nothing to do with Africa and everything to do       with California in the 1960s.              If you don't have the time to read that long expose then you can       read the column I wrote on the subject back in 1998. Here it is       in full:              One of my alert readers called me the other day to inform me       that the public schools in New Jersey aren't allowed to       celebrate Christmas but are celebrating Kwanzaa.       This is intriguing. Christmas celebrates the legacy of Christ       who, by all accounts, was a nonviolent man who believed that       people of all types could learn to live in peace. Kwanzaa       celebrates the legacy of an extremely violent man from       California who has dedicated his life to spreading dissension       among the races.              More on that later. First let's deal with the question of why       schools can propagate a belief in Kwanzaa but not Christmas or       Chanukah. For an answer, I called Ed Martone of the American       Civil Liberties Union.              ''Kwanzaa isn't a religious holiday," said Martone. "It's a       cultural holiday. It doesn't have the same restrictions as       Chanukah or Christmas."              I'll grant that there is a certain logic to the view. After all,       once the government gets involved in religion, the potential       conflicts among Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Muslims and       atheists are so complex that perhaps we are better off avoiding       them altogether.              But by that same logic, the public schools should not be pushing       certain cultural practices. And the schools especially shouldn't       be endorsing cultural practices created by a character with the       beliefs and the background of Ron Karenga.              It is not easy to get a hold of the facts about the background       of the creator of Kwanzaa. In fact, it is nearly impossible. The       history of the founder of Kwanzaa has disappeared into an       Orwellian time warp. If you look up the name "Ron Karenga" on       any of the many newspaper data bases that are available these       days, you will read a glowing account of a deep-thinking       philosopher who comes across as a sort of jolly Father Christmas       for African-Americans.              You won't find any reference to murder or torture. Yet murder       was a specialty of US, the paramilitary organization that       Karenga ran in Los Angeles in the late 1960s.              As for torture, Karenga took that more personally. The accounts       of his personal role in a particularly sadistic episode of       brutality have been largely lost to history. The episode seems       to exist only on a few microfilmed pages of the Los Angeles       Times. It took two days of research and phone calls to track       them down. Here is an excerpt from an article headlined "Woman       describes two days of torture" on the May 1971 trial of Karenga       for torturing two dissident members of his group:              ''Deborah Jones, who once was given the Swahili title of an       African queen, said she and Gail Davis were whipped with an       electrical cord and beaten with a karate baton after being       ordered to remove their clothes. She testified that a hot       soldering iron was placed in Miss Davis' mouth and placed       against Miss Davis' face and that one of her own big toes was       tightened in a vise. Karenga, head of US, also put detergent and       running hoses in their mouths, she said."              Karenga was convicted and served more than three years in a       state prison.              This was not an isolated incident. In 1967, Karenga was accused       of having his thugs beat up a student who asked him an       impertinent question at a college forum. In 1969, US got       involved in a struggle with the Black Panthers for control of              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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