You know,you read stories about selfless people helping blacks and as a reward,getting killed,robbed or raped(or all three)and you just shake your head. Opening yourself up to the risk of attack by assisting minorities is not laudable,because the priest is now unable to help ANYONE--thanks to another sociopathic black murderer--who killed the priest as easily as if he were blowing his nose.
And both actions are as insignificant--in the black's mind--as the other.
Long ago I was driving up a winding mountain road in the dark to watch the sunrise from the top of the 10,000 foot plus peak. Alongside the road I saw a car with its flashers on. I stopped and asked if the driver had car trouble--he said yes and wanted a ride. I promised to stop on my way down the mountain and give him a lift into the city. Well, after the sunrise I started back down and stopped at the broken down car. Now in the daylight I could see that the driver was black. I knew enough even back then to be wary of blacks, but I had given my word so let him get in. Being fearful of what he might do, I drove at racing speeds (I had graduated from a professional racing school) around the hairpin corners and hit over 85 on the short straights. I figured he would be smart enough to know if he knifed me that we would both die. Well, I got back to the city and drove him to his apartment. He thanked me profusely and tried to pay me--which I refused. I might have done a dumb thing, but a promise is a promise to me. The only other hitchhiker I ever picked up was an American Indian girl. I thought that was safe but more recently I have read about a young girl who killed a fisherman to steal his truck. So the smart thing is never pick up strangers as the old Prestone ad said.
If subsequent news stories are correct, the pastor's killer was Dylan Arrington, a white man, one of four escapees (three white, one black) from a jail or "Detention Center" in Raymond, Mississippi. He was subsequently killed in a standoff with police. Still, Derbyshire's lifesaving rules should never be ignored.
The link clearly states the name of the suspect: Dylan Arrington, an escapee.
It was not difficult to find out that he's white, and also now dead:
"Hinds County escapee Dylan Arrington dead following police standoff" https://clarionledger.com/story/news/2023/04/26/dylan-arrington-mississippi-jail-escapee-shot-and-killed-police-standoff/70154060007/
bLACKS WANTED TO "GET" CAROLYN BRYANT DONHAM IN THE EMMETT TILL CASE--BUT NEVER DID. SHE DIED TUESDAY AT 88--FRUSTRATING CURRENT nEGRO GROUPS
Woman whose accusation led to the lynching of Emmett Till has died at 88, coroner says By Dianne Gallagher, Sara Smart and Emma Tucker, CNN
— Carolyn Bryant Donham, the White woman whose accusation led to the 1955 lynching of Black teen Emmett Till in Mississippi – and whose role in the brutal death was reconsidered by a grand jury as recently as last year – has died in Louisiana, the Calcasieu Parish coroner’s office confirmed to CNN.
Donham, 88, died Tuesday in Westlake, according to a fact of death letter from the coroner
Malik Shabazz, with Black Lawyers for Justice, said in a statement Thursday that Donham’s legacy “will be one of dishonesty and injustice.”
(GRA:No injustice--in those days blacks weren't supposed to go near White women--and White men protected their wives.)
“Carolyn Bryant’s death brings a conclusion to a painful chapter for the Emmett Till family and for Black peoples in America. The tragic part about Bryant’s death was that she was never held accountable for her role in the death of young Emmett Till, who is the martyr for the Civil Rights Movement,” the statement reads.
(GRA:Aren't they all?)
In August 1955, 14-year-old Emmett was beaten and shot to death after he allegedly whistled at Bryant – now Donham – in Money, Mississippi.
Emmett Louis Till, 14, with his mother, Mamie Bradley, at home in Chicago. Emmett Louis Till, 14, with his mother, Mamie Bradley, at home in Chicago. Later, her husband, Roy Bryant, and J.W. Milam, took Emmett from his bed and ordered him into the back of a pickup truck and beat him before shooting him in the head and tossing his body into the Tallahatchie River. They were both acquitted of murder by an all-White jury following a trial in which Carolyn Bryant testified that Emmett grabbed and verbally threatened her.
Milam, who died in 1980, and Bryant, who died in 1994, admitted to the killing in a 1956 interview with Look magazine.
In 2007, a Mississippi grand jury declined to indict Donham on any charges.
Donham testified in 1955 that Emmett grabbed her hand and waist and propositioned her, saying he had been with “White women before.” But years later, when professor Timothy Tyson raised that trial testimony in a 2008 interview with Donham, he claimed she told him, “That part’s not true.”
The interview was included in Tyson’s book, “The Blood of Emmett Till.”
In a statement after Donham’s death, Tyson said: “68 years ago, there was the unspeakable murder of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old Black boy from Chicago. It has comforted America to see this as a story about monsters, her one of them. But the truth is what was unspeakable was the American social order that did nothing about Emmett Till or thousands more like him.”
The prospect that the woman at the center of Emmett’s case had recanted her testimony – which the US Justice Department said in a memo would contradict statements she made during the state trial in 1955 and later to the FBI – prompted calls for authorities to reopen the investigation.
The DOJ, which had already re-examined and closed the case in 2007, reopened the probe into Emmett’s killing in 2018. But the case was closed in December 2021 after the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division concluded it could not prove Donham had lied. When questioned directly, Donham adamantly denied to investigators that she had recanted her testimony.
In August 2022, a Leflore County, Mississippi, grand jury declined to indict Donham, deciding there was insufficient evidence to indict her on charges of kidnapping and manslaughter, according to a statement from District Attorney Dewayne Richardson.
GRA:So she told the truth,even after years of constant pressure by black groups,she was never indicted.Take THAT,lying blacks.
You know,you read stories about selfless people helping blacks and as a reward,getting killed,robbed or raped(or all three)and you just shake your head. Opening yourself up to the risk of attack by assisting minorities is not laudable,because the priest is now unable to help ANYONE--thanks to another sociopathic black murderer--who killed the priest as easily as if he were blowing his nose.
ReplyDeleteAnd both actions are as insignificant--in the black's mind--as the other.
--GRA
Long ago I was driving up a winding mountain road in the dark to watch the sunrise from the top of the 10,000 foot plus peak. Alongside the road I saw a car with its flashers on. I stopped and asked if the driver had car trouble--he said yes and wanted a ride. I promised to stop on my way down the mountain and give him a lift into the city. Well, after the sunrise I started back down and stopped at the broken down car. Now in the daylight I could see that the driver was black. I knew enough even back then to be wary of blacks, but I had given my word so let him get in. Being fearful of what he might do, I drove at racing speeds (I had graduated from a professional racing school) around the hairpin corners and hit over 85 on the short straights. I figured he would be smart enough to know if he knifed me that we would both die. Well, I got back to the city and drove him to his apartment. He thanked me profusely and tried to pay me--which I refused. I might have done a dumb thing, but a promise is a promise to me. The only other hitchhiker I ever picked up was an American Indian girl. I thought that was safe but more recently I have read about a young girl who killed a fisherman to steal his truck. So the smart thing is never pick up strangers as the old Prestone ad said.
ReplyDeleteThe GOP supports family values...Manson Family Values.
ReplyDeleteAgree.They shouldn't be out there hitchhiking either--even if law abiding.
ReplyDelete--GRA
If subsequent news stories are correct, the pastor's killer was Dylan Arrington, a white man, one of four escapees (three white, one black) from a jail or "Detention Center" in Raymond, Mississippi. He was subsequently killed in a standoff with police. Still, Derbyshire's lifesaving rules should never be ignored.
ReplyDeleteFYI
ReplyDeleteThe link clearly states the name of the suspect: Dylan Arrington, an escapee.
It was not difficult to find out that he's white, and also now dead:
"Hinds County escapee Dylan Arrington dead following police standoff"
https://clarionledger.com/story/news/2023/04/26/dylan-arrington-mississippi-jail-escapee-shot-and-killed-police-standoff/70154060007/
But yeah, I don't advise stopping for Blacks.
Or maybe anyone else either.
bLACKS WANTED TO "GET" CAROLYN BRYANT DONHAM IN THE EMMETT TILL CASE--BUT NEVER DID. SHE DIED TUESDAY AT 88--FRUSTRATING CURRENT nEGRO GROUPS
ReplyDeleteWoman whose accusation led to the lynching of Emmett Till has died at 88, coroner says
By Dianne Gallagher, Sara Smart and Emma Tucker, CNN
—
Carolyn Bryant Donham, the White woman whose accusation led to the 1955 lynching of Black teen Emmett Till in Mississippi – and whose role in the brutal death was reconsidered by a grand jury as recently as last year – has died in Louisiana, the Calcasieu Parish coroner’s office confirmed to CNN.
Donham, 88, died Tuesday in Westlake, according to a fact of death letter from the coroner
Malik Shabazz, with Black Lawyers for Justice, said in a statement Thursday that Donham’s legacy “will be one of dishonesty and injustice.”
(GRA:No injustice--in those days blacks weren't supposed to go near White women--and White men protected their wives.)
“Carolyn Bryant’s death brings a conclusion to a painful chapter for the Emmett Till family and for Black peoples in America. The tragic part about Bryant’s death was that she was never held accountable for her role in the death of young Emmett Till, who is the martyr for the Civil Rights Movement,” the statement reads.
(GRA:Aren't they all?)
In August 1955, 14-year-old Emmett was beaten and shot to death after he allegedly whistled at Bryant – now Donham – in Money, Mississippi.
Emmett Louis Till, 14, with his mother, Mamie Bradley, at home in Chicago.
Emmett Louis Till, 14, with his mother, Mamie Bradley, at home in Chicago.
Later, her husband, Roy Bryant, and J.W. Milam, took Emmett from his bed and ordered him into the back of a pickup truck and beat him before shooting him in the head and tossing his body into the Tallahatchie River. They were both acquitted of murder by an all-White jury following a trial in which Carolyn Bryant testified that Emmett grabbed and verbally threatened her.
Milam, who died in 1980, and Bryant, who died in 1994, admitted to the killing in a 1956 interview with Look magazine.
In 2007, a Mississippi grand jury declined to indict Donham on any charges.
Donham testified in 1955 that Emmett grabbed her hand and waist and propositioned her, saying he had been with “White women before.” But years later, when professor Timothy Tyson raised that trial testimony in a 2008 interview with Donham, he claimed she told him, “That part’s not true.”
The interview was included in Tyson’s book, “The Blood of Emmett Till.”
In a statement after Donham’s death, Tyson said: “68 years ago, there was the unspeakable murder of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old Black boy from Chicago. It has comforted America to see this as a story about monsters, her one of them. But the truth is what was unspeakable was the American social order that did nothing about Emmett Till or thousands more like him.”
The prospect that the woman at the center of Emmett’s case had recanted her testimony – which the US Justice Department said in a memo would contradict statements she made during the state trial in 1955 and later to the FBI – prompted calls for authorities to reopen the investigation.
The DOJ, which had already re-examined and closed the case in 2007, reopened the probe into Emmett’s killing in 2018. But the case was closed in December 2021 after the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division concluded it could not prove Donham had lied. When questioned directly, Donham adamantly denied to investigators that she had recanted her testimony.
In August 2022, a Leflore County, Mississippi, grand jury declined to indict Donham, deciding there was insufficient evidence to indict her on charges of kidnapping and manslaughter, according to a statement from District Attorney Dewayne Richardson.
GRA:So she told the truth,even after years of constant pressure by black groups,she was never indicted.Take THAT,lying blacks.
--GRA
"Derbyshire's lifesaving rules should never be ignored."
ReplyDeleteIndeed, Derbyshire his rules proven correct over and over. Much to the regret of many people, playing good samaritan.