By “W”
monday, july 3, 2023 at 04:35:16 p.m. edt
yes, had she been a black lesbian, her career could have skyrocketed
she might not be just vice president, but prez-ze-dent of the usa.
N.S.: So that’s what it takes—a retired, 84-year-old feminist—to say the obvious. Meanwhile,
“the shocking statements were documented by [Stephanie] Narrow, a doctoral student who attended the friday plenary session where Banner spoke.
“She wrote that the event ‘took a turn’ after Banner – who she did not initially name – shared her extremely controversial opinions.
“‘a White senior scholar at the 50th anniversary plenary VERY publicly, and unapologetically, said that she wished she was black so her professional life would be easier,’ Narrow tweeted out friday night.
“the student said that the professor – who has a ph.d. from Columbia university – was shunned for the comments which caused an uproar.
“‘She was immediately called out for her blatantly racist remarks, and refused to apologize, let alone listen, to the reason why her remarks were horrifying wrong.’
“Narrow went on to say that the ‘room was shaken,’ calling the feeling that rippled through the auditorium ‘palpable.’
“the student did not name Banner as the professor who had made the startling remarks until several hours later, but stated she had confirmed Banner’s identity.
“another crowd member, Paul Renfro of florida state university, described the situation by saying that ‘s**t went absolutely off the rails.’
“‘a lot of folks (myself included) walked out due to a dreadfully racist comment made by one of the presenters,’ Renfro tweeted on June 30.
“‘She was reprimanded by several audience members, and quite a few attendees walked out,’ he said.”…
The only White man whom Hope Sloop quoted in her “thing” was racist, fake historian Paul Renfro, an assistant professor at florida state university. Renfro is the author of the fake history book, stranger danger: family values, childhood, and the American carceral state, published in 2020 by the once-great oxford university press.
To get a taste of what Renfro does to history, I found a 2019 “thing’ he produced on the so-called atlanta child murders, a series of killings of blacks almost all certainly by other blacks, with the decedents from seven to 27 years of age, between circa 1979 and 1981 (actually there were many more decedents, and the deaths did not end in 1981, but the authorities stopped counting). While the deaths were real, they were not all murders, and the whole business was turned into a hoax by hysterical, greedy black supremacists and their White allies. Many of the dead had been prostitutes who likely died during sex acts in which their clients engaged in manual strangulation meant to increase sexual pleasure, which went too far. (The prostitution angle was aggressively covered up. It was exposed by kentucky lawman Chet Dettlinger, who was brought in as a consultant to try and “solve” the “murders,” in his 1984 book, ghosted by Jeff Prugh, The List.) One or two of the deceased’s mothers exploited the situation, in order to get public agencies and private organizations and individuals to raise a fund, supposedly for all of the victims’ families, all of which money the one or two mothers stole.
At the time, the black supremacists leading the hoax—including leading lawmen, like later atlanta police chief Louis Graham, insisted that the killings had all been carried out by the Ku Klux Klan. Graham was given a fund with $50,000 to “solve” the murders. The money, which Graham never accounted for, all disappeared.
The black supremacist hoaxers, like Graham, insisted that Klansmen were driving around black neighborhoods unmolested, scooping up, kidnapping, and murdering black children. But when White fbi agents drove around such neighborhoods, they found it impossible to do so in daylight, without drawing attention from racist blacks, who would jump up from their porches, at the sight of White people.
The truth was that the deaths—both through murders and accidental prostitution killings—were the product of black rule, which entailed carte blanche for black criminals, and were overwhelmingly (if not necessarily entirely) committed by many different blacks. (Any deaths caused by Whites were almost certainly accidental, and during paid acts of prostitution.)
Instead of dispelling the hoax of the “atlanta youth/child murders,” in the 2019 “thing” Paul Renfro wrote (see below) for the new Georgia encyclopedia, Renfro acts as an apologist for the black supremacists, and blocks out all of the truth.
“atlanta youth murders”
“from 1979 through 1981, a wave of kidnappings and murders terrorized Atlanta’s economically marginalized African American population.
“at least twenty-nine atlantans between the ages of seven and twenty-seven (almost all male) were abducted and slain across a twenty-two-month period. The tragedies—which came to be known as the atlanta youth murders or, alternatively, the atlanta child murders—attracted national and international attention, as investigators struggled to solve the cases and placate the city’s increasingly restless poor and working-class black communities. the racial and class tensions surrounding the murders reflected not only the interracial animosities that had shaped Jim Crow Georgia; they also revealed longstanding intraracial class divides between black atlantans.
“the national media seized upon the atlanta saga as the death toll continued to climb in the fall of 1980. that october, an explosion at the gate city day nursery in west atlanta claimed the lives of five people, including four black children. though investigators attributed the blast to an overheated boiler, many observers remained unconvinced that it was an accident. given the broader political climate of intensifying anti-Black racism [N.S.: This is a blood libel]—marked by a resurgent White power movement—many poor and working-class african Americans in the city worried that a White supremacist individual or organization might be responsible for the killings. several observers, including the late novelist Toni Cade Bambara, drew parallels between the gate city tragedy and the 1963 sixteenth street Baptist church bombing—orchestrated by a splinter group of the Ku Klux Klan—which killed four african American girls. Others speculated that the central intelligence agency and centers for disease control (later centers for disease control and prevention) were executing the murders in the service of a broader eugenicist or exterminationist agenda, a notion that seemed more plausible in the wake of the tuskegee syphilis experiment.”
N.S.: There was no “tuskegee syphilis experiment.” That was yet another hoax which racist, fake historian Paul Renfro piggybacked onto. He is a perfect example of what I call the landfill of lies. He takes established lies, and adds new lies to them. Lies, on top of lies, on top of lies.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12259897/White-professor-refuses-apologize-saying-career-better-black.html
2 comments:
" White fbi agents drove around such neighborhoods, they found it impossible to do so in daylight, without drawing attention from racist blacks, who would jump up from their porches, at the sight of White people."
Correct. Almost 100 % of the time impossible for a whitey of any sort to enter a hostile negro area, not be spotted and ID'd as white, and have something unpleasant happen. From being given the finger, having someone throw something at your car, etc.
"N.S.: There was no 'tuskegee syphilis experiment.' That was yet another hoax"
A study and not an experiment. Almost all participants died from cancer or heart disease and generally lived rather long lives.
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