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The White Tree

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-22 14:52 ID:P0OIWSPT

I'm sure everyone has heard about this on the news. These white kids at school decided that only white people can sit underneath this tree at school. So, someone who was new to the school sat down underneath the tree, and he just so happen to be black. The white kids beat up this black kid. After that, all the black kids decided to sit under the tree. The white kids then brought guns to school, and the black kids beat them up. So, the black kids got charged with MURDER for taking GUNS from these white kids. WTf? And guess what. For bringing GUNS to school, the white kids got charged with...NOTHING. Racist much?

Also, The sagging your pants law. This law of sagging your pants has been passed in a few states. They know black people don't read or vote..so it's one step closer to their main goal of showing a form of slavery. they wont call it slavery, but another word.

Fellow black people, please don't let this happen. They are aiming the laws towards us, in a hidden manner. Pass the word.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-22 20:30 ID:zUGdzNWf

Wow, I am saddened to learn that people are just barely learning about the Jena 6 (referring to the 6 black high schoolers who were put in jail) because this happened quite awhile ago.


"On Thursday, August 31, 2006, a small group of black students asked if they could sit under a tree on the traditionally white side of the Jena High School square. [They felt it necessary to ASK. What does that say?] • The students were informed by the Vice Principal that they could sit wherever they pleased. • The following day, September 1, 2006, three nooses were found hanging from the tree in question. Two of the nooses were black and one was gold: the Jena High School colors. • On Tuesday night, September 5, 2006, a group of black parents convened at the L&A Missionary Baptist Church in Jena to discuss their response to what they considered a hate crime and an act of intimidation. [No laws were broken by hanging these nooses, nor should we have laws for motive instead of action. But it certainly fell under the school disciplinary category.] • When black students staged an impromptu protest under the tree on Wednesday, September 6, 2006, a school assembly was hastily convened. Flanked by police officers, District Attorney Reed Walters warned black students that additional unrest would be treated as a criminal matter. According to multiple witnesses, Walters warned the black student protestors that, “I can make your lives disappear with a stroke of my pen.” This was widely interpreted as a reference to the filing of charges carrying a maximum sentence of life in prison. [An assembly basically convened to tell the black students to “simmah down, boy.”] • On Thursday, September 7th, police officers patrolled the halls of Jena High School and on Friday, September 8th, the school was placed on full lockdown. Most students, black and white, either stayed home, or were picked up by parents shortly after the lockdown was imposed. The Jena Times suggested that black parents were to blame for the unrest at the school because their September 5th gathering had attracted media attention. [What would you do if your child was threatened?] • Principal Scott Windham recommended to an expulsion hearing committee that the three white boys responsible for hanging the nooses in the tree should be expelled from school. [Very wise.] • On Thursday September 7, 2006, asserting that the noose were merely a silly prank inspired by a hanging scene in the television min-series ‘Lonesome Dove’, the committee opted for a few days of in-school suspension. The names of the three students were not released to the public for reasons of confidentiality. [Teenage boys watch MTV, not Hallmark channel mini-series. Give me a freaking break.] • According to press accounts, on September 10, 2006, several dozen black parents attempted to address a meeting of the school board but were refused an opportunity to speak. • At a second September meeting of the school board, September 18, 2006, a representative of the black families was allowed to give a five-minute statement, but school board refused to discuss the “noose issue” because the matter had been fully addressed and resolved. • Although few major disciplinary issues emerged during the fall semester at Jena High School, there is strong evidence that several black male students remained unusually agitated throughout the semester and that disciplinary referrals on these students spiked sharply. • On Thursday, November 30, 2006, the academic wing of the Jena High School was largely destroyed by a massive fire. Officials strongly suspect arson. • Throughout the following weekend, Jena was engulfed by a wave of racially tinged violence. • In one incident, a black student was assaulted by a white adult as he entered a predominantly white partly held at the Fair Barn (a large metal building reserved for social events). After being struck in the face without warning, the young black student was assaulted by white students wielding beer bottles and was punched and kicked before adults broke up the fight. It has been reported that the white assailant who threw the first punch was subsequently charged with simple battery (a misdemeanor), but there is no documentary evidence that anyone was charged. • In a second major incident, a white high school graduate who had been involved in the assault the night before pulled a pump-action shotgun on three black high school students as they exited the Gotta-Go, a local convenience store. After a brief struggle for possession of the firearm, the black students exited the scene with the weapon. [According to Mother Jones, the black students were charged with aggravated battery and theft.] • The Jena Times has reported that, in light of these racially-tinged incidents, several high school teachers begged school administrators to postpone the resumption of classes until the wave of hysteria had dissipated. This request was ignored and classes resumed the morning of Monday, December 4, 2006. • Shortly after the lunch hour of Monday, December 4, 2006, a fight between a white student and a black student reportedly ended with the white student [Justin Barker, later arrested for having a rifle with 13 bullets in his truck in the school parking lot.] being knocked to the floor. Several black students reportedly attacked the white student as he lay unconscious. Because the incident took place in a crowded area and was over in a matter of seconds eye witness accounts vary widely. Written statements from students closest to the scene (in space and time) suggest that the incident was sparked by an angry exchange in the gymnasium moments before in which the black student assaulted at the Fair Barn was taunted for having his “ass whipped”. • The victim of the attack is close friends of the boys who have admitted to hanging the nooses in September of 2006. • Within an hour of the fight, six black students were arrested and charged with aggravated battery. [According to the Chicago Trib it was originally “attempted second-degree murder and other offenses, for which they could face a maximum of 100 years in prison if convicted.“] According to The Jena Times, at least a dozen teachers subsequently threatened a “sick-out” if discipline was not restored to the school. According to the Alexandria Town Talk, District Attorney Reed Walters responded to the teacher’s threat by upping the charges on the six boys to attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit second-degree murder—charges carrying a maximum sentence of life in prison"

And yes that is copied and pasted.

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