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To: TigerClaws

white Serbian man in his car with his wife at his side had his head smashed in with hammers because of all the race baiting.
= = = = = = = = = = = = =
Maybe the ‘reason’ they aren’t calling it a ‘hate crime’ is because she was unscathed.
Of course, had she been raped, brutalized then beaten to death with a hammer, it would have been COMPLETELY swept into the gutter.

If these TV stations and radio outlets and press would GO HOME, I am sure this BS would end in a day or two.

In an ‘on scene’ interview one of the protesters(??) declared ‘we will come out here as long as needed’.

Bet your Bippie by the time ‘they’ figure the cameras and public quit ‘caring’, they will go home...

Kind of like CNN’s old coverage of ‘riots’ in mid east cities against the “USofA” where they would show the riot police, protestors, stone throwers etc and declare the ‘whole country’ was up in arms and go 3 blocks from the Embassy and the city was in ‘business as usual’.

Back in the early 60’s the ‘student protestors’ in Yokosuka Japan would gather at the main gate of the Naval Base and try to ‘disrupt’ day to day business.

The Base CO had his fill of it and said if traffic was going to continue to be blocked and people harassed coming and going, the ENTIRE TOWN would be placed Off Limits.

Funny how all of a sudden a ‘deal’ was worked out that the protestors were allowed to set up ‘camp’ at one of the 3 side by side gates at the main entrance.

The shipyard workers (Japanese) and bar owners etc in Yokosuka wanted ‘no part’ of any disruption to the business of relieving us young sailors of our money......


20 posted on 12/02/2014 9:45:25 PM PST by xrmusn ((6/98) Would love to buy BO for what he is worth, then sell him for what he thinks he is worth.)
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To: xrmusn

“Funny how all of a sudden a ‘deal’ was worked out that the protestors were allowed to set up ‘camp’ at one of the 3 side by side gates at the main entrance.

The shipyard workers (Japanese) and bar owners etc in Yokosuka wanted ‘no part’ of any disruption to the business of relieving us young sailors of our money......”

Kind of like me doing nearly all my Christmas shopping online, which I finished almost entirely before Black Friday, a day I stay home and continue to give thanks, rather than be bait for the feral. Businesses all across the U.S. will suffer from this. A point was driven home when I took a CCW class. If you shoot someone outside of your home in self defense you can plan on your life being pretty much over and destroyed by legal fees. I’ll shop online and save my bullets for home. No shopping outside home except for the few grocery store trips I have to make, which will most likely now be at the Hispanic market a block away. I don’t see many blacks there.


29 posted on 12/02/2014 10:41:29 PM PST by pops88 (Geek chick standing with Breitbart for truth)
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To: xrmusn

I lived in the Yokosuka Naval Base for several years when I was a kid between the ages of 8 and 11 (1967 - 1970)

Suffice to say that for an eight year old gaijin kid, Japan was a very strange place. Odd toilets that you had to squat over...open sewers...the smell of fish...large groups of people walking around wearing face masks, pachinko ball machines...restaurants with bizarre plastic food in the front windows...

But one of the oddest things to me was that whenever an aircraft carrier came into port, there would be these HUGE anti-nuclear weapon demonstrations outside the base.

At around 9:00 AM several hundred Japanese riot police would assemble in a field near my house, then on cue shortly thereafter, the crowds would assemble outside the fence near the main gate with banners and megaphones...I seem to remember large groups, but it might have only been 500 or even a thousand. They would get vocal and demonstrate for a while, then again, on cue, some of them would go over and begin climbing the fence. The fire trucks inside the base parked nearby would begin spraying the demonstrators on the fence with fire hoses, knocking them off, then they would begin spraying the other demonstrators through the fence.

Shortly thereafter, the demonstrators would disperse, the area would be quickly cleaned up, and when the water evaporated, there was no indication that anything had transpired.

When I think of it now, it seemed like one big, huge, ritualized kabuki dance. Everyone knew their roles on both sides, the whole thing went down like clockwork, and then it was over until the next time.

I remember my brother and I going over and talking to a bunch of the Japanese riot police, and inviting them back to our house after the demonstration was over. We went into the cabinets and opened up a bunch of cans of stuff and poured them into bowls. I recall that we had maybe ten bowls of things like chick peas, corn, whatever.

My mom came home, and politely told the Japanese guys to leave, which they did. I have no idea what my mother thought of that. I think she must have thought we were just crazy.


42 posted on 12/03/2014 2:42:01 AM PST by rlmorel (The Media's Principles: Conflict must exist. Doesn't exist? Create it. Exists? Exacerbate it.)
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