1961 GOP GQP American Nazi Party leader George Rockwell

6/25/1961 #American #Nazi Party leader #George #Rockwell

listened to Malcolm X and MLK also meet the Rockwell.

#GOP #GQP  George Wallace wanted Segregation Separation forever NOT segregation.

Anita Hill testifying to sexual harassment from former boss Clarence Thomas during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the nomination of Thomas to the Supreme Court

If you are looking for something to stream this weekend, you could do worse than to watch the full, riveting C-SPAN footage of the Hill-Thomas hearings, in which, for the first time in American history, the august walls of the Senate—and a watching nation—absorbed public talk of things like oral sex and pornography and male entitlement, so shocking then, so drearily familiar now.

1991 Hill said that at one point Thomas got a can of Coke and asked who had put “pubic hair” on it.

JOE BIDEN DIDN’T BELIEVE HER

ALABAMA
PEOPLE ARE  DISGUSTING!

 

A life marked by hate, violence George Wallace gave comfort to racists.
His kind of venomous rhetoric incited the Ku Klux Klansmen who killed four little girls in the 1963 bombing of Birmingham’s Sixteenth Street Baptist Church.

 

George Wallace Stood in a Doorway at the University of Alabama

The Alabama governor famously protested the integration of the state university by two black students.

In January of 1963, following his election as Governor of Alabama, George Wallace famously stated in his inaugural address: “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/aug/27/george-lincoln-rockwell-american-nazi-party-alt-right-charlottesville

https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/18/politics/peggy-wallace-kennedy-bash-intv/index.html

1967 A sniper shot and killed American Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell

IF GERMANY CAN TEACH ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST

THEY NEED TO TEACH ABOUT THIS IN AMERICA 

IT’S NOT THAT DIFFICULT

 

President John F. Kennedy called for 100 troops from the Alabama National Guard to assist federal officials. Wallace chose to step down rather than incite violence.

The summer of 1963 was a tense time in this nation’s history. The day after Wallace’s standoff, civil rights leader Medgar Evers was assassinated in Jackson, Miss. Violence also struck in Cambridge, Md., and Danville, Va., that June.

WHAT IS OFFENSIVE NOW IN 2022 – TEACH IN CONTEXT