• Re: Ooops!

    From David Hartung@21:1/5 to All on Sat Oct 30 18:46:34 2021
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic
    XPost: alt.politics, alt.politics.trump, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats, alt.abortion, alt.recovery.catholicism
    XPost: soc.women

    P+Barker wrote

    How many "colored" people are right wing?


    Niggers defeated Trump in November and now he's gone crazy because his next interaction with one will be in his prison cell with a black dick up his ass.

    Rightists like shooting up black churches and burning them to the ground.

    Dylann Storm Roof[1] (born April 3, 1994) is an American white supremacist, neo-Nazi and mass murderer convicted for perpetrating the Charleston church shooting on June 17, 2015, in the U.S. state of South Carolina.[2][3] During
    a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Roof killed nine people, all African Americans, including senior pastor and state senator Clementa C. Pinckney, and injured one other person. After several people identified Roof as the main suspect, he became the center of a manhunt that ended the morning after the shooting with his arrest in Shelby, North
    Carolina. He later confessed that he committed the shooting in hopes of igniting a race war.[4] Roof's actions in Charleston have been widely
    described as domestic terrorism.[5]

    Three days after the shooting, a website titled The Last Rhodesian was discovered and later confirmed by officials to be owned by Roof. The website contained photos of Roof posing with symbols of white supremacy and neo- Nazism, along with a manifesto in which he outlined his views toward black people, among other peoples. He also claimed in the manifesto to have
    developed his white supremacist views after reading about the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin and black-on-white crime.

    On December 15, 2016, Roof was convicted in federal court of all 33 federal charges (including hate crimes) against him stemming from the shooting; on January 11, 2017, he was sentenced to death for those crimes.[6] On March 31, 2017, Roof agreed to plead guilty in South Carolina state court to all state charges pending against him—nine counts of murder, three counts of attempted murder, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony—to
    avoid a second death sentence. In return, he accepted a sentence of life in prison without parole.[7] On April 10, 2017, Roof was sentenced to nine consecutive sentences of life without parole after formally pleading guilty
    to state murder charges.[8][9][10]

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