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Sean Gruber
February 27th, 2009, 07:10 PM
Niggers raped, tortured, and murdered Channon Christian (http://www.vdare.com/stix/071031_knoxville.htm) and Christopher Newsom (http://blog.vdare.com/archives/2008/05/15/channon-christian%E2%80%99s-ordeal-knoxville-horror-torture-testimony/). That atrocity is just the tip of the iceberg: [Here] (http://vnnforum.com/newthread.php?do=newthread&f=71) and [Here (pdf)] (http://www.colorofcrime.com/colorofcrime2005.pdf). Nigger crime is widespread - and often horrific: [Here (http://vdare.com/stix/090217_coulter.htm) (warning: article is by a jew - the truth is probably much worse than he says)].

Who let the dogs out? Who loosed niggers on white society?

Answer: "Civil Rights". Civil rights is war on Whites.

But, who started "Civil Rights"?

Answer: the jew.

The jew virtually created the NAACP (http://www.greenvilleroad.info/index.php/viewEntry/00100/Another-View-of-the-NAACP----Part-Two), for example. The jew - through the ADL - pushed and pushes anti-White propaganda at White children, and commits many other crimes against us. For many decades, the jew worked hard to darken America, to turn it into a hellhole of nigger crime and violence, to see our cities destroyed, our women raped and polluted, to commit demographic genocide against us.

And the jew continues to do so in the name of "Civil Rights".

HERE (http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2009/feb/17/knoxs-voice-for-racial-justice/) is a "tip of the iceberg" example, one big jew in Knoxville.

In Channon and Chris's hometown, he "keeps fighting to end discrimination", in other words, he keeps fighting for nigger-worship and Gentile White self-hatred.

Knoxville's voice for racial justice
Attorney keeps fighting to end discrimination

By Jessie Pounds
Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Arnold G. Cohen is one of 12 East Tennessee residents who was honored on Inauguration Day.

Call it the "Arnold Cohen memo." For all those who "missed" the civil-rights movement, it's not too late to pitch in.

Cohen never marched to desegregate Knoxville's hospitals or theaters.

He never participated in a sit-in, despite coming of age in Knoxville at the same time as leaders of the sit-in movement, like Avon Rollins.

Nonetheless, in the past couple of decades, the downtown attorney has emerged as one of Knoxville's leading voices for racial justice. As a member of Knoxville's Jewish community, Cohen, 67, sees fighting discrimination on any basis as both a moral obligation and a strategic necessity.

"Anyone who is 'the other' is vulnerable," Cohen said.

By day, Cohen works from a Gay Street office scattered with yellow legal pads and lined with multicultural art. At night, he turns his lawyerly mind to an anti-discrimination agenda.

Currently, Cohen sits on the board of the Race Relations Center of East Tennessee and chairs the Knoxville Jewish Alliance Community Relations Committee; he's active in other groups as well.

He can't remember any epiphany that propelled him into this type of work, solely recollecting that his rabbi first sent him to cover for him at a conference of the social justice organization National Conference of Christians and Jews back in the early 1980s.

Since then, Cohen's journey has been a gradual process from involved, to very involved, to "go-to person" - with ties across Knoxville.

According to Bernie Rosenblatt, executive director of the Knoxville Jewish Alliance, Cohen's efforts have helped foster a stronger relationship between a variety of groups that could be discriminated against in Knoxville.

One of Cohen's roles has been quietly bringing up concerns about racism or discrimination with public leaders in Knoxville, instances he declined to discuss in specific detail.

Friends and colleagues say this is typical of Cohen's approach: speaking his mind, without grandstanding.

"He's diplomatic, but he is not reticent to call it like it is," said Rosenblatt.

Cohen's friend Gene Rosenburg added that while Cohen can be opinionated, he tends to work quietly - to the point of possibly being underappreciated in some circles.

"I'm not sure a lot of people in the Jewish community know how much he does as far as race relations," Rosenburg said.

Another major project Cohen has been involved in has been bringing anti-racism training to Knoxville, especially through the Race Relations Center's annual Undoing Racism workshops.

The workshops are designed to help participants not only to confront their own conceptions and biases around racial issues, but also to examine systemic, political and institutional forms of racism.

"Frankly, if you are not uncomfortable with it, it is not working," Cohen said.

His own self-examination led him to wonder why he didn't question the status quo during segregation. Though he doesn't feel guilty about missing out on the civil-rights demonstrations, he still wishes he could have been part of what he sees as the profound moral message of the movement.

"The so-called 'children' were showing the adults what to do," Cohen said. "That's what I regret not being a part of."

He pauses, then adds that though he missed the chance to take a stand as a youth, he still has the chance to teach his values by way of example to another generation.

"I've gained the self-satisfaction that I am on the right track," he said.

"I am really now thinking of my children and their children."

Jessie Pounds is a freelance contributor to the News Sentinel.

How many more Channon Christians and Christopher Newsoms will result from this jew's efforts at brainwashing? In Knoxville...or in your home town?

http://media.knoxnews.com/kns/content/img/photos/2009/02/16/021709bhm1_t220.jpg

http://www.jewishknoxville.org/display_image.aspx?ID=120133