white guilt has been promoted for political power by jews to the point
that the DOJ refuses to prosecute discrimination against whites.

A report issued today by the inspector general of the Department of
Justice shows the Civil Rights Division of one of the most powerful
organizations in the federal government has widespread hostility to
protecting the civil rights of whites.
The 258-page report, issued by the Justice Department Inspector
General Michael Horowitz, highlights deep ideological and political
divisions within the Civil Rights Division.
And it says many employees within this division of Attorney General
Eric Holder’s DOJ are hostile to the idea white Americans are
protected by the Voting Rights Act and even civil rights laws.
Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., was one of the key lawmakers to call for an
investigation of the handling of the New Black Panther Party voter
intimidation incident during the 2008 presidential election outside a
polling place in Philadelphia.
Four members of the NBPP were brought up on charges, but the DOJ
dropped them all.
“The report makes clear that the division has become a rat’s nest of
unacceptable and unprofessional actions, and even outright threats
against career attorneys and systemic mismanagement,” Wolf said in a
statement.
The report detailed two cases where the Voting Section of the Civil
Rights Division filed suit on behalf of white plaintiffs against
minority defendants, both of which were in the presidency George W.
Bush.
The first was in 2005, when civil action was filed against the
Noxubee
County, Miss., Democratic Election Committee, and its black chairman,
Ike Brown, alleging multiple violations of the Voting Rights Act.
The second was the case involving the NBPP incident at the voting
station in Philadelphia, filed in early 2009.
Intense ideological polarization within the Voting Section of the DOJ
Civil Rights Division was found in Horowitz report, including:
“Polarization within the Voting Section has been exacerbated by
another factor. In recent years a debate has arisen about whether
voting rights laws that were enacted in response to discrimination
against blacks and other minorities also should be used to challenge
allegedly improper voting practices that harm white voters. Views on
this question among many employees within the Voting Section were
sharply divergent and strongly held. Disputes were ignited when the
Division’s leadership decided to pursue particular cases or
investigations on behalf of white victims, and more recently when
Division leadership stated that it would focus on “traditional” civil
rights cases on behalf of racial or ethnic minorities who have been
the historical victims of discrimination.”
“In 2007, some career employees made offensive and racially charged
comments to and about a student intern who volunteered to assist the
trial team in the controversial Noxubee matter, which was the first
Section 2 case brought against minority defendants on behalf of white
voters. Division leadership reprimanded one career attorney and
counseled two others for this conduct. We also found that some Voting
Section employees criticized and mocked the trial team in e-mails to
each other at work, sometimes using inappropriate and intemperate
language.”
The continued polarization within the Voting Section also came into
focus during “brown bag” meetings between section personnel and Julie
Fernandes, who was Deputy Assistant Attorney General. During one
meeting about Section 2 enforcement, in September 2009, Fernandes
made
comments about Division leadership’s intention to prioritize
“traditional civil rights enforcement” on behalf of racial or ethnic
minorities. Some career staff interpreted her comments to signal that
division leadership had a blanket policy of not pursing Section 2
cases against black defendants or on behalf of white voters.
In an earlier interview WND conducted with former Department of
Justice attorney J. Christian Adams, it was made clear the DOJ
operates under a climate that is anything but race-neutral when it
comes to the application of civil rights law.
“There’s a hostility [in the Department of Justice] toward even
conceiving civil rights protect everybody,” Adams told WND in an
exclusive interview. “People in the Department of Justice are
philosophically opposed to this.”
Adams is a five-year veteran of the Department of Justice. He was a
key attorney in pursuing the New Black Panther voter intimidation
case, which he deemed “the simplest and most obvious violation of
federal law” he ever saw in his career.
He resigned from the DOJ in June of 2010 after the case was ordered
dismissed by his superiors.
When asked what will happen if the Department of Justice refuses to
step in and prosecute racially motivated attacks, Adams said, “If
Eric
Holder and the DOJ don’t do something about it, what do you think is
going to happen? Of course it’s going to get worse. They are enabling
lawless conduct and abandoning law-abiding citizens. That’s what
they’ve been doing since they were sworn in.
“They turned a blind eye to the thugs,” he said.
In Adams’ estimation – and his book, “Injustice: Exposing the Racial
Agenda of the Obama Justice Department,” offers compelling evidence
to
support his view – Mark Kappelhoff is against pursuing civil rights
violations when they apply to certain groups of people.
Adams said Kappelhoff, the chief of the Criminal Section of the Civil
Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, “doesn’t think
civil rights laws should be used in this fashion [to protect
whites].”
Kappelhoff supervises and manages DOJ attorneys involved in the
investigation and prosecution of federal criminal civil rights
violations, which include bias-motivated hate crimes.
Adams, who is now a practicing attorney in the Washington, D.C.,
area,
said of the Eric Holder-run Department of Justice, “It’s like
gangsters got a greenlight.”
Cherylyn Harley LeBon, co-chairman of Project 21, a leading voice of
black conservatives, said the 258-page report is a clarion call for a
change of culture within the DOJ.
“When the Justice Department had clear evidence of voter
intimidation,
Attorney General Eric Holder and his deputy, Thomas Perez, looked the
other way. They said they were not involved, but the investigation
shows that both were involved and pointedly chose not to fully
prosecute cases that did not fall into their politically correct
interpretation of the law,” said Lebon, a former senior counsel with
the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. “Unfortunately, it appears that
Holder is spending too much time impeding the implementation of
legitimate voter ID legislation in South Carolina and Texas instead
of
adequately combating blatant forms of harassment under his own roof!”
WND reported that during the 2012 election, some of the 2008 antics
by
the New Black Panthers were repeated.
New Black Panthers patrol polling location in 2008 carrying a
nightstick and blocking a doorway
The head of the controversial New Black Panther Party, Malik Zulu
Shabazz, had told WND’s Aaron Klein in September that his group would
again deploy outside voting booths – to prevent “intimidation against
our people,” he said – and sure enough, the New Black Panthers were
out in force.
Jackson, some may recall, was one of the two New Black Panther Party
members charged in what is widely considered the most egregious case
of voter intimidation in modern times, when he and “Minister King
Samir Shabazz” (aka Maurice Heath), the party’s Philadelphia leader,
were videotaped on Election Day 2008 wearing paramilitary uniforms,
carrying a nightstick and blocking a doorway to a polling location to
intimidate voters.
As WND reported, Samir Shabazz was also noteworthy for having said on
video: “You want freedom? You’re gonna have to kill some crackers!
You’re gonna have to kill some of their babies!”
New Black Panther Jerry Jackson at Philadelphia polling site (Photo:
Victor Fiorillo for The Philly Post)
Jackson was reported by Fox News as being seen during the 2012
election “outside a North Philadelphia voting site wearing the
group’s
trademark black beret, combat-style uniform and heavy boots. Fox News
confirmed he is a designated poll watcher.”
The 2008 dispute centered on two NBPP members accused of standing in
front of the entrance to a Philadelphia polling station in uniforms
that have been described as paramilitary, with one member wielding a
billy club.
According to complaints, both men standing in front of the polling
station pointed at voters and shouted racial slurs, using such
phrases
as “white devil” and, “You’re about to be ruled by the black man,
cracker.”
Read more at 
http://mobile.wnd.com/2013/03/new-report-doj-hostile-to-civil-rights-...

On Mar 14, 7:09 pm, Travis <[email protected]> wrote:
> Gov’t Wants Volunteers to Wear ‘White Guilt’
> Bracelets<http://www.prisonplanet.com/govt-wants-volunteers-to-wear-white-guilt...>
> ****
>
> **·         *** *
>
> *Aaron Dykes*
> Prison Planet.com
> March 13, 2013
>
> Has political-correctness gone too far?****
>
> In Wisconsin, volunteers in AmeriCorps are encouraged to cope with their
> “white 
> privilege”<http://cnsnews.com/news/article/wisconsin-s-vista-program-encourages-...>
> by
> wearing a white bracelet, while reminding themselves to examine their
> status in society and talking with ‘friends of color’ to encourage their
> transformation.****
>
> *CNS 
> News*<http://cnsnews.com/news/article/wisconsin-s-vista-program-encourages-...>
>  reports:****
> *Wisconsin’s VISTA Program Encourages Volunteers to Overcome White
> ‘Privilege’*****
>
> The Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI) wants its white VISTA
> volunteers who work with low-income, racially diverse public schools to
> examine the “privilege” their Caucasian race confers on them.****
>
> DPI devotes an entire Web page to “Power and Privilege,” including links to
> racial justice workshops and online tests where VISTA volunteers can “learn
> about your personal bias.”****
>
> One “diversity” document linked to DPI’s Web site suggests that white
> people “wear a white wristband as a reminder about your privilege, and as a
> personal commitment to explain why you wear the wristband.”****
>
> Read full 
> article<http://cnsnews.com/news/article/wisconsin-s-vista-program-encourages-...>
> ****
> Wisconsin Dept. of Public Instruction: Power and
> Privilege<https://sites.google.com/a/dpi.wi.gov/dpi-vista-project/resources-1/p...>
> ****
>
> The AmeriCorps VISTA volunteers are serving in schools that are culturally
> and racially diverse. Wisconsin schools are becoming increasingly diverse,
> therefore multiple opportunities for training are provided that help the
> volunteers better serve the schools and communities in which they are
> placed. This is one strand of information for this year’s 17 Wisconsin
> VISTA volunteers.****
>
> Here you will find a variety of resources for VISTAs about the topics of
> power and privilege. Understanding the implications of both are important
> for your work as VISTAs. Not only should you examine the kind of privilege
> you bring to your site but also how power is distributed among the
> families, community members, and students you work with. The VISTA project
> encourages VISTAs to think about power and privilege in the context of
> race, gender, socio-economic status, to name only a few. Certainly what
> follows is not an exhaustive list of resources, but it should offer some
> good information and places to begin learning. Suggestions for material or
> links to add to this page are welcome! *>>> View recommended resources and
> seminars*<https://sites.google.com/a/dpi.wi.gov/dpi-vista-project/resources-1/p...>
> ****
>
> From the Beyond Diversity Resource
> Center<https://docs.google.com/a/mrc.org/viewer?a=v&pid=sites&srcid=ZHBpLndp...>
> :****
>
> [image: Govt Wants Volunteers to Wear White Guilt Bracelets coping with
> white privilege]****
>
> Document titled “Addressing Racial Privilege: A Mental Model for White
> Anti-Racists” Gives Strategies on How to Cope With White Guilt.****
>
> This article was posted: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 at 7:38 pm****
>
> ** **
>
>  image001.jpg
> 100KViewDownload

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