Two sisters who are students at Richmond High School, Kami and Barbie Baker, describe at a school meetings the abuse of White minority in the schools by the non-White majority.
Horrible Gang Rape Exposes Our Own Responsibility for Our Children
Last Friday, October 23, a fifteen-year-old white girl—like millions of other girls around the country—got dressed up to attend a high school dance. After partying and hanging out with her friends, she suddenly disappeared. Assuming that she was in the bathroom or taking a walk around campus, her friends continued to dance and enjoy their night away from home. But the girl never came back to the dance.
Outside the school, a small group of Mexicans was hanging out, drinking liquor. Within minutes they began to attack her. After tearing off her prom jewelry, the Mexicans punched and kicked the young girl until she stopped resisting. Then, for two-and-a-half hours, they took turns raping her, inviting their friends to join in. By the end of the attack, at least five men had raped her before leaving her lying unconscious in a gravel parking lot across the street from her school.
Ultimately, this poor young girl was not just the victim of the brutal gang of Mexicans who held her to the pavement, beat and raped her: she is also our victim, the victim of you and me. Because too many of our people chose to tolerate a multiracial society, this young girl had to endure a savage and ruthless attack whose horrors we can scarcely imagine. Because we have not done everything we can to counter interracial violence against our people, this girl had to suffer indescribable tortures at the hands of a non-white gang.
Because we as a community are responsible for the safety and well-being of our people—especially for the safety and well-being of our children—we have let down this little girl. Like the large group, including a couple of Whites who watched the attack but were afraid to intervene to protect her, we let her down. We let down this girl and we have let down millions of young White people, who are subjected every day to taunts and harassment at a high percentage of non-white schools. We let down this girl, who every day had to walk the dangerous streets of suburban San Francisco. Because this girl was one of our people—a young white girl—she was our responsibility; it was our duty to protect her and ensure that she lived a long, healthy, and productive life for her people. And we let her down.
Every once in a while, a terrible crime occurs that has the power to conjure the deep-rising anger of our people. This is one such case. We must stand up against the multicultural system that, at its core, is responsible for this heinous attack. In the face of this unspeakable crime, we must again renew ourselves in the fight against our people’s enemies. As honorable white men and women, it is the only path available to us. In honor of this poor fifteen-year-old girl, I encourage you—just as I do myself—to now rededicate ourselves to this rewarding and absolutely crucial struggle for our heritage, our freedom , and even the very life of our people. — www.davidduke.com






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