 - Last login: 4 hours agoLadyPredator
- Lady Predator is a 56 year old married woman from Lexington, North Carolina, USA.
- Likes 376 pages, 10 videos • 37 fans • Received 15 reviews
- Member since Jul 15, 2007
Just a big kid in an old ladies body. I spend way too much time on the internet.
Favorites » Her african-americans pages

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Vanishing American: Its everywhere
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Oct 31, 2007 7:25am
2 reviews
african-americans
http://vanishingamerican.blogspot.com/2007/10/its-everywhere.html
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The following article was brought to my attention thanks to blogger Matt:
University to students: 'All whites are racist'
A mandatory University of Delaware program requires residence hall students to acknowledge that "all whites are racist" and offers them "treatment" for any incorrect attitudes regarding class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality they might hold upon entering the school, according to a civil rights group.''
The civil rights group quoted in the article is the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, or (FIRE), and their news release on the story is here:
Referring to the mandatory re-education program, the 'residence life education program', FIRE says
The University of Delaware's residence life education program is a grave intrusion into students' private beliefs," FIRE President Greg Lukianoff said. "The university has decided that it is not enough to expose its students to the values it considers important; instead, it must coerce its students into accepting those values as their own. At a public university like Delaware, this is both unconscionable and unconstitutional."
The university's views are forced on students through a comprehensive manipulation of the residence hall environment, from mandatory training sessions to "sustainability" door decorations. Students living in the university's eight housing complexes are required to attend training sessions, floor meetings, and one-on-one meetings with their Resident Assistants (RAs). The RAs who facilitate these meetings have received their own intensive training from the university, including a "diversity facilitation training" session at which RAs were taught, among other things, that "[a] racist is one who is both privileged and socialized on the basis of race by a white supremacist (racist) system. The term applies to all white people (i.e., people of European descent) living in the United States, regardless of class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality."
I wonder if some thought I was exaggerating for rhetorical effect when I said at various times. that the PC commissars maintain that 'all whites are racists', with no exceptions. The quote above spells it out: all those of European descent, regardless of 'class, gender, religion, culture, or sexuality' are racists. And since these same leftists believe that to be a 'racist' is to be a vile person, worthy of losing the right to free speech, or livelihood, this kind of blanket condemnation should be distressing to all European-descended people.

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Issues &Views: MY VERSION - Commentary of September 10, 2006
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Aug 13, 2007 10:25am
2 reviews
african-americans, censorship, free-speech, thought-police, revjimsutter
http://www.issues-views.com/index.php/sect/2007/article/3012
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Over the years, no prominent figures, be they pundits or politicians, have dared speak out in defense of free speech rights for people trapped by warped European laws, who have been declared public pariahs. These outcasts are prosecuted for writing and/or speaking in opposition to certain historical "facts," especially details related to the Holocaust.
Such dissidents are fined and often jailed for their persistence in making known their points of view. [See I&V articles: "Europe's hypocrites and liars," "Europe censors itself," "Intolerant laws," and "Pernicious 'hate crime' laws."]
Now, years late in reporting on atrocious abuses to civil liberties by European courts, comes the Weekly Standard magazine, backed by the American Enterprise Institute. On the AEI website we find a revised version of an April 10, 2006 Weekly Standard article, "Illiberal Europe," in which writer Gerald Alexander lays out the decades-long story of the growth of European censorship laws, beginning in the 1970s. Citing especially the laws that "create official accounts of history," he claims that, "Europeans of all political stripes should want to seize this opportunity to reverse the most dangerously illiberal trend in the world's advanced democracies."
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