Head of State Police forced to resign - reason RACISM on his part
Dept. Of corrections now under investigation - recruiting for KKK and
WAR right on the premises, Black Guards received DEATH THREATS from
WHITE GUARDS.
head of the DEPT of corrections tied in to WAR.
To complain, ends the career of the complainer as the ones that review
the complaints have been tied in to the KKK,
Law suites for above have been filed by the guards who showed proof on
TV NEWS last night.
DOJ threatening to step in and take over the Overseeing of the Prison
system in NJ
Who is supplying the LAWYERS To the black Guards?
RLA bomblasted that group many times here. ADL that is the only ones
willing to take up this fight here.
But RLA hates them, why BECAUSE THEY ARE JEWS.
Just the tip of the ICEBERG
Matthew Ackerman
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"In April 1993, shortly after he took over at the NAACP, Chavis departed for
South Central, Los Angeles, where he appealed for calm in anticipation of a
not-guilty verdict in the second Rodney King beating trial. He was too busy
"working on what I thought was priority at that point" to respond to a
request for a meeting with Gad Yaacobi, then the Israeli ambassador to the
United Nations. But upon Chavis's return to Baltimore, Rabbi David
Saperstein of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, an NAACP board
member and an outspoken foe of the Nation of Islam, expressed concern about
Chavis not getting back to the ambassador. "They want to invite you to
Israel," Muhammad recalls Saperstein telling him. "It's very important that
you make an initial contact and establish yourself with the Jewish
community." (Saperstein could not be reached for comment.)
This time Chavis was more blunt. "My priority is to reconnect the
organization to the black community," he rumbled.
Chavis did honor a request from Foxman for a meeting, which took place on
June 24 at the City Club in Washington, D.C. Chavis was accompanied by his
personal attorney, Larry Wallace-"because I always want a witness when you
have meetings like that.' (Wallace did not return phone calls from the
Voice).
As Muhammad now recalls it, Foxman's opening words were: "We've been
observing your activities in Los Angeles.'
"Yes, I've been busy,' Chavis said curtly.
Foxman boasted that the ADL enjoyed good relations with the NAACP: "Every
executive director has worked very, very closely with us.' Muhammad says
Foxman then told him that the ADL would like to develop a relationship with
him, but first it must ascertain where he was steering the nation's oldest
civil rights organization. "We're gonna get active and join the liberation
movement, said Chavis, espousing the same black unity agenda that was
troubling his fellow board members.
According to Muhammad, Foxman now tried to intimidate him by declaring that
the ADL had potentially damaging information about him. "We want you to
look at it to see if it is accurate, said Foxman, retrieving a stuffed
manila folder from his briefcase. "We have statements that you have made in
the past that we believe are anti-Semitic."
"Wait! Chavis said, interrupting. "Is that the purpose of this meeting? I'm
not antiSemitic. I don't believe the NAACP is antiSemitic. Why would you
even raise that?"
"Don't get upset," Foxman reportedly pleaded. "We're not accusing you of
being an anti-Semite, but we think you have made some statements in the
past that are anti-Semitic and we're going to let you read them and give
you an opportunity to change them.
At the time, the ADL was under investigation by San Francisco district
attorney Arlo Smith for allegedly spying on political activists, including
black nationalist, white supremacist, and pro-Palestinian groups. To settle
the case, the ADL agreed to pay at least $45,000 to local activist groups,
though the organization admitted no wrongdoing.
"Look in this folder," Muhammad remembers Foxman saying, directing him to
the ADL's intelligence report on him. He browsed through the dossier, which
included newspaper articles and transcripts of speeches he had made.
You have a file on me that's 25 years old?" Chavis asked. "Who else do you
have a file on? Does the ADL keep files on black leaders in general? Mr.
Foxman, I'm not gonna be intimidated.
"We're not trying to intimidate you," Foxman insisted.
"This is intimidation! Chavis protested. 'I am not anti-Semitic."
But Foxman persisted: "Did you say that the Palestinians have a right to a
state?" "Yes, sir," Chavis replied. 'I still believe that. That's not an
anti-Semitic statement. I've said nothing bad about Israel. I said, `The
Palestinians have a right to a homeland.'
"In 1975, you said Zionism was racism!" Foxman shot back.
"I was quoting the United Nations!" said Chavis, reminding Foxman of the
1975 United Nations resolution that equated Zionism with racism. That, too,
Chavis vowed not to change. "And I don't appreciate you trying to
intimidate the NAACP!" Chavis told Foxman that his implied threats to smear
him might hamper efforts to promote the ADL's own cause. Foxman, according
to Chavis, scraped the dossier from the table and left the room.
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mack...@idt.net wrote in message <36ed19e1...@news.idt.net>...