SouthernN'Proud
Southern Discomfort
'Hate Speech'
Defendants in court in Denver charged with unlawfully disrupting a Columbus Day parade are trying to justify their actions by calling the parade a form of “hate speech,” reports the Rocky Mountain News.
Some 230 people are charged with loitering and failure to obey lawful orders for trying to block the city’s annual October parade.
Some of the defendants claim their actions were necessary because the parade is a form of ethnic intimidation. They object to elebrating Columbus, whom they condemn as a slave trader responsible for genocide in the deaths of up to 10 million American Indians.
They decried as racists a group of teenage girls on top of one float who threw candy at the protestors in an “aggressive manner.”
***end***
All I can say to this is...
"They threw candy at us in an aggressive manner! My life will never be the same! Oh the humanity! I think I broke a nail when that Tootsie Roll was hurled at me by that anorexic beauty queen! I want my lawyer!"

Defendants in court in Denver charged with unlawfully disrupting a Columbus Day parade are trying to justify their actions by calling the parade a form of “hate speech,” reports the Rocky Mountain News.
Some 230 people are charged with loitering and failure to obey lawful orders for trying to block the city’s annual October parade.
Some of the defendants claim their actions were necessary because the parade is a form of ethnic intimidation. They object to elebrating Columbus, whom they condemn as a slave trader responsible for genocide in the deaths of up to 10 million American Indians.
They decried as racists a group of teenage girls on top of one float who threw candy at the protestors in an “aggressive manner.”
***end***
All I can say to this is...

"They threw candy at us in an aggressive manner! My life will never be the same! Oh the humanity! I think I broke a nail when that Tootsie Roll was hurled at me by that anorexic beauty queen! I want my lawyer!"
