Friday, June 19, 2015

Mr. Roof should never have received bond.

I can't believe that congregation is worried about a race war. This is 2015. They don't feel safe within their own lives. I guess I am just not that forgiving.

Zimmerman was given a million dollar bond and he got out on $100,000 from donations from a gun movement. 

Already the NRA is rallying the troops. There is a real threat for a race war.

June 20, 2015 
Christopher Ingraham 

Charles Cotton (click here) is a National Rifle Association board member who also runs TexasCHLForum.com, an online discussion forum about guns and guns rights in Texas and beyond. In a discussion thread yesterday which has since been deleted, a commenter noted that one of the 9 people slain at a Charleston church, Clementa Pinkney, was a pastor and a state legislator in South Carolina. Cotton responded:

And he voted against concealed-carry. Eight of his church members who might be alive if he had expressly allowed members to carry handguns in church are dead. Innocent people died because of his position on a political issue....

...In a phone interview from Texas, Cotton emphasised that his comments were made not in his capacity as an NRA board member, but as a private citizen who runs a gun discussion forum. "It was a discussion we were having about so called gun-free zones," he said when asked about his remarks. "It's my opinion that there should not be any gun-free zones in schools or churches or anywhere else. If we look at mass shootings that occur, most happen in gun-free zones."... 

One has to remember this is the south. This is where businesses hold religion over their employees heads. You better believe there is going to be many events that are attributed to god. It was the responsibility of the person that found Roof to call authorities. That's the law. I suppose a person could look the other way and assist the crime.

June 18, 2015
South Carolina is home to 19 known hate groups (click here) — including two factions of the Ku Klux Klan and four "white nationalist" organizations, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. 

While police described Wednesday's massacre in Charleston, South Carolina, of nine people at one of the nation's oldest African-American churches as a hate crime, they did not suggest the attack was linked to any group. 

The SPLC's database records the distribution of KKK leaflets in a Seneca neighborhood was among four hate crimes committed in the state last year....

Roof is unsuccessful in life. He didn't have a job and has a signature of a second grader. He is either inhibited by a learning disability or by a completely dysfunctional South Carolina educations system or both.

The NRA needs to apologize for placing the blame on a deceased South Carolina state senator. This accusation by the NRA is meant to threaten every legislator in the country.

At this point the NRA has established itself as a supporter of domestic terrorism. One might think the NRA might actually know that guns are not a constitutional right.

The only power the NRA has, evidently, is death. They believe a man of peace was a threat to himself because of a VOTE in the South Carolina state senate. Death is the NRA's promise. Think about it.