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To: djf

My daughter is graduating from high school in a couple weeks. After 4 years in a public hs she cannot stand it for its anti-American, anti-white racism she faces daily.

It is gotten silly - every color but white is allowed a group on campus and spout anti-American, anti-white attacks.


6 posted on 04/25/2010 9:16:43 AM PDT by edcoil (If I had 1 cent for every dollar the government saved, Bill Gates and I would be friends.)
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To: edcoil

Wait Untill She Enters The Workforce,,,
Human Resources Has Discrimination down to a Science.
It Will only Get Worse, the American Dream is Over.


13 posted on 04/25/2010 9:23:31 AM PDT by bravotu (Have a Nice Day !)
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To: edcoil
My daughter is finishing college. She explained it like this to me recently: "During my entire eduction I have had the importance of diversity drilled into me. I have been forced to read an unending number of books, most of which tell story of some minority which has been horribly oppressed, but eventually fights their way to freedom. The white people are always shown as being wrong, for believing the stereotypes about minorities. It has been pounded into my head that 'to believe stereotypes is wong'"

But now I realize the biggest stereotype of all is that white people are morally defective, abusive and without conscience. They are all shown in the same light, the race is deeply flawed. There has been a continual narrative to reinforce this stereotype.

The latest piece of claptrap she is being forced to read is called "Tortilla Curtain". Here is the plot summary from Wikipedia:

Cándido Rincón (a divorcé, 33) and América (a young pregnant woman, 17) are two Mexicans who enter the United States illegally, dreaming of the good life in their own little house somewhere in California. Meanwhile, they are homeless and camping at the bottom of the Topanga Canyon area of Los Angeles, in the hills above Malibu. Another couple, Delaney and Kyra Mossbacher, have recently moved into a gated community on top of Topanga, in order to be closer to nature yet be close enough to the city to enjoy those amenities. Kyra is a successful real estate agent while Delaney keeps house, looks after Kyra's son by her first marriage and writes a regular column for an environmentalist magazine.

The two couples' paths cross unexpectedly when Cándido is hit and injured by Delaney, who is driving his car along the suburban roads near his home. For different reasons, each man prefers not to call the police or an ambulance, and Delaney soothes his conscience by giving Cándido "$20 blood money," explaining to Kyra that "He's a Mexican." From that moment on, the lives of the two couples are constantly influenced by the others.

After the accident, Cándido's problems deepen. When he does not find a temporary job at a local work exchange anymore, he unavailingly tries to find one in the city, hoping to save money for an apartment in the North despite the low wages offered. With América pregnant, his shame at not being able to get a job and procure a home and food for his family increases, especially when América decides to find some illegal—and possibly dangerous—work herself. At one point in the novel, after Cándido is robbed by some Mexicans in the city, they are forced to go through the trash cans behind a fast-food restaurant so as not to starve.

The Mossbachers are also having problems, though of an altogether different nature. Comfortably settled in their new home, they are faced with the cruelty of nature when one of their two pet dogs is killed by a coyote. In addition, the majority of inhabitants of their exclusive estate feel increasingly disturbed and threatened by the presence of—as they see it—potentially criminal, illegal aliens and vote for a wall to be built around the whole estate.

Cándido has a stroke of luck when he is given a free turkey at a grocery store by another customer, who has just received it through the store's Thanksgiving promotion. When Cándido starts roasting the bird back in their shelter, he inadvertently causes a fire which spreads so quickly that even the gated community the Mossbachers live in has to be evacuated.

In the midst of the escalating disasters, América gives birth to Socorro, a daughter, whom she suspects might be blind. But the couple has no money to see the doctor. Time and again in the novel, however, it is hinted at that the real perpetrators can be found inside rather than outside the projected wall: well-to-do people insensitive to the plight of the have-nots; WASP racists afraid of being overrun by Latinos and of the end of white supremacy; business people employing illegal immigrants to maximise their own profit without caring for the welfare of those who work for them; and criminals posing as honourable members of society.

This is a (what college guides say) is one of the more conservative private colleges in the West. One can only imagine what the virulant form at somwhere like UC Santa Cruz is like. (The public school that made black racist and terrorist accomplice Angela Davis a full professor of 'human consciousness'.)

But you know, kids still have fun. They can blow off steam, maybe go see a movie. Maybe Avatar?

27 posted on 04/25/2010 9:52:45 AM PDT by Jack Black ( Whatever is left of American patriotism is now identical with counter-revolution.)
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To: edcoil

The white kids should start their own group anyway.

Whoever doesn’t like it, tough sh*t.


33 posted on 04/25/2010 10:19:06 AM PDT by july4thfreedomfoundation (I'm voting for Sarah Palin because she pisses off the right people.)
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