Posted on 01/25/2018 4:45:39 AM PST by MarvinStinson
Former Communist Party USA member and prominent political activist Angela Davis appeared at Florida State University Tuesday to deliver a speech trashing the Trump administration.
Davis, speaking to a packed crowd that erupted into applause when she entered the auditorium, kicked off the start of the schools weeklong celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr., using the opportunity to express the disdain she believes King would have had for President Trump.
I bet Dr. King would be turning in his grave to know that Donald Trump is the President of the United States. Who wouldve thought that 30 years after his death, we would be dishonoring him by having a white supremacist in the peoples house, she said during the lecture.
At another point in her lecture, Davis took a shot at Trump for golfing on MLK Day, saying that instead of answering the calls of service, he played golf.
According to the university, the purpose of the weeks celebrations is to bring the FSU Tallahassee communities together to reflect on the past and challenge one another to be engaged in creating social justice and advocating for the civil rights of all.
Footage of attendees outside the event waiting to enter shows hundreds, if not thousands, of students waiting to listen to Davis, some of whom spoke with Campus Reform to express appreciation for her and her communist past.
One student, however, claimed that he was in support of Davis as a civil rights activist, not as a communist, but didnt object to her history with the Communist Party USA, saying everybody has the right to their own opinion.
The way that Marx wrote it is different than the way its been implemented, so I like the way Marx wrote it, not the way its been implemented, another student submitted as a justification for communisms questionable record, adding that I hate it when questioned on her views of capitalism.
Notably, in response to the lecture, a group of Republican students protested Davis talk outside the hall in an effort to show their peers why communism is an unacceptable ideology that will not be tolerated.
Rather than attempting to disrupt the event, however, the students arranged for their protest to end at the same time Davis was scheduled to begin speaking.
Gary Thomas, prosecutor paralyzed in 1970 courthouse shootout, dies
By Kevin Fagan Saturday, April 22, 2017
http://www.mysanantonio.com/bayarea/article/Gary-Thomas-prosecutor-paralyzed-in-1970-11090823.php
Gary Thomas heroically intervened in a 1970 kidnapping at the Marin County Courthouse.
Photo: Bill Young, The Chronicle
Gary Thomas went to work one hot August day in 1970 as just another prosecutor in Marin County, and by the end of the day he was a hero but one who never let that title define the rest of his life.
By the time the San Rafael man died this month of natural causes at 79, he was known to his family and friends as the Judge, who for decades dispensed tough but fair rulings from the Marin County Superior Court bench, as well as an avid fisherman with a photographic memory for everything from legal precedents to passages from science fiction novels.
But back on the morning of Aug. 7, 1970, he was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney who showed up at the Marin County Courthouse to handle the prosecution in a fairly routine trial of a prison inmate accused of knifing a prison guard. By late morning his life, and the lives of many others, had been changed forever by a spasm of violence that became one of the most notorious kidnapping-murders in California history.
The jury had just reconvened in Superior Court Judge Harold Haleys courtroom when Jonathan Jackson, brother of the imprisoned black power leader George Jackson, stood up and produced a cache of weapons for him, the defendant and two convicts who were there to testify. The intent was to take then-prosecutor Thomas, the judge and three jurors hostage and to bargain them for George Jacksons freedom but the plot was thwarted by Gary Thomas.
The kidnappers had hustled their hostages into a van and were preparing to leave when one of them shot out a window. Another pulled the trigger on a shotgun taped to Haleys head, killing the judge instantly. Thats when the prosecutor grabbed a .357-caliber pistol from one of the convicts and began firing.
By the time he was done, he had fatally shot three of the four convicts and had taken a bullet to the spine. He was paralyzed from the waist down. But he and the three jurors survived.
He later testified at the 1972 trial of Angela Davis, who was acquitted of charges of buying guns used in the shootout and helping plan it.
Gary saved my life and the lives of the other jurors, juror Maria Graham, who was shot in the arm, told The Chronicle before she died in 2009. He was an incredibly brave man. I have no idea how he managed to do what he did in those few moments, but we are all eternally grateful.
For his heroism, Judge Thomas was named 1970 Peace Officer of the Year by the Marin County Peace Officers Association.
Judge Thomas seldom spoke of that day as he continued his career in law, going back to work in a wheelchair after only four weeks off and then being appointed in 1972 by then-Gov. Ronald Reagan as a Marin County Municipal Court judge at the age of 34. But along with his renowned sense of right and wrong, one quote his friends and family often point to may explain a bit of why he did what he did.
He always told people he was from Montana, where the men are men and damned proud of it, said his wife of 57 years, Maureen Thomas, whose uncle was Haley.
After the shooting he never complained about anything, she said. Most people could be depressed after something like that, but not him. He was amazing. He just carried on.
Judge Thomas was born in Great Falls, Mont. When he was 9, the family moved to San Francisco, but he returned most summers to Montana throughout his childhood to work on his uncles cattle ranch. He graduated from Riordan High School, earned his law degree from the University of San Francisco, and served in the Air Force Reserves from 1962 to 1968.
Judge Thomas was elected to the Marin County Superior Court in 1986 and served on the bench until retiring in 1999.
Judge Thomas, who died April 3, is survived by his wife; sons, Christopher of Norway and Matthew Thomas of Dixon; sister, Elaine Jordan of San Ramon; and four grandchildren.
A funeral Mass was said April 12 at St. Raphael Church in San Rafael.
Great post. These are the lefts heroes: Obamas America. The fact that they are not only allowed, but lauded at our universities tells how far this nation has fallen. Too many conservatives think all leftists are pajama-boy pansies, but the same spirit killed millions in Maos revolution. There is a visceral lust for violence at the heart of leftism that hates all things good or Godly. They worship death, especially the death of innocents, which explains abortions place as their central sacrament to their father, Satan.
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