Thursday, April 20, 2006

Lansing Communists complain that freedom of speech should only be offered to Jews and Hippies

Here is another article that insinuates that the Toledo riot was caused by the NSM and not a group of blood thirsty niggers that attacked police.

Fences, counter protests staged by the city, illegal searches, are all civil rights violations that the city of Lansing is trying to get away with. These Commies can complain all they want that “freedom of speech is only meant for Jews and Liberals", this will only strengthen the determination of the NSM. This is a prime example of a failing local, state and federal government that is turning a brighter shade of red everyday.

This is our country and we will not let it fall into the hands of neo con, uniracialist Jews. Those who are unaware of the ever tightening noose that the Zionists have thrown around the neck of white America will become aware! We continue to expose the Jew, his idea of America, of stupid consumers that have been cheated out of their heritage and left with no identity. WE SHALL RECLAIM OUR BIRTH RIGHT!

Sieg Heil!

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Toledo riot offers lesson to Lansing authoritiesIn Ohio, fences kept neo-Nazis, protesters apart

By Christine Rook Lansing State Journal
Toledo learned its lesson.

In October, just the threat of neo-Nazis marching through the mostly minority neighborhood of North End spawned a riot.
In December, when white supremacists returned, the city was prepared. There was no major violence.

Toledo's struggle offers lessons for Lansing, which on Saturday plays host to dueling rallies - one supporting neo-Nazism, the other supporting diversity.
"Don't do it on the cheap," warned Toledo police Lt. Tom Wiegand, who was the tactical operations commander during the October riot.

Toledo's December rally lacked the violence and volume of arrests - 20 versus more than 120 - in part, officials say, because fences kept neo-Nazis and anti-Nazi protesters away from neighborhoods and one another.

Checkpoints allowed police to search participants for weapons, and the downtown environment - unfamiliar to many - eliminated the easy escape routes that had emboldened rioters.
December also differed because law enforcement agencies made a strong showing from the start with about 500 officers on the ground, police said. In October the initial force was about a fifth of that.

The result was that in December, officials outnumbered protesters.
In October, the crowd of more than 400 had overwhelmed officials, rioting for two to three hours until officials had about 300 officers in place. Order was restored within a half-hour.
Anger turned on police
And there was one other lesson Toledo learned: A crowd's anger doesn't quell once instigators are removed.

Officials had canceled the march in October even before it started and escorted white supremacists away. The crowd, however, was already too aggravated.
"They turned their anger on the police," Toledo police Sgt. Richard Murphy said.
Rioters threw rocks, flipped cars, burned a bar and ransacked stores.
"Some of the gang members felt disrespected with the Nazis coming in," Wiegand said.
That disrespect cost the larger community more than $400,000, with most of the cost from police and fire department overtime and damage to property.
Tensions existed
What led to the situation? It appears there was racial tension in the city's North End before the neo-Nazis arrived.
The Associated Press in October reported a neighborhood squabble drew the National Socialist Movement into the community, and Murphy explained that a white man was upset a largely minority culture had overtaken his once Polish-American neighborhood.
Greater Lansing is not without racial tensions.
In March, a white Eaton County sheriff's sergeant accused a black man of shooting him. Authorities later charged the sergeant with shooting himself, and the situation angered some minorities.

As a result, the Pastors Conference of Greater Lansing, a largely black group, held a community forum so that people could vent.
Venting helps

Melvin Jones, a member of the group and pastor of Union Missionary Baptist Church in Lansing, believes venting is good. Lansing's history of dialogue may help it avoid Nazi-inspired violence.
"I don't foresee there would be anything," he said, "that would erupt in the Lansing area as did in Toledo."

Just as Lansing has a chance to learn from Toledo's experience, Lansing's ability to handle Saturday's dueling rallies will offer lessons for other cities.
The National Socialist Movement will gather near the Capitol.
The city-sponsored diversity rally will form about a mile east near Eastern High School.
Toledo's Lt. Wiegand may attend both.
"You're always gonna Monday morning quarterback," he said, "to see if there is something you can learn."

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