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A Malicious Duo, Part Two: Two More Laws
that Destroyed America's Culture
by VNN
Staff
19 March 2005
In March 2005, VNN published an
essay titled: "A
Malicious Duo: Two Laws that Destroyed America's Culture," covering
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Immigration and Nationality Act
Amendments of 1965. This is a companion essay, covering two other
destructive laws.
A documentation in two parts
This
essay focuses on two important laws that were passed by the United States
Congress during the 1960s: the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Civil
Rights Act of 1968.
While not as harmful to America's White
culture as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or the Immigration Act of 1965,
these laws nonetheless caused immeasurable damage to White culture within
the United States.
A certain ethnic group, Jews, played a key role
in the creation of these two Acts - just as it did in the creation of
other laws harmful to the racial interests of White Americans.
We
examine the creation of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 first.
Part I: the Voting Rights Act of 1965
The Voting
Rights Act of 1965 was designed largely to prevent the Southern states
from hindering the Black vote.[1]
The Act came from Senate bill
S1564 and was co-sponsored by Senator Michael Mansfield (D-MT; 1903-2001),
who introduced it jointly with Senator Everett Dirksen (R-IL; 1896-1969)
in the Congress in March 1965.
The co-sponsor of the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 in the House of Representatives was Jewish Congressman Emanuel
Celler (D-NY; 1888-1981), via his bill HR6400, which he introduced on
March 17, 1965. Celler also chaired House subcommittee #5, which
considered HR6400.[2]
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was written
mainly by Jewish assistant attorney general Norbert A. Schlei
(1929-2003).[3]
The Act (S1564) was signed into law by President
Johnson on August 6, 1965.
The Voting Rights Act was an important
part of the Black civil-rights movement in America, and Representative
Celler and attorney Schlei helped create it.
1. The
matter of Black voting in the 1960s-era South had an impact on not just
the South but all of America, since Southern politicians went to
Washington, D.C., as Congressmen from the various Southern states. The
Jews were very aware of that fact, the Whites much less so.
2.
Celler mentioned as the sponsor of HR6400: the Lyndon B. Johnson library.
The Celler committee shown as considering HR6400: description of court
case "U.S. Supreme Court, PERKINS v. MATTHEWS, 400 U.S. 379 (1971)" at
FindLaw, on the web.
3. Schlei shown as the main author of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965: obituary, Norbert Schlei, Los Angeles
Times, April 21, 2003.
Part II: the Civil Rights Act
of 1968
The Civil Rights Act of 1968, aka the Fair Housing
Act, came from House bill HR2516 and was introduced into Congress by
Representative Celler in mid-January 1966. Celler also chaired House
subcommittee #5, which considered HR2516 (that subcommittee had
jurisdiction over civil-rights bills, giving Celler much leverage in the
creation of civil-rights legislation during the 1960s).[1]
The
1968 Act contained an important section that affected all White property
owners who rented or sold housing to the public: Title VIII, the Fair
Housing Act, outlawed racial or gender discrimination in the renting or
selling of homes, apartments, etc. After the Act was passed, Whites could
no longer rent or sell a dwelling to whomever they wanted. The law forced
racial minorities onto the properties of Whites, whether or not the Whites
desired it.
The Senate version of the law was bill S1843 (which
was identical to the Senate-adopted amendment #430), introduced by Senator
Sam Ervin, Jr. (D-NC;1896-1985) in May 1967.
The 1968 Act was the
second major assault on White private property rights in America (the
first major assault having come from the Civil Rights Act of 1964).
The Act (HR2516) was signed into law by President Johnson on April
11, 1968.
1. Bill HR2516 as coming from Celler/bill
HR2516 as having been considered by Celler's House subcommittee #5:
article in periodical, "Fair Housing Legislation: Not an Easy Row To Hoe,"
by former U.S. Senator Charles McCurdy Mathias, Jr. and Marion Morris;
online at Hud User (http://www.huduser.org/)
Summary
In conjunction with the other civil-rights
laws cited in the first articles, the two Acts in question damaged White
America profoundly by forcing it to mix with an alien and hostile
population. That was the intent of the men behind the acts. As with the
first duo, Jews played the key role in the creation and passage of these
laws. On the pretext of "equal rights for minorities," these laws
destroyed the White population's most basic right of all: the right to
communal protection. Outward appearances notwithstanding, with the passage
of the "civil rights" laws of the sixties, America ceased to be a free
nation and passed into a Jewish dictatorship.
VNN
STAFF
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