tinydancer
Diamond Member
- Thread starter
- #81
You won't be able to provide a single historical link to Charleston Heston LEADING them, because he didn't.You really a dumb little broad aren't you?
Post a link that supports your bogus claimed.
LOLing @ "Heston was voted to lead them."
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!!!
That was RICH!!
*wipes tears from my good eye*
I gave the Telegraph. It's history man. If you want to be an asshole by all means be an asshole.
The leaders reached out to him and ASKED him to take an integral role in the march. Nothing more, nothing less.
But go on ahead and rewrite history as you and your ilk are prone to do with this "Charlestone Hestone LED" BS.
lol
Fuck you racist. No black had any power back then. None. Not one black had the power to pull this off without white help.
You are so racist it is unreal that you don't even get yourself.
Here's the list one more time you racist black.
Who led who?
It all started in May 1963, when Martin Luther King paid a visit to the home of the actor Burt Lancaster and gave a speech to a crowd of celebrities about the Civil Rights struggle in the South.
They were so shocked by the stories of cops beating protestors that they gave him $75,000 on the spot.
Energised by an issue of undoubted morality (and, importantly, non-partisan so Republicans could support it as well as Democrats), the stars met again a few days later at Marlon Brando's villa and formed an action committee.Members included Tony Curtis, Mel Ferrer, Tony Franciosa, Billy Wilder, Burt Lancaster, Shirley MacLaine, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Steve McQueen, Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Sidney Poitier, and Harry Belafonte.
The day Hollywood joined the March on Washington, led by Charlton 'cold dead hands' Heston ? Telegraph Blogs
I never thought you to be a racist pig but I guess you are. Wow.