Yo, Republicans Better Get Some Balls!!!

1stRambo

Gold Member
Feb 8, 2015
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Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
99924bbc-5350-460e-8cc1-b7d3540470ed_zps91f59586.jpg
 
Gee, seems the Democrats are having history bite them in the ass...
Nathan Bedford Forrest

You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Nathan Bedford Forrest









Click on an image to view full-sized
Nathan Bedford Forrest






FORREST, Nathan Bedford, soldier, born in Bedford County, Tennessee, 13 July 1821; died in Memphis, Tennessee, 29 October 1877. While yet quite young he removed with his family to Mississippi, where his father soon afterward died, leaving Nathan mainly responsible for the support of the household. In 1842 he removed to Hernando, Miss., and established himself as a planter, remaining there till about 1852, when he went to Memphis, Tennessee, and became a real estate broker and dealer in slaves.

When the civil war broke out he had amassed a considerable fortune. In June 1861, he joined the Tennessee mounted rifles, and in July following he raised and equipped, at the request of Governor Harris, a regiment of cavalry, and was made lieutenant colonel. In October he moved with his men to Fort Donelson, where he remained until the approach of General Grant, and whence he was allowed to escape with his men before the flag of truce was sent. After a raiding excursion, during which he visited Nashville, Huntsville, and Iuka he took part in the battle of Shiloh. He was assigned to the command of the cavalry at Chattanooga in the following June participated in the attack on Murfreesboro on 13 July 1862, and on 21 July was made brigadier general. In September he was in command at Murfreesboro, and on 31 Dec. was engaged at Parker's Crossroads. He fought at Chiekamauga on 19 and 20 September 1863, and in November was transferred to northern Mississippi. In the following month he was made major general and assigned to the command of Forrest's cavalry department. He was in command of the Confederate forces that attacked Fort Pillow in April 1864, and, while negotiations for the surrender of the fort were in progress under a flag of truce, moved troops into favorable positions that they could not have gained at any other time.

Major Bradford, the commander of the fort, refused to surrender, whereupon the works were taken by assault, and the garrison, consisting many of colored troops, were given no quarter. The excuse given by Forrest's men was, that the flag of the fort had not been hauled down in token of surrender. During the operations of Hood and Thomas in Tennessee he proved a great source of annoyance to the National commanders, and in February 1865, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general. General James H. Wilson finally routed him on 2 April 1865, and on 9 May he surrendered at Gainesville.

After the war he was president of the Selma, Marion, and Memphis railroad, but resigned in 1874. He was a delegate from Tennessee to the New York Democratic national convention of 4 July 1868. Some of General Porrest's official documents are very amusing for their peculiar orthography and phraseology. In his dispatch announcing the fall of Fort Pillow, the original of which is still preserved, he wrote: " We busted the fort at ninerclock and scattered the *******. The men is still a cillanem in the woods." Accounting for prisoners, he wrote: "Them as was cotch with spoons and brestpins and sieh was cilld and the rest of the lot was payrold and told to git." See "Campaigns of N. B. Porrest," by T. Jordan and J. B. Pryor (New York, 1868).
 
Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
View attachment 43052
I knew it was coming, but I didn't think that I'd live long enough to see it happen. Fasten your seatbelts and hold on tight, the ride is about to get very bumpy. Shit is about to hit the proverbial fan, big time. Watch the daily headlines for the next couple of weeks. We're about to see angry Americans fight for America.
 
Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
View attachment 43052
I knew it was coming, but I didn't think that I'd live long enough to see it happen. Fasten your seatbelts and hold on tight, the ride is about to get very bumpy. Shit is about to hit the proverbial fan, big time. Watch the daily headlines for the next couple of weeks. We're about angry Americans fight for America.

It's called blowback.
 
Gee, seems the Democrats are having history bite them in the ass...
Nathan Bedford Forrest

You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Nathan Bedford Forrest









Click on an image to view full-sized
Nathan Bedford Forrest






FORREST, Nathan Bedford, soldier, born in Bedford County, Tennessee, 13 July 1821; died in Memphis, Tennessee, 29 October 1877. While yet quite young he removed with his family to Mississippi, where his father soon afterward died, leaving Nathan mainly responsible for the support of the household. In 1842 he removed to Hernando, Miss., and established himself as a planter, remaining there till about 1852, when he went to Memphis, Tennessee, and became a real estate broker and dealer in slaves.

When the civil war broke out he had amassed a considerable fortune. In June 1861, he joined the Tennessee mounted rifles, and in July following he raised and equipped, at the request of Governor Harris, a regiment of cavalry, and was made lieutenant colonel. In October he moved with his men to Fort Donelson, where he remained until the approach of General Grant, and whence he was allowed to escape with his men before the flag of truce was sent. After a raiding excursion, during which he visited Nashville, Huntsville, and Iuka he took part in the battle of Shiloh. He was assigned to the command of the cavalry at Chattanooga in the following June participated in the attack on Murfreesboro on 13 July 1862, and on 21 July was made brigadier general. In September he was in command at Murfreesboro, and on 31 Dec. was engaged at Parker's Crossroads. He fought at Chiekamauga on 19 and 20 September 1863, and in November was transferred to northern Mississippi. In the following month he was made major general and assigned to the command of Forrest's cavalry department. He was in command of the Confederate forces that attacked Fort Pillow in April 1864, and, while negotiations for the surrender of the fort were in progress under a flag of truce, moved troops into favorable positions that they could not have gained at any other time.

Major Bradford, the commander of the fort, refused to surrender, whereupon the works were taken by assault, and the garrison, consisting many of colored troops, were given no quarter. The excuse given by Forrest's men was, that the flag of the fort had not been hauled down in token of surrender. During the operations of Hood and Thomas in Tennessee he proved a great source of annoyance to the National commanders, and in February 1865, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general. General James H. Wilson finally routed him on 2 April 1865, and on 9 May he surrendered at Gainesville.

After the war he was president of the Selma, Marion, and Memphis railroad, but resigned in 1874. He was a delegate from Tennessee to the New York Democratic national convention of 4 July 1868. Some of General Porrest's official documents are very amusing for their peculiar orthography and phraseology. In his dispatch announcing the fall of Fort Pillow, the original of which is still preserved, he wrote: " We busted the fort at ninerclock and scattered the *******. The men is still a cillanem in the woods." Accounting for prisoners, he wrote: "Them as was cotch with spoons and brestpins and sieh was cilld and the rest of the lot was payrold and told to git." See "Campaigns of N. B. Porrest," by T. Jordan and J. B. Pryor (New York, 1868).

Yo, can you put a Democrat slave owner for us to see Miss So-Called History? They do come in all Parties!!!

"GTP"
 
"He who controls the past controls the future. He who controls the present controls the past."
- Orwell, NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR
 
Democratic Party Platform

1864 Presidential Campaign
By 1864, the Country had grown weary of the long and bloody Civil War. Hundreds of thousands of the countries' best and bravest young men had fallen on the fields of Bull Run, Antietam, Shiloh, and countless more. Many began to think that the war was not worth it, and the price of freedom too great. The Republican Presidential Candidate Abraham Lincoln thought no price was too great for the abolition of slavery and the creation of a society in which a man was not judged by the color of his skin. Unfortunately, after four long years of war, Lincoln's support was dropping fast, and people were looking for a way out of the war.

With this backdrop, the Democratic Party chose General George McClellan to be their Presidential Candidate at the Chicago National Convention in 1864. The Democratic Party Platform presented a plan of "Compromise with the South", which became known as "The Chicago Platform". While on its surface the Chicago Platform was seductive in that it promised an immediate cessation of hostilities, and a restoration of the union. What was unsaid in the platform, but clearly implied, was that the "compromise" would be to agree to make permanent the institution of slavery in exchange for an end to the Civil War and restoration of the Union. In other words, the Democratic party was ready to "Sell Out" the enslaved, in order to stop further loss of white lives. This is reflected in McClellan's acceptance speech, where he stated:

The reestablishment of the Union, in all its integrity, is and must continue to be the indispensable condition in any settlement.
 
And here are the facts about not only history but the present the SoB democrats are try to squash. Just to think, 13% of the population have 100% of the regressives (dimocrats) in this country cowed like no other group of weak-ass individuals have EVER been cowed. Borrowed from another poster in another thread, Thank you very much.

Prof. Philippe Rushton - Latest Research on Race - YouTube

By the way the more important statistics/graphs of the presentation can be found the 31 to 36 minute mark. Why the MEDIA section won't let me post the actual YouTube video us beyond me. Second or third time it has happened.
 
Last edited:
And here are the facts about not only history but the present the SoB democrats are try to squash. Just to think, 13% of the population have 100% of the regressives (dimocrats) in this country cowed like no other group of weak-ass individuals have EVER been cowed. Borrowed from another poster in another thread, Thank you very much.

Prof. Philippe Rushton - Latest Research on Race - YouTube

Yo, what gets me? They are not in the majority, and the woosie Republicans are caving in, sick! Remember when you vote, who is who!!!

"GTP"
 
Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
View attachment 43052

Yo, thanks sweetie!

"GTP"
 
Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
View attachment 43052

Yo, thanks sweetie!

"GTP"


YoYo is talking to himself ...

Funny how they have to go back 150 years for this garbage.

If you want to find modern day racists, look at today's Repubs. Like YoYo and other idiots who post here.
 
Yo, Democrats are trying to erase their past!!!

LATEST ON CHURCH SHOOTING: TENN. GOV. SAYS REMOVE KKK BUST?

5:45 p.m.

Gov. Bill Haslam says he supports removing the bust of Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state Capitol.

The Republican governor told reporters on Tuesday that if he's picking which Tennesseans to honor, "that would not be one of the Tennesseans I would honor."

Haslam says he also supports removing the Confederate flag from license plates and specialty plates in Tennessee.

Haslam's comments follow news media reports that a couple of Metro Nashville Council members are seeking to cover up a private statue of Forrest that sits along the Interstate 65 corridor.

The moves from state and local lawmakers come days after nine people were gunned down in a historic black church in South Carolina, prompting a debate over Confederate symbols.

News from The Associated Press

"GTP"
View attachment 43052

Yo, thanks sweetie!

"GTP"


YoYo is talking to himself ...

Funny how they have to go back 150 years for this garbage.

If you want to find modern day racists, look at today's Repubs. Like YoYo and other idiots who post here.
Way too much piss and vinegar. Relax, take it easy, we're all friends here. Be nice.
 
Gee, seems the Democrats are having history bite them in the ass...
Nathan Bedford Forrest

You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Nathan Bedford Forrest









Click on an image to view full-sized
Nathan Bedford Forrest






FORREST, Nathan Bedford, soldier, born in Bedford County, Tennessee, 13 July 1821; died in Memphis, Tennessee, 29 October 1877. While yet quite young he removed with his family to Mississippi, where his father soon afterward died, leaving Nathan mainly responsible for the support of the household. In 1842 he removed to Hernando, Miss., and established himself as a planter, remaining there till about 1852, when he went to Memphis, Tennessee, and became a real estate broker and dealer in slaves.

When the civil war broke out he had amassed a considerable fortune. In June 1861, he joined the Tennessee mounted rifles, and in July following he raised and equipped, at the request of Governor Harris, a regiment of cavalry, and was made lieutenant colonel. In October he moved with his men to Fort Donelson, where he remained until the approach of General Grant, and whence he was allowed to escape with his men before the flag of truce was sent. After a raiding excursion, during which he visited Nashville, Huntsville, and Iuka he took part in the battle of Shiloh. He was assigned to the command of the cavalry at Chattanooga in the following June participated in the attack on Murfreesboro on 13 July 1862, and on 21 July was made brigadier general. In September he was in command at Murfreesboro, and on 31 Dec. was engaged at Parker's Crossroads. He fought at Chiekamauga on 19 and 20 September 1863, and in November was transferred to northern Mississippi. In the following month he was made major general and assigned to the command of Forrest's cavalry department. He was in command of the Confederate forces that attacked Fort Pillow in April 1864, and, while negotiations for the surrender of the fort were in progress under a flag of truce, moved troops into favorable positions that they could not have gained at any other time.

Major Bradford, the commander of the fort, refused to surrender, whereupon the works were taken by assault, and the garrison, consisting many of colored troops, were given no quarter. The excuse given by Forrest's men was, that the flag of the fort had not been hauled down in token of surrender. During the operations of Hood and Thomas in Tennessee he proved a great source of annoyance to the National commanders, and in February 1865, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general. General James H. Wilson finally routed him on 2 April 1865, and on 9 May he surrendered at Gainesville.

After the war he was president of the Selma, Marion, and Memphis railroad, but resigned in 1874. He was a delegate from Tennessee to the New York Democratic national convention of 4 July 1868. Some of General Porrest's official documents are very amusing for their peculiar orthography and phraseology. In his dispatch announcing the fall of Fort Pillow, the original of which is still preserved, he wrote: " We busted the fort at ninerclock and scattered the *******. The men is still a cillanem in the woods." Accounting for prisoners, he wrote: "Them as was cotch with spoons and brestpins and sieh was cilld and the rest of the lot was payrold and told to git." See "Campaigns of N. B. Porrest," by T. Jordan and J. B. Pryor (New York, 1868).

Poor Repubs. Still a delusional crowd of wandering pilgrims. Maybe they can convince themselves they are something other than the party of old white people. It is coming to an end soon. The pain will ease somewhat after reality hits them in the face in 2016.
 

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