Affiliation with
violent Black Panthers while in college may explain the attorney General's anti-white bias
By Pat Shannan
Attorney General Eric
Holder’s reluctance to prosecute criminal behavior on the part of the Black
Panthers in Philadelphia during the 2008 presidential election apparently has its
roots in his own affiliation with the group as far back as 1970. While a
freshman at Columbia University that year, Holder participated in a five-day,
armed protest and occupation of the university’s Naval Reserve Officer Training
Corps (ROTC) building organized by the “Black Students’ Organization” (BSO).
It has not been
ascertained whether the AG was ever a card-carrying member of the Black
Panthers. However, he was an active member on campus of the Student
Afro-American Society (SAAS)
that released a statement supporting the efforts of 21 Black Panthers charged
with plotting to blow up a police station, department stores, railroad tracks
and the New York Botanical Gardens.
News stories from BSO’s
defunct website show that it wasn’t the first time. Gloating over a 1968
confrontation with police the paper reported:
“Armed with guns,
the students took over Hamilton Hall, and locked the building from the inside.
After some time the black students told the white sympathizers, many of whom
were members of Students
for a Democratic Society, to leave and contribute by taking over other
buildings on campus. They did, effectively shutting down the university. The
president of the university ordered the NYPD to smother the protest by force,
aided by white athletes and members of the ROTC. Ironically it was the white
students in other buildings who bore the brunt of the police storming. Had the
police broken into Hamilton, they may have suffered casualties at the hands of the sisters and
brothers inside.”
Two years later, Holder
was among the leaders of the SAAS that were demanding the former ROTC office be
renamed the “Malcolm X Lounge” in honor of the early Black Muslim leader who
was assassinated in 1965.
The Justice
Department has not responded to a query of what kind of weapon Holder
himself was carrying at the time, but his friend, Steve Sims, told a mainstream
newspaper it all did happen.
This may explain why Holder refused to prosecute
Black Panther thugs, who were accused of intimidating voters with truncheons at
the polls in Philadelphia in 2008.
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