Evil Majority White City Wants to Leave Majority Black School District – To Make the Blacks Suffer

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 19, 2016

AYO HOL UP – so is you be sayin…

In 2016, you’d think the least that whites could do to help the blacks is go to school with them. After all, if blacks go to school with whites, they have a greater chance of success, because the magic rubs off on them.

Whites, as we know, stole civilization from the blacks, making it so they couldn’t have civilization again. Whites are in a constant state of panic that blacks will steal back civilization from them.

That’s why they don’t want their kids to go to school with blacks.

NPR:

DeVonte Kirkland is in his second to last year of school at Center Point High in Jefferson County, just outside of Birmingham, Ala. When he graduates next year he wants to head to Alabama State University.

DeVonte also wants a car, so he’s taking some serious time to learn how to work on them. Every day, he rides a school bus 25 minutes, each direction, for an auto tech class at Gardendale High, another school on the south side of the district.

Unlike the Jefferson County schools on whole, the student body inside Gardendale’s schools is mostly white. At Gardendale, DeVonte says, he’s making friends, many of whom don’t look like him. “Sometimes we see each other out of school, and we talk in school too. I’m learning something new from them every day,” he says.

Next year, though, Gardendale’s programs might not be an option for DeVonte and hundreds of other students from around Jefferson County.

DeVonte did nothing wrong.

But the whites want him to suffer.

Because they hate the color of his skin.

Several years ago, voters in the city of Gardendale raised property taxes on themselves to try to start their own school district. The mayor of the city, Stan Hogeland, says the proposal to leave the county school system doesn’t have anything to do with race, but calls it a move to do what’s best for the kids in the city. “If we had our school system, with a local superintendent, and a local board that lives in town that you see when you go shopping or at church,” there would be more accountability, he says.

The final decision, though, is up to a federal judge who could decide, any day now, whether Gardendale is violating civil rights if it pulls out of the Jefferson County school district.

Since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that separate is not equal, some 60 years ago, federal courts have kept an eye on specific school districts across the country that showed a tendency toward segregation.

“Nobody has ever said anything to me about the real reason why they want to form their own system,” says Craig Pouncey, superintendent of the schools in Jefferson County.

If Gardendale splinters off, he says, it’ll disrupt the larger district’s efforts to desegregate. “Diversity actually builds strength, in my opinion. Because it opens people’s minds. Now, I’ve seen where our schools, particularly in the last two years, have really thrived on that diversity.

Oh it opens minds, alright.

And by minds we mean “SKULLS.”

And minds aren’t the only thing getting opened by diversity.

WINK WINK WINK WINK.

If Gardendale leaves, it won’t just hurt diversity. It could also take with it money, some staff, and special programs like the auto tech class DeVonte Kirkland buses to.

But leaders in Gardendale have tried to make the case that what they’re doing is best for their kids. They claim they aren’t violating civil rights, and aren’t segregating. Part of the plan allows about 700 African-American students from one specific area to remain in the new majority-white system, even though they live outside city limits.

The federal judge will soon decide whether that makes the system truly desegregated.

Whites just need to accept that blacks are taking back the civilization they stole, and just give up.

Look at little DeVonte building this car.

Blacks don’t have their own car program because white people stole it.

If that doesn’t open up your heart, you deserve to die.