Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 5, 2014
During this time blacks had to give up there seats to whites when more whites got on the bus. Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat.
Her and the bus driver began to talk and the conversation went like this. ‘Let me have those front seats’ said the driver.
She didn’t get up and told the driver that she was tired of giving her seat to white people.
‘I’m going to have you arrested,’ said the driver. ‘You may do that,’ Rosa Parks responded.
Two white policemen came in and Rosa Parks asked them ‘why do you all push us around?’
The police officer replied and said ‘I don’t know, but the law is the law and you’re under arrest.
A whistleblower, Mary Willingham, a former professor at the school released the essay and alleged widespread fraud at UNC, where the black footballers do nothing at all and are pushed through classes in an illegal fashion.
From the Daily Mail:
The shocking essay came to light during an ESPN documentary timed to coincide with the March Madness basketball competition. It contains allegations that UNC athletes in danger of failing were encouraged to sign up for fake tutor groups designed to let students pass.
The so-called ‘paper classes’ were essentially no-show study groups that allowed semi-literate and in some cases, illiterate athletes to pass, thereby boosting their Grade Point Average to meet the NCAA’s eligibility requirements.
The anonymous essay, titled, ‘Rosa Parks: My Story’ attempts to recount the important moment on December 1, 1955 in Montgomery, Alabama, when Parks refused to give her seat up for a white man.
However, it fails to even place the event in the past or give any gravitas to the momentous moment in American history.
‘Some of these college students could read at a second or third grade level,’ Willingham, a UNC academic adviser since 2003 told ESPN.
‘Students were taking classes that really didn’t exist. They were called independent studies at that time and they just had to write a paper… There was no attendance.’
During the course of her ESPN interview, Williams confirmed the existence of ‘easy paper classes’ and alleged that studentsThe shocking essay came to light during an ESPN documentary timed to coincide with the March Madness basketball competition. It contains allegations that UNC athletes in danger of failing were encouraged to sign up for fake tutor groups designed to let students pass.
The so-called ‘paper classes’ were essentially no-show study groups that allowed semi-literate and in some cases, illiterate athletes to pass, thereby boosting their Grade Point Average to meet the NCAA’s eligibility requirements.
The anonymous essay, titled, ‘Rosa Parks: My Story’ attempts to recount the important moment on December 1, 1955 in Montgomery, Alabama, when Parks refused to give her seat up for a white man.
However, it fails to even place the event in the past or give any gravitas to the momentous moment in American history.
‘Some of these college students could read at a second or third grade level,’ Willingham, a UNC academic adviser since 2003 told ESPN.
‘Students were taking classes that really didn’t exist. They were called independent studies at that time and they just had to write a paper… There was no attendance.’
During the course of her ESPN interview, Williams confirmed the existence of ‘easy paper classes’ and alleged that students were guided to these classes by their academic advisors.
‘Their job isn’t necessarily to make Deunta Williams a better person, a smarter person,’ Williams told ESPN.
‘Their job is to make sure I’m eligible to play.’
Deunta Williams, played football at UNC from 2007 to 2010 and has admitted to the scam, now says he is ashamed to have been involved with it.
Willingham’s whistleblowing began in 2011 after she became appalled that UNC, rather than educating its athletes was keeping them from needing to study at all. were guided to these classes by their academic advisors.
‘Their job isn’t necessarily to make Deunta Williams a better person, a smarter person,’ Williams told ESPN.
‘Their job is to make sure I’m eligible to play.’
Deunta Williams, played football at UNC from 2007 to 2010 and has admitted to the scam, now says he is ashamed to have been involved with it.
Willingham’s whistleblowing began in 2011 after she became appalled that UNC, rather than educating its athletes was keeping them from needing to study at all.
Presumably, everyone already knew this was happening. Most black people are either completely illiterate or borderline, but these schools have to have those players.
What is interesting to consider here is the fact that the establishment – in this case a university – acknowledges in their behavior that blacks are incapable of competing with Whites in any area relating to intelligence, and yet with their rhetoric they continue to enforce the idiotic notion that “we are all exactly the same – skin color is the only difference.”
We are not exactly the same. We are completely different. If we were exactly the same there would be no need for endemic university corruption in order to allow black sports players to remain illiterate and yet pass classes at university.
I will not be surprised if Willingham is accused of “racism” for having drawn attention to this issue. As that is how racism is defined, is it not? One who brings attention to widely accepted, though unmentioned facts is a “racist.”