Monday, May 25, 2015

After he robbed a store, assaulted its owner & attempted to attack Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson, Ferguson blacks honor him with a memorial plaque.

How do you think the store owner of Ferguson Market & Liquor and former Ferguson Police Officer Darren Brown, whose life was threatened by teen Mike Brown feel about the new memorial plaque the city's black residents are honoring him with this Memorial Day? The plaque has been placed on the sidewalk on the street near where Brown attacked officer Wilson.
A plaque in honor of Michael Brown will replace the teddy bears, candles and flowers piled on the street where he was gunned down by a Missouri cop.
The father of the slain teen and Ferguson’s mayor announced the new shrine on Wednesday — Brown’s birthday.
“There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about my son,” Michael Brown Sr. said at a news conference. “We're just really trying to move forward.”


Michael Brown was 18 in August 2014 when he was killed during a confrontation with Officer Darren Wilson.
The death of the unarmed teen and a grand jury’s decision not to charge Wilson with a crime sparked outrage across the nation, leading to the “Black Lives Matter” movement against police brutality. (Source)
 Reportedly, many upstanding people in the community are saying it will be a nice place they can take their pets to relieve themselves.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Butlering the American Presidency: Is white America safe w/another black president - even if he's a Republican whose maybe even better educated & craftier than Obama? What if he's a radical black in GOP clothing?

Washington (CNN)Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson handily won the Southern Republican Leadership Conference straw poll on Saturday, the first major survey to take the temperature of the Republican presidential field in the south.

Carson, a staunch opponent of Obamacare who is popular among social conservatives, captured 25.4% of the vote in a pool that counted nearly 20 candidates, including announced and prospective hopefuls for the party's 2016 nomination. Runners-up Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz also received large shares of the vote, finishing with 20.5% and 16.6%, respectively.
The SRLC said in a press release that the survey is one of the first straw polls of the 2016 cycle "and is an indicator of southern primary voter support."
"This was an energetic and inspiring conference," conference chair Steve Fair said in the release. "If the level of interest in this straw poll is any indicator, a Republican candidate will be well positioned to retake the White House in 2016." (CNN Politics)