Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: AWMac on December 10, 2005, 10:25:46 PM
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Gotta say this... I was born in Toledo, Ohio, '58... Nice Grey dead in the Winter town... I spent a lifetime to escape from Toledo and I made it. Boone Docks and Glass Factories... Had a chance to work in Toledo, hold an income, turned it down and got laid off.. I've begged my Mother and Father to leave Toledo.. Dads all for it, Mom sez she doesn't want to leave all her firends...all her friends are dead...
Now all this Racial crap has to start in Toledo?
Old Chit...VERY OLD....
Do I owe someone something?
I may be missing the point here.
Help me out,
Mac
Tin soldiers and Nixon coming....
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MAC,
Maybe i've been away from the news awhile, but whats stirring in Toledo?
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Originally posted by Wolfala
MAC,
Maybe i've been away from the news awhile, but whats stirring in Toledo?
Neo-Nazis Rally in Ohio
Saturday, December 10, 2005
TOLEDO, Ohio — Members of a neo-Nazi group staged a rally at City Hall on Saturday, two months after plans for an earlier march set off a four-hour riot in which a mob attacked businesses and police.
Hundreds of officers stood guard to make sure there was no repeat of the October melee as about 60 white supremacists shouted at counterdemonstrators and held placards, including one reading: "White race, stand up and take back your neighborhood."
Nearly 200 others showed up in the freezing weather to protest against the members of the National Socialist Movement.
The counterdemonstrators, chanting slogans and carrying signs reading "Go home Nazis" and "Stop the hate now," were kept behind barricades about 75 yards from the area where the neo-Nazis were cordoned off.
After speaking for an hour, the neo-Nazis left in a caravan of cars, escorted by several police cruisers. Authorities reported only minor arrests and no violence.
In October, the neo-Nazis gathered for a march they said was intended to protest gangs and rising crime in a Toledo neighborhood. That plan set off a riot in which businesses were burned and looted and bricks were thrown at police.
On Saturday, Police Chief Mike Navarre said about 700 officers from across northern Ohio were stationed through the downtown area. He said gang leaders and community activists had offered assurances that counterdemonstrations would be peaceful as long as the neo-Nazis were kept out of predominantly black neighborhoods — a key factor in October's disturbance.
Police made 29 arrests, all for misdemeanor offenses that included disorderly conduct, inciting violence and carrying a concealed weapon. There were no injuries or property damage, Navarre said.
The cost of policing the small rally was expected to reach $300,000 for the city alone, not counting the cost for state troopers and sheriff's deputies.
A judge granted the city's request Friday to block the neo-Nazi group and counterdemonstrators from rallying beyond the grounds of the downtown government building. That kept the group about two miles from the neighborhood where the rioting broke out in October. Twelve officers were injured and 114 people had been arrested after the earlier rally.
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who was gov of Ohio when you were 1 years old?
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Too bad you weren’t there to floor it in a huge car toward the demonstrators, forcing them to jump off of a bridge into the cold icy waters below. I hate the Ohio Nazis.
eskimo
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didnt the antinazi protesters do all the rioting last time?
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Where can I get a Mud Hens cap?
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I wouldn't say that they were the anti war protestors who did all the rioting.
I'd say who they really were and why, but I'd be banned for being racist.
So I'll let lazs do it.
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'preciate that.
lazs