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  #1
Steve Coile
 
Default The Lesson of Virginia Tech

What group of people allows a gunman locked in a room with them to
shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop,
reload, and on and on and on. Sixty people were shot by one man with
a pistol without a single one of them making any substantial resistance.
Isn't this noteworthy? What kind of sheep live in our society who
would allow someone to shoot them and sixty others without making any
kind of resistance?

If there is any greater message to be taken from this, it is a comment
on how weak-willed people in our society have become that they would
allow one man with a pistol to massacre them. With our brains full of
all this garbage about how we can't fight, can't resist, have to go
along, accept multi- culturalism, accept immigration, being loving,
be tolerant, et cetera, the people of our society -- and particularly
those who are groomed for the privileged layers of the working class,
which is what all higher-salary workers are -- have been neutered and
denied any sense of transcendence -- and thus are completely lacking
in courage. They'd rather cringe under a desk and hope against reason
to live than stand up and fight and lose their lives protecting others.

That's the lesson of Virginia Tech. The fact that sixty people allowed
themselves to be victimized by one gunman disgusts me almost more than
the fact a gunman existed. Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but
the lack of courage needed to face them is a unique product of the
Judaification of society.

http://www.overthrow.com/lsn/news.asp?articleID=10347


 
  #2
Bert Hyman
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

stevers@nospam.thanks (Steve Coile) wrote in
news:1177000706.27743@nospam.thanks:

> Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but the lack of courage needed
> to face them is a unique product of the Judaification of society.


Judaification?

Well, isn't that cute.

--
Bert Hyman | St. Paul, MN | bert@iphouse.com
 
  #3
John P.
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

Get a job.

Skip college.

Learn to drink on your own.


 
  #4
Nobody
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

> That's the lesson of Virginia Tech. The fact that sixty people allowed
> themselves to be victimized by one gunman disgusts me almost more than
> the fact a gunman existed. Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but
> the lack of courage needed to face them is a unique product of the
> Judaification of society.
>
> http://www.overthrow.com/lsn/news.asp?articleID=10347
>


They probably did not want to risk their degree they were working so hard to
get. Before you laugh at me and then start flaming me let me tell you why I
say that. One year at the beginning of high school. I say I was 10 or 11th
grade, the school principal called every body to the auditorium to lay down
the laws. One thing that stuck in my head from all the other BS was if
another student started punching the crap out of you. In order to keep from
getting kicked out of school you were to put your hands in your pocket and
wait for the teacher to come and pull the attacker off of you. Along with
how they could prosecute and send you to jail after so many fights. But lots
of us still got kicked out for defending ourselves and I don't remember
hearing of anybody going to jail. But I think the reason we ignored the
rules is most did not take our education seriously enough to let another
person pound the crap out of us.

I had to throw the first punch a few times because after I went to the
principal to complain about students picking on me and all he said was for
me to ignore them. I found out the hard way that was not working. But after
beating the crap out of them my problem was solved, when I returned back to
school after they suspended me for fighting. It ticked me off that if the
principal did his job I would have not had to take it that far. But I did
enjoy the 3 day vacations.

What kind of stupid rules and dirt is Va Tech is sweeping under the rug and
not telling the general public to protect their image.







 
  #5
Notan
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

Steve Coile wrote:
> What group of people allows a gunman locked in a room with them to
> shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop,
> reload, and on and on and on. Sixty people were shot by one man with
> a pistol without a single one of them making any substantial resistance.
> Isn't this noteworthy? What kind of sheep live in our society who
> would allow someone to shoot them and sixty others without making any
> kind of resistance?
>
> If there is any greater message to be taken from this, it is a comment
> on how weak-willed people in our society have become that they would
> allow one man with a pistol to massacre them. With our brains full of
> all this garbage about how we can't fight, can't resist, have to go
> along, accept multi- culturalism, accept immigration, being loving,
> be tolerant, et cetera, the people of our society -- and particularly
> those who are groomed for the privileged layers of the working class,
> which is what all higher-salary workers are -- have been neutered and
> denied any sense of transcendence -- and thus are completely lacking
> in courage. They'd rather cringe under a desk and hope against reason
> to live than stand up and fight and lose their lives protecting others.
>
> That's the lesson of Virginia Tech. The fact that sixty people allowed
> themselves to be victimized by one gunman disgusts me almost more than
> the fact a gunman existed. Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but
> the lack of courage needed to face them is a unique product of the
> Judaification of society.


Big balls from a guy sitting in front of a computer.

--
Notan
 
  #6
Bulldog
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech


> Big balls from a guy sitting in front of a computer.
> Big balls from a guy sitting in front of a computer
> --
> Notan



 
  #7
Tim Howard
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

Steve Coile wrote:
> What group of people allows a gunman locked in a room with them to
> shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop,
> reload, and on and on and on. Sixty people were shot by one man with
> a pistol without a single one of them making any substantial resistance.
> Isn't this noteworthy? What kind of sheep live in our society who
> would allow someone to shoot them and sixty others without making any
> kind of resistance?
>
> If there is any greater message to be taken from this, it is a comment
> on how weak-willed people in our society have become that they would
> allow one man with a pistol to massacre them. With our brains full of
> all this garbage about how we can't fight, can't resist, have to go
> along, accept multi- culturalism, accept immigration, being loving,
> be tolerant, et cetera, the people of our society -- and particularly
> those who are groomed for the privileged layers of the working class,
> which is what all higher-salary workers are -- have been neutered and
> denied any sense of transcendence -- and thus are completely lacking
> in courage. They'd rather cringe under a desk and hope against reason
> to live than stand up and fight and lose their lives protecting others.
>
> That's the lesson of Virginia Tech. The fact that sixty people allowed
> themselves to be victimized by one gunman disgusts me almost more than
> the fact a gunman existed. Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but
> the lack of courage needed to face them is a unique product of the
> Judaification of society.
>

We can debate about the Jews, but one thing they are not is cowards. I
am not surprised to see some hateful idiots use this event to cynically
blame the Jews for yet another of the world's problems.

> http://www.overthrow.com/lsn/news.asp?articleID=10347
>

A neo-Nazi website. Tells you all you need to know.
 
  #8
Accurate Toners and Inks
 
Default Re: The Lesson of Virginia Tech

I would have slapped Cho upside the head with a Basic Moral Education manual
before he even pulled the gun.


"Steve Coile" <stevers@nospam.thanks> wrote in message
news:1177000706.27743@nospam.thanks...
> What group of people allows a gunman locked in a room with them to
> shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop, reload, shoot them, stop,
> reload, and on and on and on. Sixty people were shot by one man with
> a pistol without a single one of them making any substantial resistance.
> Isn't this noteworthy? What kind of sheep live in our society who
> would allow someone to shoot them and sixty others without making any
> kind of resistance?
>
> If there is any greater message to be taken from this, it is a comment
> on how weak-willed people in our society have become that they would
> allow one man with a pistol to massacre them. With our brains full of
> all this garbage about how we can't fight, can't resist, have to go
> along, accept multi- culturalism, accept immigration, being loving,
> be tolerant, et cetera, the people of our society -- and particularly
> those who are groomed for the privileged layers of the working class,
> which is what all higher-salary workers are -- have been neutered and
> denied any sense of transcendence -- and thus are completely lacking
> in courage. They'd rather cringe under a desk and hope against reason
> to live than stand up and fight and lose their lives protecting others.
>
> That's the lesson of Virginia Tech. The fact that sixty people allowed
> themselves to be victimized by one gunman disgusts me almost more than
> the fact a gunman existed. Sick people like Cho are inevitable, but
> the lack of courage needed to face them is a unique product of the
> Judaification of society.
>
> http://www.overthrow.com/lsn/news.asp?articleID=10347
>
>



 
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