Archive for Bigotry

Small Ky. church votes against interracial couples! What kind of God do they serve?


LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A tiny all-white Appalachian church in rural Kentucky has voted to ban interracial couples from joining its flock, pitting members against each other in an argument over race.

Members at the Gulnare Free Will Baptist Church voted Sunday on the resolution, which says the church “does not condone interracial marriage.”

The church member who crafted the resolution, Melvin Thompson, said he is not racist and called the matter an “internal affair.”

“I am not racist. I will tell you that. I am not prejudiced against any race of people, have never in my lifetime spoke evil about a race,” said Thompson, the church’s former pastor who stepped down earlier this year. “That’s what this is being portrayed as, but it is not.”

Church secretary Dean Harville disagrees: He says the resolution came after his daughter visited the church this summer with her boyfriend from Africa.

Stella Harville and Ticha Chikuni — now her fiancé — visited the church in June and Chikuni sang a song for the congregation. The two had visited the church before.

Dean Harville, the church’s secretary, said he was counting the church offering after a service in early August when he was approached by Thompson, who told him Harville’s daughter and her boyfriend were no longer allowed to sing at the church.

The vote by members last Sunday was 9-6, Harville said. It was taken after the service, which about 35 to 40 people attended. Harville said many people left or declined to vote.

The resolution says anyone is welcome to attend services, but interracial couples could not become members or be “used in worship services or other church functions.”

Stella Harville, a 24-year-old graduate student at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Indiana, called the vote “hurtful.”

The church’s pastor, Stacy Stepp, said Wednesday that he was against the resolution. Stepp said the denomination’s regional conference will begin working on resolving the issue this weekend.

The National Association of Free Will Baptists in Antioch, Tenn., has no official position on interracial marriage for its 2,400 churches worldwide, executive secretary Keith Burden said. The denomination believes in the Bible is inerrant and local churches have autonomy over decision-making.

“It’s been a non-issue with us,” Burden said, adding that many interracial couples attend Free Will Baptist churches. He said the Pike County church acted on its own. Burden said the association can move to strip the local church of its affiliation with the national denomination if it’s not resolved.

“Hopefully it is corrected quickly,” Burden said.

The church’s vote on interracial marriage was first reported this week by East Kentucky Broadcasting, a network of local radio stations in the region.

Stella Harville met Chikuni at Georgetown College, where he is a student advisor. Dean Harville said Chikuni’s parents live in southern Africa, and he has not seen them in over a decade.

Two Republicans call Pres. Obama ‘tar baby’ and ‘boy’ – What next by these Republicans?


Two Republicans call Pres. Obama ‘tar baby’ and ‘boy’
By Joan Firstenberg.

Washington – Two national Republican figures have now apologized for calling President Obama first a “tar baby” and then “boy” fueling speculation from the left that much of the criticism of the president and his policies, is really a symptom of racism.

The first incident happened last week. The Christian Science Monitor reports that’s when Representative Doug Lamborn (R) of Colorado, appeared on a Denver talk radio show, where he said,

“Even if some people say, “‘Well the Republicans should have done this or they should have done that,” they will hold the president responsible. Now, I don’t even want to have to be associated with him. It’s like touching a tar baby and you get it, you’re stuck, and you’re a part of the problem now and you can’t get away.”

There have been other incidents in recent years where republicans, including Sen. John McCain and Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, apologized after they used the words, “tar baby,”. But their usage at the time referred to various government policies and projects, not a black President.

The next verbal assault came Tuesday night when former GOP presidential candidate and MSNBC contributor Pat Buchanan, during an interview with the Reverend Al Sharpton, himself a black man, referred to President Obama as “your boy.” Sharpton shot back with,

“My what? My president, Barack Obama? What did you say? He’s nobody’s boy. He’s your president, he’s my president, and that’s what you have to get through your head.”
Mr. Buchanan then tried to squirm out of it by saying that he was using a boxing analogy, and that the president was “your boy in the ring.”

The LATimes reports that both men have apologized to President Obama. Lamborn, issued a statement from his office, saying he was just trying to tell a radio audience that Obama’s
“policies have created an economic quagmire for the nation and are responsible for the dismal economic conditions our country faces.”

The Lamborn letter indicated that he regretted choosing the phrase “tar baby” when he could have used the word, quagmire.

Buchanan, who was a GOP presidential candidate in 1992 and in 1996, was on his cable network’s “Morning Joe” program on Wednesday to explain his remarks the night before when he referred to Obama as “your boy” during a discussion with the Reverend Al Sharpton. He had this to say during the discussion,

“Some folks took what I said as some kind of a slur,” Buchanan said. “None was meant, none was intended, none was delivered.”

Experts: Christian militia part of growing trend! You can not blame it on a Afro American Persident: These nuts have always been lurking around!


The actions of the Christian militia group raided in Michigan are part of a growing trend of militant activity across the U.S. because of the weak economy and an African-American president, experts and a civil rights group said today.

Hutaree, a militia based in Lenawee County, allegedly planned an uprising against the U.S. government by plotting to murder police.

“I don’t think this is the last we’re going to see of these groups,” said Michael Barkun, a professor of political science at Syracuse University who studies religious violence and extremism. “The number of such groups has increased fairly dramatically in the last couple of years.”

The number of extremist anti-government groups and militias grew from 149 in 2008 to 512 in 2009, said Heidi Beirich, director of research at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil groups that monitors extremism.

“That is a lot of change in a short period of time,” Beirich said.

She said factors include the poor economy and demographic changes in the country’s racial and ethnic composition — symbolized by an African American in the White House and a female House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi. Both are Democrats and seen by some as pushing for bigger government that will diminish their freedom.

“The country is becoming more diverse,” Beirich said. “Some people find it hard to handle … these are extreme stressors for people.”

Hutaree — which means “Christian warrior” — is a group based in Lenawee County that federal prosecutors describe as “an anti-government extremist organization which advocates against local, state, and federal law enforcement officials.”

The group’s members hoped that killing law enforcement would lead to “a more widespread uprising against the government,” the indictment reads.

Professor Barkun said the group is a millennialist group that “seems to be preparing for warfare in the end of times against what they see as the forces of the antichrist. They regard that struggle as imminent. …They apparently believe that the saved will have to fight through the tribulations against the forces of the antichrist.”

The group sees themselves as “being engaged in combat against the forces of evil,” he said.

To Hutaree, the antichrist is the government.

Beirich said that Hutaree was not isolated from other militias, noting that it had more than 363 friends on My Space, including militias in Ohio, Kentucky and Michigan.

“They were part of the broader militia movement,” she said.

But one militia leader in Michigan said Hutaree was not connected to them in any way, describing Hutaree as a fringe cult.

“They more closely fit the definition of a cult,” said Michael Lackomar, with the Southeastern Michigan Volunteer Militia and michiganmilitia.com. “They believe the world is about to end according to how it was written in the Bible, and their job is to stand up and clear the way for Jesus and fight along side him against the forces of darkness.”

Lackomar said, “A lot of people are upset at an ever growing government that is overreaching.”

But he added that his militia is not associated with Hutaree “in any way, shape, or form.”

He said their plans to attack law enforcement are “despicable.”

Lackomar said that during the federal raid, a member of Hutaree attempted to seek the help of another militia member associated with Lackomar’s group. But the man told the Hutaree member he should turn himself in and didn’t help him, Lackomar said.

“You got to leave. I can’t help you,” the militia member told the Hutaree member, Lackomar said.