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Victory Resolved, Despite Munsen Guilty-Plea
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skinheadz
2008-06-11 18:39:42 UTC
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VICTORY RESOLVED, DESPITE MUNSEN GUILTY-PLEA

The eighteen-year-old, who had displayed a noose to protest the
invasion by supporters of Negro-muggers, who had beaten a youth in
Jena, Louisiana, has pleaded guilty to "hate." Jeremiah Munsen, who
had been acclaimed for his dramatic freedom-of-speech, had been
lauded by the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free
Expression at Charlottesville, Virginia, which had awarded Munsen's
Negro-prosecutor, Donald Washington, the "Jefferson Muzzle", for
opposing the First Amendment. The Nationalist Movement had applauded
Munsen as "a direct-descendant of Peter Zenger," who had libeled the
King and sparked the American Revolution. The same noose had been
hung by Jena high-school students to protest integration.

Richard Barrett called the plea a "tragedy of the highest-magnitude,"
noting that Negro William Winchester had been arrested for attacking
"Jena Justice Day", which voiced support for Munsen. Barrett
explained that the Nationalists had offered to provide a full
legal-defense, at no charge, to Munsen, "which would symbolically
place the 'Jena-Six' on trial, vindicate the First Amendment and give
the people the final-say." However, according to Barrett, there had
been a "snafu" in communications, which derailed representation by
the pro-majority organization. Barrett said that he could neither
confirm nor deny any communications between the Nationalists and
Munsen, due to any potential attorney-client-privilege, but that
Munsen might say more, if he wished.

Barrett did say that local-counsel, Gregory Aymond, had been "let go"
because Aymond had wanted to charge Munsen, but that Nationalists had
desired to accept Munsen's case, if Munsen had sought counsel, at no
charge. Munsen, eventually, sought a federal public-defender, who
cajoled acceptance of the guilty-plea. "It was the worst possible
choice," said Barrett. Critics had noted that Munsen would have
likely been sacked with a Negro-jury, but Barrett, who had won the
cross-burning cases against Larry Walker and Kenneth Painter in
Mississippi and written free-speech law in the United States Supreme
Court, insisted that Munsen would have ultimately prevailed "in a
court of law," in the "court of public-opinion" or before the "judge
of all history."

Barrett said that well-wishers had attempted to bolster Munsen, prior
to Munsen's choice of the public-defender, but that Munsen's father
had seemed disinterested. Most reported that the phone at the
Munsen-residence at Colfax went unanswered and that, when the father
did respond, his demeanor was "polite but unenthusiastic." "He did
not seem inclined to want Jeremiah to take a stand or to realize the
significance of his son's stance in the annals of freedom," said one
caller, who asked to remain anonymous. In 1988, Mark Watts had been
charged with "hate" in Georgia, for leading a parade against the
Negro-invaders of Forsyth County, a precursor to the Jena invasion.
Barrett successfully defended Watts and all charges were dismissed.

In an interview with KNOE-TV, Barrett displayed a placard, featuring
a noose, inscribed "Sic Semper Tyrannus", the motto of Virginia,
meaning, "Death Always to Tyrants." He said that he would keep it up.
"All The Way", the Nationalist-newspaper, featured a front-page
depiction of a noose hung by Chris Faulkner, a New-Orleans resident
supporting Munsen. Meanwhile, a bill was presented in the
Louisiana-legislature to make displaying a noose a "crime." Barrett
termed the proposal "unconstitutional on its face." David Dupre, who
defied Jena police-chief Paul Smith, by bringing firearms to "Jena
Justice Day", rebuked the bill. "So, you cannot offend a Negro? I say
the hell with them. Next, they'll pass a law that you can't even give
a Negro a dirty-look."

According to Dupre, "There are a lot of things the Negro does that I
find offensive, but where's the law that helps me? They can call us
'cracker' or 'honkie,' but, that's okay. Yet, God forbid, you call
them a nigger or put up a Rebel Flag and they are 'offended.' What's
more, they break into your home and you shoot them and it's 'hate.'
They can half-kill a white-kid, like a pack of animals, but they want
to be turned loose. Where are the lawmakers on that?" Barrett urged
Munsen to speak out, especially at his sentencing, to condemn the
"Jena-Six" and their supporters of lawlessness. Barrett exclaimed
that "the persecuted of one day may well be the patriots of the next.
I am resolved that the Americans will win and the 'Jena-Six' will lose."

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NYDarkBlue
2008-06-11 20:48:56 UTC
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VICTORY RESOLVED, DESPITE MUNSEN GUILTY-PLEA
The news that cali has gay marrage really excites the z-boys

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