You know how I know your news source is lying?
Comments
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That I'm laughing at you.RaceBannon said:
What does that mean?2001400ex said:
El oh elRaceBannon said:
Backtracking already?2001400ex said:
Bob thinks 100% of the country complied with the civil Rights act in 1964/1965. How cute.SFGbob said:
What was the news source you were citing that told you blacks couldn't drink from public water fountains in the 1970s Hondo?2001400ex said:Democratic liberals, including all of the senators currently running for president, have come out in support of the legislation, which calls for generating 100 percent of the nation's power from renewable sources within 10 years.
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2019/02/12/mitch-mcconnell-to-force-the-senate-to-vote-on-alexandria-ocasio-cortez-green-new-deal.html -
cringeworthy
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I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then -
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then -
Where was it that Blacks couldn't drink out of public water fountains in the 1970s Hondo?2001400ex said:
Bob thinks 100% of the country complied with the civil Rights act in 1964/1965. How cute.SFGbob said:
What was the news source you were citing that told you blacks couldn't drink from public water fountains in the 1970s Hondo?2001400ex said:Democratic liberals, including all of the senators currently running for president, have come out in support of the legislation, which calls for generating 100 percent of the nation's power from renewable sources within 10 years.
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2019/02/12/mitch-mcconnell-to-force-the-senate-to-vote-on-alexandria-ocasio-cortez-green-new-deal.html -
How about one example now that you have back tracked all the way to some small town somewhere and does that still excuse the Democrats in Virginia for being racist?2001400ex said:
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then
El oh El!!!!
Read for comprehension?
You live in a white nationalist state cracker -
You said there were many places in the 1970s where blacks couldn't drink from public water fountains. Where were they and how did they stop blacks from doing so? Did they arrest them? Beat them? Surely you've got some evidence to back up that ignorant mouth of yours Hondo.2001400ex said:
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then
And you weren't talking about a single isolated incident Hondo. You were claiming that it was still a practice that continued in many places. -
You always know when Hondo is lying when he starts denying things he was never accused of. No one said that you said "everywhere" Hondo. Why don't you provide the quote of what you said Hondo?2001400ex said:
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then -
Your own quote even says that southern towns that complied did so begrudgingly.RaceBannon said:
How about one example now that you have back tracked all the way to some small town somewhere and does that still excuse the Democrats in Virginia for being racist?2001400ex said:
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then
El oh El!!!!
Read for comprehension?
You live in a white nationalist state cracker
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Complied. Grudgingly or not they complied. It also says promptly. Did you miss that?2001400ex said:
Your own quote even says that southern towns that complied did so begrudgingly.RaceBannon said:
How about one example now that you have back tracked all the way to some small town somewhere and does that still excuse the Democrats in Virginia for being racist?2001400ex said:
Read my original quote. I didn't say everywhere. I didn't even say it was widespread. But there were some racist small towns where that shit was still going on. And you are an ignorant old white dude from the West coast if you don't get that. And your quote says as much. If you actually read it.RaceBannon said:I guess it is easier to laugh at me than admit you're a dumbass
When did segregated water fountains end?
Ben Steelman
StarNews
That’s a good question, and it’s a tough one to answer.
Segregation of public facilities — including water fountains and restrooms — was officially outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2, 1964, after a rare cloture vote in the U.S. Senate. (Sen. Robert F. Byrd, D-W.Va., a former Klansman, spoke against the bill on the Senate floor for 14 hours, 13 minutes straight.)
U.S. Rep. Alton A. Lennon of Wilmington, a Democrat who represented North Carolina’s 7th District at the time, and North Carolina’s U.S. senators, Democrats B. Everett Jordan and Sam J. Ervin Jr., all voted against the measure.
In Raleigh, Wilmington and other Southern cities, local businesses seem to have complied grudgingly but promptly. (Local historian Susan Taylor Block remembers watching the water fountains being removed from the downtown J.C. Penney store when she was a young girl.) In smaller towns and rural areas, however, old Jim Crow customs lingered a little while longer.
The questioner specifically mentioned H.L. Green’s dime store, which was at 258 N. Front St., Wilmington [Map this], until around 1967. That was one of a number of stores and offices with segregated fountains.
Local history librarian Beverly Tetterton still remembers seeing fading “White” and “Colored” signs on the restrooms of shuttered gas stations when she first came to town in the 1970s.
Elliott Erwin of Magnum Photos took a celebrated black-and-white photo of a segregated water fountain in North Carolina in 1950.
Date posted: June 5, 2009
I guess you were talking about shuttered gas stations then
El oh El!!!!
Read for comprehension?
You live in a white nationalist state cracker
El oh El!!!!!!!
Give us just one town hondo. Link?


