Monday, May 28, 2007

Norma Raegun

Those Robots That Host Tables At Fairs? - They're ALWAYS "Inflatable Rightie Youth" - Now Meet Their Cretin Queen !!:

"When the club started, Jezierski told the campus newspaper, "This club is a way to instill pride in each other and not be ashamed we're Caucasian males..."

"...Its supporters (at one time, the club had 40 members) told reporters that white males are quickly becoming a minority on college campuses and in America, and that their numbers are declining by outstanding percentages.

Um, not quite. Not in Arizona, and definitely not at Arizona State. In 2006, 283 black ASU students graduated with about 7,000 of their white peers..."

"...But recently, when contacted by New Times, he sounded sheepish. "It dwindled off," he said. "There's not much interest in it." He didn't really want to talk about the club anymore.

Maybe that's because Jezierski wasn't really the one behind it in the first place.

The truth is that a woman started the Caucasian American Men of ASU: a blond-haired, blue-eyed former beauty pageant queen named Emily Mitchell, who never even went to Arizona State University..."

"...Emily Mitchell looks like just another undergrad, but she's actually a political organizer working for a Virginia-based nonprofit called the Leadership Institute...founded in the late '70s to put young conservatives into prominent positions..."

Norma Raegun, the flower of a rightie pod, moving like a bee through the culture delivering pods that will deliver pods that will deliver pods. Like the lump in Coulter's throat, it's there and perhaps it's a sign.


"...It's Mitchell's job to push students like Jezierski to become active in what she calls the conservative movement...Mitchell started 57 clubs on Arizona college campuses during the 2006-2007 school year, including CAMASU; the New Sexual Revolution, an abstinence club; and the Network of Enlightened Women, a conservative women's group opposed to radical feminism and concepts such as women's studies or The Vagina Monologues, one she says she'd like to be a part of if she were a student. She also started Choice Magazine, a libertarian publication. And she supported established clubs like ASU's anti-abortion group Students for Life, founding chapters on other college campuses..."

"...Though LI promotes conservative values, it is registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and lists itself as nonpartisan. But it is clear that founder and president Morton Blackwell, at least, is a staunch Republican. He's served in various parts of the RNC since 1965 and is currently a Republican committeeman for Virginia..."

"...There is nothing on campus that could be described as conservative,' Blackwell says. 'It's really outrageous. Families that send their kids to college don't expect they're going to be in left-wing indoctrination centers.' "

The brilliance missing from these cretins is legion. The other side of their coin says that families that bring their souls to church don't expect they're going to be in right-wing indoctrination centers.

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