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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (7441)3/17/2005 11:26:46 PM
From: rrufff  Respond to of 22250
 
Emile, did the Jewish wife let you out of the basement yet? You seem to use these intervals to libel an entire religion. Is it because the wife robs you of your masculinity or perhaps you never had any?

Shall we review your hatred of African Americans?

Do you still believe there are too many blacks in city hall?

What a scum bag, bigot!!

Do you realize that Jesus is watching you and judging you for your hatred?



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (7441)3/17/2005 11:27:22 PM
From: rrufff  Respond to of 22250
 
Message 16531020

Too Many Blacks at City Hall!
LOL! Emile, you RASCAL! Who could have guessed you worked for David Duke and ran for office on the famous and popular "Too Many Blacks" agenda?
LOL!
The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.)
September 23, 1995 Saturday METRO EDITION
Vidrine: Too many blacks at city hall
BYLINE: BRUCE SCHULTZ, ACADIANA BUREAU
LAFAYETTE - Emile Vidrine, candidate for city-parish president, told realtors Friday that too many black people are working in city hall, depriving Caucasians off those jobs.
He said 31 percent of the employees in city hall are black, compared to the minority population in the city which is less than 20 percent.
"Folks, that's un-Christian and unjust," he told the Lafayette Board of Realtors. Vidrine, a Republican, ran for mayor in 1992 and he came in last with 603 votes, less than 2 percent of the total.
He said an affirmative action program at city hall gives an advantage to black people, and that keeps white people out of those jobs.
"We are discriminating against white people, and it has to stop," he said.

But officials in city hall deny any affirmative action quotas are used in hiring.
Vidrine also spoke out against the "moral crisis" facing the U.S. He said the nation must return to Christianity.
"The impasse between the mayor and City Council is an impasse of pirituality and morality," Vidrine said. "They could not forgive one and another for the good of Lafayette.
Parish President Walter Comeaux said unrest in city government has stalled progress in the city.
"Nothing's moving because of dissension, because of bickering," he said.
Comeaux said he favors the Camellia Boulevard bridge, Louisiana Avenue extension and a South College Road bridge over Bayou Vermilion.
Comeaux said parish government has reduced its workforce by 41 percent through layoffs, reflecting the economy of the mid-1980s.
"We all took a beating and we all suffered," he said.
But parish government has increased its productivity.
"We took the high road and we didn't fight," he said.
Parish Councilman Ed Roy said Lafayette government will change in June with the new city-parish government.
"If we don't change the politics, we haven't changed anything," he said.
Roy said a high-capacity water system is needed for all of
Lafayette Parish to attract new businesses. And he said the parish needs a comprehensive development plan to decide issues related to future growth.
Government should help businesses, he said.
City Councilman Elmo Laborde said he's the youngest of the
candidates, at age 35, but his background as an accountant and lawyer enables him to understand fiscal and legal issues.
He said as a city councilman he has become familiar with problems facing the city that are out of the realm of parish government.
Laborde said his even temper allows him to deal with controversy.
"Throughout it all, I've kept my focus on why I was elected," he said.
Laborde said he's disagreed and agreed with others based on principles, not personalities.
City Councilman F.V. "Pappy" Landry said he's not accepting any campaign contributions, freeing him for political obligations.
"My goal is to bring about efficiency and effectiveness of
government," he said.
He said he would only eliminate civil service jobs through
attrition, and he would require city police to cooperate with the sheriff's office.
Chris Kole Obafunwa was not at the meeting.
The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeal ruled Thursday that he cannot run for the office because he lacks U.S. citizenship



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (7441)3/17/2005 11:29:46 PM
From: rrufff  Respond to of 22250
 
The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.)
September 26, 1995 Tuesday METRO EDITION
NAACP officials accuse candidate of race-baiting
BYLINE: ANGELA SIMONEAUX, ACADIANA BUREAU
LAFAYETTE - A candidate for Lafayette city-parish president is
engaging in race-baiting, and his opponents should call him on it,
representatives of the local NAACP said Monday.
At a Friday forum, Republican candidate Emile Vidrine told a civic
group that there are too many African-American people working at City
Hall.
He said the percentage of black city workers is higher than the
percentage of black city residents, and that is "unchristian. " On Monday, several officers of the local chapter of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People accused Vidrine of
playing "the race card. "
"It is not typical for the NAACP to get involved in an election
campaign, but when a candidate engages in racist conduct we must
address this divisive tactic," said President Aaron Walker.
Vidrine said he worked for rights for black people during the
1960s, and believes in Christian justice for everyone.
Walker said he thinks Vidrine is trying to "solidify his base of
closet racists and right-wing moralists," but the NAACP doesn't want
him using African-American city employees as his scapegoats.
"The NAACP is calling on each mayor-president candidate to rebuke
Mr. Vidrine's attack on the African-Americans who are employed by the
city and parish of Lafayette," Walker said.
"The failure of other candidates to rebuke Mr. Vidrine's racist
ideology will show the African-American community that they embrace
those views also. "
Walker said Vidrine's information is wrong anyway.
The city doesn't have an affirmative action policy and has no
quotas, he said.
Additionally, Vidrine is wrong about the percentage of Lafayette's
population that is African-American, he said.
Vidrine, who held his own press conference Monday, said the NAACP
is wrong about the numbers.
But the discrepancy may have arisen because Vidrine is using
registered voters, and the NAACP is using the census.
Vidrine said he is looking at registered voters because they are
the "working people. "
He said the NAACP's figures are "totally wrong. "
City Personnel Director Ken Mouton confirmed there is no
affirmative action policy or quota system.
The City Council has adopted an ordinance that prohibits
discrimination against any person, he said.
Mouton also said he has no control over who applies for city jobs.
The best-qualified person is hired, regardless of what color or sex
the person is, he said.
As of Monday, there were 18,520 African-Americans registered to
vote in Lafayette Parish, Walker said.
That number of voters could decide who will be city-parish
president, because the white community is divided, he said.
But race was not an issue until Vidrine made it one, Walker said.
"He is bringing race into this, not us," Walker said.
"He says we're top-heavy on blacks. Does that mean, if he's
elected, he'll start firing people based on their race instead of
their qualifications? "
Vidrine said he wouldn't do that, because "you have to keep a
Christian perspective. "
He said he's working on a policy to correct the problem, but
basically he would try to balance the numbers by hiring more white
people.
"If three equally qualified people applied for a job and one was
white and three were black, I'd hire the white person until the
numbers were right," Vidrine said.
Vidrine said the NAACP is a racist, anti-Christian organization
that discriminates against white people.
He also said he is doing further research on the city's hiring
practices, but is having problems getting information out of the City
Council office.
Vidrine said he is just trying to get government to do things
right.
"First, I want to keep Jesus Christ in the foreground," he said
. "I believe in justice for everyone. "



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (7441)3/17/2005 11:37:40 PM
From: Ben Wa  Respond to of 22250
 
Hodos sees a Jewish hand in all the major catastrophic events of recent history, from the Chernobyl meltdown to the events of September 11, 2001, using excerpts from The Protocols of the Elders of Zion to help explain and illustrate why.

Did your ancestors burn people at the stake in Salem, too?
Did they like 'em rare or medium? I hope you only engage in anal sex with hairless Pakistani boys since the thought of your genes spreading is frightening.



To: Emile Vidrine who wrote (7441)3/19/2005 8:04:55 PM
From: Ben Wa  Respond to of 22250
 
So you are getting a boner from a crank author who uses as source material, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion". Was that book next to your tattered copy of "Green Eggs & Ham"? Does it bother you that your ancestors lived in Africa? That our earlierst ancestors come from Africa? That you in turn, are an African American? Didn't Jesus have hair like wool? Does it bother you that his skin color may have been as dark as those people in City Hall who you think are over-represented.