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25697240? ago

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25697243? ago

... the Theory? Open Borders for the Saudi and Israel? but why attack sell propaganda the a young male Negroe of the West, why attack the Western woman with Propaganda? It's the soft target for the extremist, old women, old men, kids, females and when not under direct attack the media tells them to open borders or to raise an alien brood that is not their own biology? @killer7 @Mustard_of_puppets @Helena73 @SegFault Anti-miscegenation laws were first introduced in North America from the late seventeenth century onwards by several of the Thirteen Colonies, and subsequently by many US states and US territories and remained in force in many US states until 1967. The Jews cannot legally marry non-Jews in Israel and a significant number of Israelis marry in Cyprus. Saudi women are prohibited from marrying men other than Arab citizens of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries without special dispensation from the King. Under the mohammedan Shari'a law, Saudi women, as Muslims, are not permitted under any circumstances to marry non-Muslim men. Whites have, indeed, been repelled by what they called “amalgamation.” At some point in their histories, 44 of the 50 states had laws prohibiting interracial marriage and sometimes fornication, with the first such law being passed in 1661. Prof. Lemire suggests that anti-miscegenationist feeling was stronger in the North than in the South, and she writes of the shock with which Yankees learned of close personal relations between Southern blacks and whites, and of couplings between masters and slaves. Like many states, South Carolina and Alabama wrote prohibitions of miscegenation into their constitutions. After the Supreme Court decision of 1967, these bans were unenforceable, but the language remained. In 1988 and 2000 respectively, voters in the two states went to the polls, in accordance with the procedures required to amend the state constitutions. Substantial minorities in both states voted to keep the ban: 38 percent in South Carolina and 41 percent in Alabama. Five of 47 South Carolina counties voted to keep the ban, as did no fewer than 23 of 67 counties in Alabama. In Brazil, "Mixed Race Day" (Dia do Mestiço) is observed annually on June 27, three days after the Day of the Caboclo, in celebration of all mixed-race Brazilians, including the caboclos. Forced Race Mixing they already tried it, Forced Racial Mixing it was supposed to fix everything in the Brazilian, Racial whitening, or "whitening" (branqueamento), is an old race mix ideology that was widely accepted in Brazil between 1889 and 1914, as the solution to the "Negro problem." Theodore Roosevelt: After visiting Brazil in 1913 he wrote an article in Outlook magazine. In his article he talks about how the Brazilian Negro is disappearing and a new mongrel brownish nigger tanned race was being created.