I have two versions, of the history of the nigger rapist. Which one is correct?
Here is the mainstream story
The Tulsa Race Riot
On the morning of May 30, 1921, a young black man named Dick Rowland was riding in the elevator in the Drexel Building at Third and Main. The white elevator operator, Sarah Page, claimed that Rowland grabbed her arm, causing her to flee in panic. Accounts of the incident circulated among the city's white community during the day and became more exaggerated with each telling.
Tulsa police arrested Rowland the following day and began an investigation. An inflammatory report in the May 31 edition of the Tulsa Tribune spurred a confrontation between black and white armed mobs around the courthouse where the sheriff and his men had barricaded the top floor to protect Rowland. Shots were fired and the outnumbered blacks began retreating to the Greenwo
od Avenue business district.
Eric von Zipper says this
http://www.originaldissent.com/forums/arch...php/t-3407.html
eric von zipper10-29-02, 06:25-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"In one notorious incident in 1921, white rioters leveled the entire black community in Tulsa, Okla., after false rumors told of an assault on a white woman. As recently as a generation ago, news outlets routinely noted that a person was "a Negro" when describing altercations or trials. And the 1998 Texas lynching of James Byrd, 49, who was stripped, chained to a truck and dragged behind a pickup truck by white supremacists, rekindled old feelings of vulnerability"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<span style='
colo
r:blue'>This is typical of the way Tulsa is misrepresented.
The whites leveled negro town AFTER
blacks came to the jail and opened fire on the whites who had assembled there - killing a few. The whites then armed themselves and went into the black area and kicked ass for a couple days.
And who says the assault was based on "false rumours"? Christ, you'd think negro rape of white women was unheard of instead of commonplace if all you had to go by was watching movies like the excreble "To Kill a Mockingbird".</span>