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		<title>Why So Much Jew Science? Said the Skinhead to the Dyke</title>
		<description>Comments for Why So Much Jew Science? Said the Skinhead to the Dyke at http://ts-si.org , comment 1 to 2 out of 2 comments</description>
		<link>http://ts-si.org</link>
		<lastBuildDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 16:29:24 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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			<title>The Internet is like a visit to the tide pools...........</title>
			<link>http://ts-si.org/global-warning/3246-why-so-much-jew-science-said-the-skinhead-to-the-dyke.html#comment-791</link>
			<description>You never know what is going crawl out from under the next rock. 

Speaking of Martians...
They tell me they are not bigots although they like Canadians best of all, they say free-range Canadians are really tasty. 

Seriously though....
We all may be 99.999% the same genetically, that is no guarantee we are equal from a biological or emotional perspective. Genetic diversity, and environmental factors ensure survival of the species. Even Abdul has his role in the grand scheme of things. His genes once served to protect the tribe against those who would endanger their survival, those where substantially less civilized times. Abdul's genetic line has served it's purpose soon his ilk will go by way of the Dodo. Sometimes i just wish evolution wouldn't take it's sweet time. 
 - Sue</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 09:36:17 +0100</pubDate>
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			<title>...</title>
			<link>http://ts-si.org/global-warning/3246-why-so-much-jew-science-said-the-skinhead-to-the-dyke.html#comment-790</link>
			<description>I find the bigotry of 'Abdul' so offensive and usually would never answer in reply. 
I am 100% Irish ancestry dating back to the Viking settlements founded in Ireland. I even have some Spanish blood in the mix as evidenced by my Irish born great grandmother with the family name of Costello and who by the way was considered as black Irish with olive skin, black hair and blue eyes. She immigrated to this country from Ireland back in the 1800's; her daughter, my grandmother, married my Irish born grandfather who was an engineer who helped build the Chrysler Building in NYC. Even had a great, great uncle who died in the civil war.

I grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y. and in a very diversified neighborhood that added to my understanding of others. Yes, we might have had our prejudices but they were not symbolic of ones skin or religious nature. I loved the Italian, Jewish, Greek, German and Irish interaction. I never referred to my friends by their race or religion but simply by their names and our shared interests which led to beautiful memories. I attended Catholic school but also because my closest friend Barbara would not go alone I too was allowed to go with her to a Methodist Summer Day Camp. 

My name is one suggested by a Jewish friend and seconded by another girlfriend, a Greek. I had always been attached to Lynn and that was my pre-correction identity up to the day they and I discussed my new legal name request to the court of law. They suggested Diane fit me better and I agreed so my name became Diane Lynn. Was I aware of it being a name that many Jews also had...of course. Did it matter...NO! They were my friends and I happened to like their suggestion.

I cannot understand how people can hate another because of their skin color or their country of origin. I can understand and even profess prejudice myself but that and bigotry are two separate attitudes. One is selection of likes and dislikes and the other an intolerance generated by hate. My father taught me that and his life mimicked his thoughts. When he died over five hundred people came to his wake and that included every conceivable color and religion and it mattered not they be rich or poor. He left me with that legacy and I love him more for that than anything else; even more than his tolerance for what he knew and understood I needed to be. 

Abdul, I doubt you would have been comfortable at my fathers wake for you might not have liked the diversity of friends that were there who found commonality in their shared loss of a close friend whose religion or race did not matter to them. 
Diane  - Diane Kearny</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 08:49:31 +0100</pubDate>
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