The Civil Rights Act
From the Detroit Free Press (Nov. 30, 1989) in an article written by Dennis Niemiec, we read: “It was payday at Dodge City Complex at Warren. Archie Jordan reported for the second shift at his job carrying dark blue coveralls and a paper bag. The bag didn’t hold his lunch, it contained cocaine, heroin, and marijuana. His pockets and socks bulged with $4,782 in cash. He also had a list of twenty-five names with dollar amounts written along side each name. Tipped-off security officials waited for him to walk through the plant turnstile. After a chase through the plant, Jordan was detained until the Warren police arrived and arrested him.” Archie Jordan is a “soul brother” (like the one the Vietnamese contacted back in the seventies in Vietnam and brought heroin into the United States army).
Now we read that the workplace “has become the high stakes battleground in the war against drugs. Studies indicate that drug abuse on the job costs American business as much as 150 million dollars a year.” At General Motors the annual drug abuse tab is more than one billion dollars.
Well that’s all right.
The integrated school system has cost the American taxpayer more money than that in a year just to pay for assaults on teachers and pupils and vandalism, not to mention a gasoline bill for enforced segregation of well over one million dollars a week. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was aimed in a certain direction when it was passed and has never deviated from this course once. The Civil Rights Act–the most massive Communist bill ever passed by bureaucrats for the destruction of democracy–is designed to deprive you of every “right” you have, and among them the right to run your own business. At present, you could be sued for refusing to hire a homosexual. With a few little finishing touches done on the job, the government can eventually arrest you for refusing to hire a drug addict. You will be “discriminating” against people who “can’t help their habit.” They were “just born that way,” etc.
Every child of God should read the definitive work on “the Drug Business” which was never printed in any newspaper in the world. The reason why it was never printed was because at that time the news media was engaged as they are today twenty-four hours a day pushing racial integration. They didn’t dare print the material. It was written by Westin and Shaffer and was published in 1972 by Pocket Books and was called Heroes and Heroin. The first drug connection was with the black troops (p. 18-21) called “soul brothers.” Captain Brian Joseph explained that drugs were necessary to a Harlem population (p. 30). In 1965 there was a change in the type of troops the Marines were getting. This was due to the Civil Rights Act passed the year before. From 1968 on, the enlisted men threatened officers who tried to stop the dope traffic in the army, and the govemment would back them up if they were black (pp. 58-59). Before the “soul brothers” got through, the army had to spend four million dollars for rehabilitation centers for drug addicts in the service (pp. 70-76). The author said that drugs in Philadelphia came from blacks (p. 103) who got hooked in Vietnam (p. 112), and they had all re-enlisted to get more dope (p. 115). The Command in the United States army had to go by the news media position. John Murphy of New York, after touring installations in the Far East, offered a bill (March 16, 1971) that stated the entire army was not able to handle its own narcotic problem (p. 253). So why should Detroit or Michigan be able to handle its problem? They can’t, and they won’t.