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October 7, 2007
Moonbats Attack Columbus Day Parade in Denver
Columbus Day celebrates the lifting of this hemisphere out of Stone Age barbarism by the spread of Western Civilization. Even more than the Fourth of July, it is a day to celebrate our own existence. This is why it is being phased out as an official holiday in favor of guilt-ridden MLK Day. It's also why moonbats won't tolerate a Columbus Day parade.
El Presidente reports on Denver's 100th annual Columbus Day Parade yesterday, which 83 moonbats were arrested for trying to disrupt. The appalling moonbattery on display is well documented; here's a sample:

Don't worry — the blood is like everything else about the anti-Columbus crowd: phony as a left-wing college professor.
Apparently one of the many things moonbats don't like about Western Civilization is the right to assemble peaceably. Parades must be moonbat-approved; otherwise we get this.
Posted by Van Helsing at October 7, 2007 1:06 PM
Comments
Sad part is they don't realize the only reason they get to act so silly is because of the very man they villanize.
Posted by: James at October 7, 2007 3:26 PM
Videos are finally, finally loaded . . .
Posted by: El Presidente at October 7, 2007 4:04 PM
Ya think the mafia was taking names?
Posted by: pocomoco at October 7, 2007 4:50 PM
Why dont the re-enact the Mayan human sacrifices and kill a few hundred Moonbats by ripping their hearts out and rolling the bodies down the pyramid steps? The myth that native Americans were somehow less prone to violence than white Europeans persists.
Posted by: Anonymous at October 7, 2007 6:10 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vaISoCZM-g
Vet removes flag...
Posted by: fellowes at October 7, 2007 6:11 PM
They hate Columbus and everything that came after him. I have yet to find one that feels enough guilt to actually research where their ancestors came from so they can move back and return the land to its rightful owners. yes, they feel guilty, but they just don't feel that guilty.
Posted by: Robert Mahoney at October 7, 2007 6:50 PM
There appears to be a lot of people in Co with an IQ of '0', can it be less than '0'?
Posted by: Scrapiron at October 7, 2007 8:35 PM
How dare you bigoted Anglofascist j00s claim that you colonial missionary cultrue is superior to indigeneous kultur???
http://www.despair.com/sacrifice1.html
Posted by: Scott at October 7, 2007 11:13 PM
Today, American Indian activist Russell Means took the bullhorn at one of these rallies and screamed, among other things, that America was a "vicious police state". I thought that was pretty comical...throwing a public tantrum about living in a "police state", with cops all around, and he doesn't get arrested. What a fool...
Posted by: Toa at October 8, 2007 4:03 PM
I heard an excerpt from Means' speach on the radio. He cried foul because he and his brother had once been arrested for trying to preven liquer from entering "the reservation".
Yeah, I'm SO SURE that he and his brother had the authority to impose PROHIBITION on the reservation by (possibly) confiscateing and/or destroying someone ELSE'S property!
Posted by: KHarn at October 8, 2007 5:54 PM
Columbus Day celebrates the lifting of this hemisphere out of Stone Age barbarism by the spread of Western Civilization.
Columbus Day is the day we celebrate delivering Western Civilization™ to the poor savages native to this hemisphere, who desperately needed the totally beneficent and well-intentioned presence of Europeans to show them the light and the way.
Posted by: Paulacarp at October 9, 2007 2:56 AM
Via Reason's Brian Doherty:
A Columbus Day Thought
Posted on October 8, 2007, 5:05pm | Brian Doherty
Economist Bryan Caplan, author of our October cover story on "The Four Boneheaded Biases of Stupid Voters," thinks he sees some cognitive dissonance in some defenders of Columbus Day from multi-culti relativists:
Critics of multi-culturalism often mock its proponents for (a) cultural relativism and (b) disrepecting Columbus. The problem, as I've explained before, is that Columbus was a pioneer of slavery and barbarism. The only way to excuse his behavior is to say "Oh, you can't judge Columbus by our standards. In those days, people thought that slavery was OK. Everyone was doing it."
If that excuse makes sense to you, you're a cultural relativist. Change your heroes, or change your meta-ethics!
Full link: http://www.reason.com/blog/show/122882.html
Posted by: Paulacarp at October 9, 2007 3:05 AM

