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pikers



Joined: 04 Apr 2005
Posts: 2212
Location: Someplace you'll never be...

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2005 10:33 pm    Post subject: Rosa Parks dead...  

Civil rights figure Rosa Parks died tonight.
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Demonic Spoon



Joined: 20 Sep 2004
Posts: 6756
Location: Ohio

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2005 10:40 pm    Post subject:  

...okay...And? What kind of debate are you trying to create? If none, then post this in the lounge
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pikers



Joined: 04 Apr 2005
Posts: 2212
Location: Someplace you'll never be...

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2005 10:44 pm    Post subject:  

Demonic Spoon wrote: ...okay...And? What kind of debate are you trying to create? If none, then post this in the lounge

Announcing the death for those that haven't heard.

Moron. :roll:
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checkerboardstrangler



Joined: 04 Sep 2004
Posts: 1470
Location: Dallas, Texas

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2005 11:03 pm    Post subject:  

Good lady...she did a lot and had balls of steel, which is impressive for a tiny black lady. She singlehandedly started the movement to shoot down Jim Crow laws.
Montgomery, Alabama should offer free bus rides all day tomorrow as a kind gesture of appreciation.
Aww hell, ALL public transportation systems should, at least in the South anyway.

JeffH
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Demonic Spoon



Joined: 20 Sep 2004
Posts: 6756
Location: Ohio

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2005 11:15 pm    Post subject:  

hey "moron". Know why theres a rule that you must provide an opinion of an article to stir debate? BECAUSE THIS SITE IS NOT A NEWS SERVICE. Post it in the Lounge forum



"Moron"
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pikers



Joined: 04 Apr 2005
Posts: 2212
Location: Someplace you'll never be...

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 12:35 am    Post subject:  

Demonic Spoon wrote: hey "moron". Know why theres a rule that you must provide an opinion of an article to stir debate? BECAUSE THIS SITE IS NOT A NEWS SERVICE. Post it in the Lounge forum



"Moron"

I'm sorry someone pissed in your Cheerios this morning, but the header is News and Current Events.

Interesting that some kid posts a similar thread in the wrong place, and I don't see you over there barking up his tree.

Wait, there you are...
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Bag of Rags



Joined: 03 Aug 2005
Posts: 4484

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 1:10 am    Post subject:  

pikers wrote: Demonic Spoon wrote: hey "moron". Know why theres a rule that you must provide an opinion of an article to stir debate? BECAUSE THIS SITE IS NOT A NEWS SERVICE. Post it in the Lounge forum



"Moron"

I'm sorry someone pissed in your Cheerios this morning, but the header is News and Current Events.

Interesting that some kid posts a similar thread in the wrong place, and I don't see you over there barking up his tree.

Wait, there you are...

Seems like "News" to me - but of course, I'm not the ALL-KNOWING Demonic Spoon... :-D


Apparently they left the line FORUM ADMINISTRATOR off from under his avatar.
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Trajan



Joined: 16 Jul 2005
Posts: 6584
Location: SE PA

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 1:32 am    Post subject:  

This is the right place for it as shown by the title "News and Current Events."

Her death is news. And it was a current event.

So what is the problem?????????
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Lord Hargreaves



Joined: 05 Oct 2004
Posts: 6941
Location: Herefordshire

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 5:50 am    Post subject:  

A great woman who inspired many, she will be sorely missed
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Wayne L.



Joined: 15 Apr 2005
Posts: 888
Location: USA

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 7:54 am    Post subject:  

The late Rosa Parks was a civil rights pioneer 50 years ago for not giving up her seat on the bus to a white man while the mainstream news media will go overboard as usual with the race issue but publicity pimps Jesse Jackson & Al Sharpton destroyed the cause a long time ago.
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pikers



Joined: 04 Apr 2005
Posts: 2212
Location: Someplace you'll never be...

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 10:15 am    Post subject:  

Trajan wrote: This is the right place for it as shown by the title "News and Current Events."

Her death is news. And it was a current event.

So what is the problem?????????

Ask Spoon, Forum Lounge Commandant.
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gordontravels



Joined: 14 May 2005
Posts: 164
Location: In The Middle

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 11:06 am    Post subject:  

There are differences here. I believe that Rosa Parks did what she did strictly out of personal principles after realizing what racism was doing to black people and her personally. "Get up and get to the back of the bus!" What would you have done or do now?

Those like Jesse Jackson have their principles as well. What I see them doing is detrimental to the civil rights movement but I think that is calculated. Jesse Jackson has made civil rights a business and a tool to use as a means to a political end. If the conflict between races had a proven method of elimination I don't think he would subscribe. In fairness, this is supposition on my part lacking that "method of elimination" which would be found somewhere in education both inside and outside the family.

Rosa Parks had more than a moment. Her bravery in the face of a world against her and her race has lived on. She will too. 8)
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Jehan



Joined: 07 Apr 2005
Posts: 3680
Location: Rhode Island

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 4:01 pm    Post subject:  

(CNN) -- Rosa Parks, whose act of civil disobedience in 1955 inspired the modern civil rights movement, died Monday in Detroit, Michigan. She was 92.

Parks' moment in history began in December 1955 when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man in Montgomery, Alabama.

Her arrest triggered a 381-day boycott of the bus system by blacks that was organized by a 26-year-old Baptist minister, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (See video on an activist's life and times -- 2:52)

The boycott led to a court ruling desegregating public transportation in Montgomery, but it wasn't until the 1964 Civil Rights Act that all public accommodations nationwide were desegregated.

Facing regular threats and having lost her department store job because of her activism, Parks moved from Alabama to Detroit in 1957. She later joined the staff of U.S. Rep. John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat.

Conyers, who first met Parks during the early days of the civil rights struggle, recalled Monday that she worked on his original congressional staff when he first was elected to the House of Representatives in 1964.

"I think that she, as the mother of the new civil rights movement, has left an impact not just on the nation, but on the world," he told CNN in a telephone interview. "She was a real apostle of the nonviolence movement."

He remembered her as someone who never raised her voice -- an eloquent voice of the civil rights movement.

"You treated her with deference because she was so quiet, so serene -- just a very special person," he said, adding that "there was only one" Rosa Parks.

Gregory Reed, a longtime friend and attorney, said Parks died between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. of natural causes. He called Parks "a lady of great courage."

Parks co-founded the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development to help young people pursue educational opportunities, get them registered to vote and work toward racial peace.

"As long as there is unemployment, war, crime and all things that go to the infliction of man's inhumanity to man, regardless -- there is much to be done, and people need to work together," she once said.

Even into her 80s, she was active on the lecture circuit, speaking at civil rights groups and accepting awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996 and the Congressional Gold Medal in 1999.

"This medal is encouragement for all of us to continue until all have rights," she said at the June 1999 ceremony for the latter medal.

Parks was the subject of the documentary "Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks," which received a 2002 Oscar nomination for best documentary short.

In April, Parks and rap duo OutKast settled a lawsuit over the use of her name on a CD released in 1998. (Full story)
Bus boycott

She was born Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee, Alabama, on February 4, 1913. Her marriage to Raymond Parks lasted from 1932 until his death in 1977.

Parks' father, James McCauley, was a carpenter, and her mother, Leona Edwards McCauley, a teacher.

Before her arrest in 1955, Parks was active in the voter registration movement and with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, where she also worked as a secretary in 1943.

At the time of her arrest, Parks was 42 and on her way home from work as a seamstress.

She took a seat in the front of the black section of a city bus in Montgomery. The bus filled up and the bus driver demanded that she move so a white male passenger could have her seat.

"The driver wanted us to stand up, the four of us. We didn't move at the beginning, but he says, 'Let me have these seats.' And the other three people moved, but I didn't," she once said.

When Parks refused to give up her seat, a police officer arrested her.

As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked, "Why do you push us around?"

The officer's response: "I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."

She added, "I only knew that, as I was being arrested, that it was the very last time that I would ever ride in humiliation of this kind."

Four days later, Parks was convicted of disorderly conduct and fined $14.

That same day, a group of blacks founded the Montgomery Improvement Association and named King, the young pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, as its leader, and the bus boycott began.

For the next 381 days, blacks -- who according to Time magazine had comprised two-thirds of Montgomery bus riders -- boycotted public transportation to protest Parks' arrest and in turn the city's Jim Crow segregation laws.

Black people walked, rode taxis and used carpools in an effort that severely damaged the transit company's finances.

The mass movement marked one of the largest and most successful challenges of segregation and helped catapult King to the forefront of the civil rights movement.

The boycott ended on November 13, 1956, after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that Montgomery's segregated bus service was unconstitutional.

Parks' act of defiance came one year after the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision that led to the end of racial segregation in public schools. (Full story)

U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a Democrat, told CNN Monday he watched the 1955-56 Montgomery drama unfold as a teenager and it inspired him to get active in the civil rights movement.

"It was so unbelievable that this woman -- this one woman -- had the courage to take a seat and refuse to get up and give it up to a white gentleman. By sitting down, she was standing up for all Americans," he said.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/10/24/parks.obit/index.html
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gordontravels



Joined: 14 May 2005
Posts: 164
Location: In The Middle

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 11:01 pm    Post subject:  

Thank you Jehan. 8)
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eynon



Joined: 03 Jul 2004
Posts: 18106
Location: Minneapolis......

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 2:16 am    Post subject:  

Jehan wrote: (CNN) -- Rosa Parks, whose act of civil disobedience in 1955 inspired the modern civil rights movement, died Monday in Detroit, Michigan. She was 92.

Parks' moment in history began in December 1955 when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man in Montgomery, Alabama.

Her arrest triggered a 381-day boycott of the bus system by blacks that was organized by a 26-year-old Baptist minister, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (See video on an activist's life and times -- 2:52)

The boycott led to a court ruling desegregating public transportation in Montgomery, but it wasn't until the 1964 Civil Rights Act that all public accommodations nationwide were desegregated.

Facing regular threats and having lost her department store job because of her activism, Parks moved from Alabama to Detroit in 1957. She later joined the staff of U.S. Rep. John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat.

Conyers, who first met Parks during the early days of the civil rights struggle, recalled Monday that she worked on his original congressional staff when he first was elected to the House of Representatives in 1964.

"I think that she, as the mother of the new civil rights movement, has left an impact not just on the nation, but on the world," he told CNN in a telephone interview. "She was a real apostle of the nonviolence movement."

He remembered her as someone who never raised her voice -- an eloquent voice of the civil rights movement.

"You treated her with deference because she was so quiet, so serene -- just a very special person," he said, adding that "there was only one" Rosa Parks.

Gregory Reed, a longtime friend and attorney, said Parks died between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. of natural causes. He called Parks "a lady of great courage."

Parks co-founded the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development to help young people pursue educational opportunities, get them registered to vote and work toward racial peace.

"As long as there is unemployment, war, crime and all things that go to the infliction of man's inhumanity to man, regardless -- there is much to be done, and people need to work together," she once said.

Even into her 80s, she was active on the lecture circuit, speaking at civil rights groups and accepting awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996 and the Congressional Gold Medal in 1999.

"This medal is encouragement for all of us to continue until all have rights," she said at the June 1999 ceremony for the latter medal.

Parks was the subject of the documentary "Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks," which received a 2002 Oscar nomination for best documentary short.

In April, Parks and rap duo OutKast settled a lawsuit over the use of her name on a CD released in 1998. (Full story)
Bus boycott

She was born Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee, Alabama, on February 4, 1913. Her marriage to Raymond Parks lasted from 1932 until his death in 1977.

Parks' father, James McCauley, was a carpenter, and her mother, Leona Edwards McCauley, a teacher.

Before her arrest in 1955, Parks was active in the voter registration movement and with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, where she also worked as a secretary in 1943.

At the time of her arrest, Parks was 42 and on her way home from work as a seamstress.

She took a seat in the front of the black section of a city bus in Montgomery. The bus filled up and the bus driver demanded that she move so a white male passenger could have her seat.

"The driver wanted us to stand up, the four of us. We didn't move at the beginning, but he says, 'Let me have these seats.' And the other three people moved, but I didn't," she once said.

When Parks refused to give up her seat, a police officer arrested her.

As the officer took her away, she recalled that she asked, "Why do you push us around?"

The officer's response: "I don't know, but the law's the law, and you're under arrest."

She added, "I only knew that, as I was being arrested, that it was the very last time that I would ever ride in humiliation of this kind."

Four days later, Parks was convicted of disorderly conduct and fined $14.

That same day, a group of blacks founded the Montgomery Improvement Association and named King, the young pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, as its leader, and the bus boycott began.

For the next 381 days, blacks -- who according to Time magazine had comprised two-thirds of Montgomery bus riders -- boycotted public transportation to protest Parks' arrest and in turn the city's Jim Crow segregation laws.

Black people walked, rode taxis and used carpools in an effort that severely damaged the transit company's finances.

The mass movement marked one of the largest and most successful challenges of segregation and helped catapult King to the forefront of the civil rights movement.

The boycott ended on November 13, 1956, after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that Montgomery's segregated bus service was unconstitutional.

Parks' act of defiance came one year after the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision that led to the end of racial segregation in public schools. (Full story)

U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a Democrat, told CNN Monday he watched the 1955-56 Montgomery drama unfold as a teenager and it inspired him to get active in the civil rights movement.

"It was so unbelievable that this woman -- this one woman -- had the courage to take a seat and refuse to get up and give it up to a white gentleman. By sitting down, she was standing up for all Americans," he said.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/10/24/parks.obit/index.html

cheers and thanks :-D


Yeesh! MLK was 26 when he started his movement......that's a mere 2 years older then me....what a man :-D :shock:
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b_moh



Joined: 25 Oct 2005
Posts: 168
Location: Alberta

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 4:26 am    Post subject: ROSA PARKS!!!  

:cry: I cant believed she died she was one of my idols...next to martin luther king ofcourse but wow i cant belive she died well she would of died sooner or later...to bad to bad i didnt get to say :hi: to her



p.s:Some of u guyz r getting :ot:
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David



Joined: 29 Dec 2003
Posts: 11844
Location: Louisiana

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 6:15 am    Post subject:  

Moved to front page news
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Wildtalon



Joined: 09 Jun 2005
Posts: 37
Location: Santa Barbara

Posted: Mon Nov 21, 2005 9:37 pm    Post subject:  

what a grim title......
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mein bowl



Joined: 03 Dec 2005
Posts: 3

Posted: Sat Dec 03, 2005 3:58 am    Post subject:  

THANK GOD!!!
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