Word: racistly
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Most people around NSCAR limit their vocabulary to expressions like "build the action, cram those buses down their throats, win the rights of Black children to attend any school they want, and smash the racist offensive;" issues such as the maintenance of bilingual education programs after desegregation, the elimination of "tracking" in schools, and the quality of the Boston educational system as a whole are said to be "counterposed, used as a screen, or distracting from the real issue." For worse, or for better, NSCAR is headed towards a May 17th demonstration around three slogans, and if my guess...
Integration is a generally progressive goal. The Boston School Committee has opposed busing in a consistently racist manner. Though this sort of opposition is incorrect, it is nevertheless apparent that the Boston busing plan defeats the goals of integration: improving the quality of everyone's education and increasing the solidarity and understanding between nationalities. Pam Compton
...said, "While individuals like [President] Bok might have condemned the racist violence around the South, when it's in Boston they say it's outside their realm of responsibility...
Wicker's analysis may be simplistic, but it has merit. For instance, it explains the urban warfare of modern America. Police are not brutal or racist when they shoot to kill, or beat up or harrass "violent subhuman beats." They are protecting normal society. They had to get Fred Hampton before he got us. It is not surprising, then, that "they" populate the Atticas of America...
...CITY POLITICIANS prepare for next fall's elections, and one of the stalwarts of the anti-busing cause, state representative Raymond Flynn; compares the situation in Boston today to that facing the revolutionaries 200 years ago, students and left-wing politicians formulate their own plans to "fight the racist offensive" and to "keep the buses rolling." For them Boston '74 is to be compared to Selma '64 and Little Rock '54. They have a different vision of the "freedom trail" but in the long run, it appears almost as narrow as Flynn's and the South Boston...