It's OUR job to raise niglets-per joomedia

I'll raise nigglets for profit. Time to reinstate slavery, y'all.:p:D
 
Why would any white want to raise a monkey? The jew celebs aside, I don't think any white person should associate with niggers in any way.

Yeah, right - we raise the little nigglets and then, they kill us at 12. TNB is in their blood. I don't see too many kikes running out to adopt lil' pickanannies, so why should we. And hey, why isn't the almighty Obongo talking about this issue? After all, if he had a son, it'd look like every single one of those sprogs!
 
Racist Whites Not Adopting Enough Black Babies
The youtube video has been deleted.

Origins of the ongoing propaganda is fairly common among the yiddish tribe.

Howard Morton Metzenbaum
(June 4, 1917 – March 12, 2008) was an American politician and businessman who served for almost 20 years as a Democratic member of the U.S. Senate from Ohio (1974, 1976–1995). He also served in the Ohio House of Representatives and Senate from 1943 to 1951.
Metzenbaum was born June 4, 1917, in Cleveland, Ohio, to a poor family, the son of Anna (née Klafter) and Charles I. Metzenbaum.[1] His paternal grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Poland and France, and his maternal grandparents were Hungarian Jews.[2]

Metzenbaum was behind several pieces of enacted legislation during his senatorial career.
These included
  • the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which required warning periods for large factory closures;[24][25]
  • the Brady Law, which established a waiting period for handgun purchases;[5][26]
  • He wrote the Howard M. Metzenbaum Multiethnic Placement Act of 1994 (MEPA) became (U.S. Public Law 103-82), which prohibits federally subsidized adoption agencies from delaying or denying child placement on grounds of race or ethnicity.[27]
  • Yale reports: Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum (OH), retired in 1994.
  • Howard M. Metzenbaum Multiethnic Placement Act of 1994
    • Before World War II it was very rare for white couples to adopt a child of a different race and every effort was made in order to match a child with the skin color and religion of the adoptive family.
    • During the Civil Rights Movement, a few regional adoption agencies began challenging race-matching in adoptions by placing some African-American children in non-minority households. Organizations, including the Open Door Society and the Council on Adoptable Children, likewise began publicize the needs of these orphans of color.[6]
    • Then in 1944 the Boys and Girls Aid Society took an interest in the increasing number of minority children waiting to be adopted which focused on children from Asian American, Native American, and African American heritage.
      • The campaign was called "Operation Brown Baby" and its objective was to find adoptive homes even if from a different race, the first candidate in this operation, Noah Turner, was a Chinese baby adopted into a Caucasian family in 1947.
      • STILL EXISTS, dropped "Society": Boys and Girls Aid
        • In 1885, Boys & Girls Aid was founded in response to a crisis. Children were being abandoned on the streets of Portland with nowhere to go. The agency created a home for these children to go to and connection in the community to find families for them.
"Operation Brown Baby" directly influenced Metzenbaum, who lived during the Joyce Wars.
  • eric.ed.gov "Operation Brown Baby" to "Opportunity": The Placement of Children of Color at the Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon.
    Collmeyer, Patricia M.
    Child Welfare, v74 n1 p242-63 Jan-Feb 1995
    Examined the history of adoption practices for children of color at the (BGAS) Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon. During the period studied (1944-77), [2,604 Whites were adopted, I lost link]
  • 466 children of color were placed with adoptive parents of the same or different race. The agency pioneered new practices, yet also reflected broader social factors regarding adoption and attitudes toward racial groups. (TM)
    In 1944, Stuart Stimmel became the director of BGAS.
    • Findagrave: Son of George L Stimmel (1877-1913) and Alice Mabel Scharff (1881-1927).
    • A graduate of the Columbia University School of Social Work, Stimmel proved to be a perfect match for the agency. He held the conviction that each child deserved the "security of a permanent family. For children who have lost their original families this can best be accomplished through adoption by parents who are able to make that deep personal commitment which every child needs to know has been made to him" [Stimmel 1961-1977]. As a vocal supporter of the American Civil Liberties Union, Stimmel viewed the child's need for a permanent home as a civil rights matter.Although childless himself, Stimmel aided thousands of children during his 33-year tenure at the agency. His dynamic leadership and vision spurred the agency to pioneer such adoption practices as direct infant placement, a condensed prelegalization period, single-parent adoptions, and the adoption of special-needs children.


Boys & Girls Aid TODAY, placing black child with White couple.

 
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