Posted by alex in Alex Linder, Knoxville rally, Linder appearances at 5:00 pm | Permanent Link
Great thanks to Soren Renner of Majority Rights for taping this interview between me and the reporter for the Knoxville News-Sentinel.
Meta-interview is my name for an INTERVIEW BETWEEN ONE OF OUR GUYS AND THE JUNK MEDIA THAT IS TAPED BY SOMEONE ON OUR SIDE.
The controlled media use nothing or next to nothing of what we Whites say. They carefully exclude the content of our character, pardon, our message, and stick to incidentals. So our sweetness is wasted on the desert air unless we preserve their questions and our answers so some honest reader can nostril up some serious epithelial value.
Sniff away!
Alex vs the reporter parts 1 and 2 on our own Podblanc:
http://podblanc.ath.cx/?q=node/1737
http://podblanc.ath.cx/?q=node/1739
The Meta-Interview is completed when the work as produced by the MSM obscurer is posted alongside the tape of the actual interview itself, made by the White.
I HIGHLY RECOMMEND that all interviews conducted in relation to rallies be made META-interviews, because these are great sources of educational value for people on the fence, who might not fully understand what we mean by jew-controlled media.
Now, what we’ve seen the last few days in relation to Pitts is that the “cry me a river” coons-of-privilege and culty-cathy liberals can’t handle direct pressure. That’s an indication that we must do the very best we can to make these things — these rallies, these stories, these reactions, these politics, these reports — personal. If they’re going to report on us Whites, they’re going to know that there will be hell to pay if we are treated like scum. We can find your addresses, boys; we can find your phone numbers. You WILL be held accountable for your lies and the misimpressions they create. Know that. To all you VNN loyalists, understand that if we are leading the way, and you aren’t helping with money, or signs, or something, then you better be contacting these people and reinforcing our power. We working as a team can bring the pressure needed to produce the change.
Matt Lakin’s article about the June 16th rally:
Rally ‘stressful’ but controlled
No injuries, 2 arrests at protest over media’s coverage of killings
The scene looked about the same Saturday as protesters, counter-protesters and more than 300 police gathered downtown at another rally against interracial crime. The protest on the lawn of the City County Building resulted in two arrests but no other problems, authorities said.
“This is always stressful for everybody,” Knoxville Police Chief Sterling P. Owen IV said. “But I think the most important thing is that no one got hurt.”
A few more people showed up this time for the protest “in honor of” slaying victims Channon Christian, 21, and Christopher Newsom, 23. Police said the white Knox County couple were raped and killed during a January carjacking. Four men and a woman, all black, face various charges in their deaths. They could go to trial next year. Police say they’ve found no evidence that race played a role in the killings.
The protesters, led by Ken Gregg of the Dandridge-based Against Black Crimes Group, accused police, the media and the victims’ families of trying to cover up the crimes.
“Our people are being murdered,” Gregg said. “If it’s a white-on-black crime, it’s all over the national media. They don’t charge these animals with a hate crime. If that’s not hate, what was?”
The protests began Saturday morning as about 25 people stood in front of WATE, Channel 6, on Broadway and News Sentinel headquarters on Western Avenue, holding signs with such slogans as “Bring back the rope” and “Why the blackout?”
The group grew to a little less than 100 by the time the rally started at 1 p.m.
About 70 opponents stood across the street, chanting, dancing and waving signs as soul music and the words of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. played.
Jason Kaos of South Knoxville stood there with his 3-year-old son, Orion.
“We can’t be silent about something like this,” he said. “It’s really important for my son to see that you have to confront these people.”
Saturday’s rally marked the second such protest downtown in less than a month. The first happened May 26 and opened with the arrest of its organizer, Alex Linder of Kirksville, Mo., as he headed down a closed street with a sign.
Linder showed up again Saturday but left his sign at home.
Saturday’s only arrests came in a parking lot at the corner of Gay Street and Cumberland Avenue just before the rally started, Knoxville Police Department spokesman Darrell DeBusk said.
Michael David Hahn, 49, of Corryton faces a charge of carrying a gun with intent to go armed. Timothy Tierney, 40, of Cincinnati faces a charge of possession of less than half an ounce of marijuana, police said.
Hahn said he and Tierney went to the rally as sightseers, not participants for either side. He said he had borrowed a nephew’s truck and didn’t know it had a pistol in the glove compartment.
“I did nothing wrong,” he said after leaving jail on bond Saturday night. “When I go to court, I expect I’ll be absolved.”
The protesters left around 3 p.m., to jeers from their opponents.
Linder and Gregg said they’ll be back – maybe this fall, maybe in January.
“Our people want to do it, and the case is still not resolved,” Linder said. “We want Channon Christian Day to replace Martin Luther King Day.”
Police and opponents said they’ll be ready.
“I believe this is going to bring our city closer together to make sure a crime like this doesn’t happen again,” said the Rev. Ezra Maize, president of the Knoxville branch of the NAACP. “And I’ll be glad when this day’s over.”
Matt Lakin may be reached at 865-342-6306.
[Original]