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From the Trenches in St. Louis « The Thinking Housewife
The Thinking Housewife
 

From the Trenches in St. Louis

November 19, 2015

ALAN writes:

Last August I wrote about an old Protestant church building in south St. Louis that was no longer a church but was being used as a pizza restaurant.  (“Communities in Memory Alone”, The Thinking Housewife, Aug. 5)

Recently St. Louis police closed the building and placed signs on it reading “Danger – Condemned – Keep Out.” But the problem was not in the building; it was in some of the people in the building, who are suspected of trafficking in girls. [More here.]

This is in the Bevo neighborhood of south St. Louis, which was all-white in the 1950s but now includes many Bosnians, blacks, and Muslims. A modern apartment building across the street from the church is mostly vacant.  In some apartments the venetian blinds are mangled, the unmistakable handiwork of blacks.  Windows in some storefronts along the street are boarded-up or barred.  A minaret stands five blocks from that church, a sight people in that area in the 1950s could not have imagined in their wildest dreams.  The sign for a Chinese restaurant that closed or moved away now hangs upside down above its door, a cute touch likely contributed by white anarchists.  A billboard devoid of advertising was festooned with spray paint when I saw it a few days ago, likely more work by those anarchists.  Not long ago, two young men were found dead in a car four blocks from the church, and the suspect arrested is named Hernandez.

Behold the joys of multiculturalism in living color.

That a pizza restaurant in an old church building would serve as a front for nefarious activity would probably shock some locals.  But I would expect nothing more from Americans today who cannot see that “diversity” and “multiculturalism” are a front for the long-range obliteration of American culture, heritage, identity, and sovereignty.  Erasing strong local neighborhoods is just a prelude to that long-range goal.

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