The latest group to be targeted now are Catholics. We got a good taste of it this weekend at the Pro Life Rally. There can be little doubt the kids attending were targeted. Heap big Indian drummer man steps up to a Covington school kids and baits them. But you know the story no need to repeat.
Now on to MLK day. Let’s keep it going with this story line. All whites very bad bringing Western Civilization to the American continent. Worse, even Catholics participated in the deed.
The aspect that should be most distressing is this is Notre Dame, The President shaming the very foundation’s religion.
The president of the University of Notre Dame announced Sunday that it would cover up murals of Christopher Columbus.

Portrait of Christopher Columbus
The president of the University of Notre Dame sent an email to all students Sunday night, informing them of the school’s decision to cover up an on-campus mural of Christopher Columbus.
President John Jenkins wrote “as we prepare to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day…at Notre Dame, I write to let you know of a recent decision,” in an email obtained by Campus Reform. “The murals by Luigi Gregori that adorn the ceremonial entrance to Notre Dame’s Main Building depict the life and exploration of Christopher Columbus.”
Jenkins continued by saying that the mural, which dates back to 1882-1884, was originally intended as a response to the school’s mostly Catholic immigrant population. Columbus, it is believed, was also Catholic.
“In recent years, however, many have come to see the murals as at best blind to the consequences of Columbus’ voyage for the indigenous peoples who inhabited this ‘new’ world and at worst demeaning toward them,” Jenkins wrote.
Jenkins added that the arrival of Columbus to the “new world” was a “catastrophe” for native Americans. He added, “whatever else Columbus’ arrival brought, for these peoples it led to exploitation, expropriation of land, repression of vibrant cultures, enslavement, and new diseases causing epidemics that killed millions.”
But, Jenkins continued, the historic pieces painted on the plaster of the walls, were “not intended to slight indigenous peoples, but to encourage another marginalized group.”
“Gregori’s murals focused on the popular image of Columbus as an American hero, who was also an immigrant and a devout Catholic. The message to the Notre Dame community was that they too, though largely immigrant and Catholics, could be fully and proudly American,” he wrote.
More of the diatribe can be read at Campus Reform
Let us just keep this in mind:

As far as Covington?





