Happy Fabricated Hollidays :Hide your American Flag T Shirts

huele mucho Why not celebrate a "Fabricated Holidays Day" combine Cinco de Mayo and Kwanzaa.?
Patriots say "No!" to Cinco de Mayo
Shirt Stop http://www.snopes.com/Politics/immigrat ... shirts.asp
Rumor: A federal court upheld a ruling that school officials acted correctly in requiring students to remove clothing featuring U.S. flag designs on Cinco de Mayo.
http://www.weirdrepublic.com/episode124.htm
It took a while, but there is finally a festivity in our midst that is even more hostile to our culture than the Marxist-inspired claptrap called Kwanzaa. It’s called Cinco de Mayo.
To the half-wit victims of American public education who now call themselves "college students,” Cinco de Mayo is the Mexican day of independence, or something, which is celebrated with lots of beer. The beer part is no accident; the other part is dead wrong. Here’s the back-story.
The Mexican Day of Independence is September 16th, which comes way too early in the school year to attract vast crowds of drunken revelers. Cinco de Mayo is not even a national holiday in Mexico. It’s a provincial observance commemorating a wildly improbable Mexican victory over the French army at the Battle of Puebla in 1862. Soon thereafter, Napoleon the Third sent in 30,000 soldiers and crushed the Mexicans. The French forces had come to collect a whacking big debt the Mexicans owed to them. Got that? Cinco de Mayo commemorates a confrontation between Mexicans and some repo men!
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2012/12 ... all-about/
kwanzaa
A holiday developed by a Dr. Maulana "Ron" Karenga, a black militant, Marxist, and convicted felon.
Just five years after this, he was convicted of torturing two black women to death.
Observed from December 26 to January 1, Kwanzaa is based on a mixture of East African harvest rituals, called "first fruits" by Karenga and 1960's radicalism. This is in spite of the fact most slaves came from West Africa.
Viewed as an "alternative" to Christmas, it, nonetheless, is based on race, and not in faith.
Like the ancient celebrations it is modeled after, the modern-day holiday, lasts for seven days (observing one principle each day). While reflective of past traditions, Kwanzaa is a modern-day phenomenon. Founded by Dr. Maulana Karenga, a professor and the head of the Department of Africana Studies at California State University Long Beach, it originated in 1966, during the Civil Rights movement in America.
Patriots say "No!" to Cinco de Mayo
Shirt Stop http://www.snopes.com/Politics/immigrat ... shirts.asp
Rumor: A federal court upheld a ruling that school officials acted correctly in requiring students to remove clothing featuring U.S. flag designs on Cinco de Mayo.
http://www.weirdrepublic.com/episode124.htm
It took a while, but there is finally a festivity in our midst that is even more hostile to our culture than the Marxist-inspired claptrap called Kwanzaa. It’s called Cinco de Mayo.
To the half-wit victims of American public education who now call themselves "college students,” Cinco de Mayo is the Mexican day of independence, or something, which is celebrated with lots of beer. The beer part is no accident; the other part is dead wrong. Here’s the back-story.
The Mexican Day of Independence is September 16th, which comes way too early in the school year to attract vast crowds of drunken revelers. Cinco de Mayo is not even a national holiday in Mexico. It’s a provincial observance commemorating a wildly improbable Mexican victory over the French army at the Battle of Puebla in 1862. Soon thereafter, Napoleon the Third sent in 30,000 soldiers and crushed the Mexicans. The French forces had come to collect a whacking big debt the Mexicans owed to them. Got that? Cinco de Mayo commemorates a confrontation between Mexicans and some repo men!
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2012/12 ... all-about/
kwanzaa
A holiday developed by a Dr. Maulana "Ron" Karenga, a black militant, Marxist, and convicted felon.
Just five years after this, he was convicted of torturing two black women to death.
Observed from December 26 to January 1, Kwanzaa is based on a mixture of East African harvest rituals, called "first fruits" by Karenga and 1960's radicalism. This is in spite of the fact most slaves came from West Africa.
Viewed as an "alternative" to Christmas, it, nonetheless, is based on race, and not in faith.
Like the ancient celebrations it is modeled after, the modern-day holiday, lasts for seven days (observing one principle each day). While reflective of past traditions, Kwanzaa is a modern-day phenomenon. Founded by Dr. Maulana Karenga, a professor and the head of the Department of Africana Studies at California State University Long Beach, it originated in 1966, during the Civil Rights movement in America.