First published at 19:04 UTC on June 20th, 2018.
www.GoyTalk.com
This is a segment of a radio special about George Lincoln Rockwell. It features a news broadcast of an incident on June 22nd, 1960 where George Lincoln Rockwell went to the New York Supreme Court to try to obtain a permit to hold a …
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www.GoyTalk.com
This is a segment of a radio special about George Lincoln Rockwell. It features a news broadcast of an incident on June 22nd, 1960 where George Lincoln Rockwell went to the New York Supreme Court to try to obtain a permit to hold a rally.
"Rockwell held a rally April 3, 1960, on the National Mall of Washington, D.C., where Rockwell addressed the crowd with a two-hour long speech. The second rally was to be held at Union Square in New York City. Mayor Robert Wagner refused to grant him a permit to speak, and he appealed that decision to the New York Supreme Court. Jewish war veterans and Holocaust survivors gathered to oppose his appeal and, during a court recess, when Rockwell emerged into the court Rotunda he was surrounded by a crowd of television reporters. One of the reporters, Reese Schonfeld, asked Rockwell how he would treat Jews if he came to power in the United States. Rockwell replied he would treat Jews just as he treated any other American citizens. If they were loyal Americans, everything would be fine; if they were traitors, they would be executed. When Schonfeld asked what percentage of Jews Rockwell perceived as traitors, Rockwell replied, "Ninety percent." The Jewish war veterans and Holocaust survivors rioted and began beating Rockwell and the reporter with their umbrellas, and Rockwell was escorted out of the Courthouse Rotunda in the midst of a police convoy. Rockwell, with the aid of the ACLU, eventually won his permit, but it was long after the date of the planned event."
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