WHITE RUFF NECKS
and
BLACK SCAPEGOATS
WHITE RUFF NECKS
At their most extreme, ruffs were a foot or more wide; these cartwheel ruffs required a wire frame called a supportasse or underpropper to hold them at the fashionable angle. By the end of the sixteenth century, ruffs were falling out of fashion in Western Europe, in favour of wing collars and falling bands. The fashion lingered longer in Holland, where ruffs can be seen in portraits well into the seventeenth century, and farther east. It also stayed on as part of the ceremonial dress of city councillors (Senatoren) in North German Hanseatic cities and of Lutheran clergy in those cities and in Denmark, Norway, the Faeroe Islands, Iceland and in Greenland.
The ruff was banned in Spain under Philip IV (orchestrated by Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares).[4]
GOD IS WHITE COLLAR
http://united-races.blogspot.co.uk/2011/08/god-is-white-god-is-not-almighty.html
BLACK SCAPEGOATS
"Nor is it probable that Elizabeth's efforts to deport them had much success. The historian James Walvin concludes that 'Blacks had become too securely lodged at various social levels of English society to be displaced and repatriated.'"
We are building the unbreakable "Black Iron Wall" of the European Racial Partition.
This is a weak IC6, Semite, Middle Eastern wall.
---
THE
HOLY BOOK
OF
RACIAL GOVERNMENT
They are being cast out of fashion.
ReplyDeleteruff (n.)
kind of large collar, stiffly starched, especially common in the seventeenth century, 1520s, originally in reference to sleeves (of collars, from 1550s), probably a shortened form of ruffle.
Card-playing sense is a separate word, from a former game of that name (1580s), from Middle French roffle, earlier romfle (early 15c.), from Italian ronfa, perhaps a corruption of trionfo "triumph" (from French; cf. trump). The game was in vogue c.1590-1630.
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=ruff
wire (n.)
Old English wir "metal drawn out into a thread," from Proto-Germanic *wiraz (cf. Old Norse viravirka "filigree work," Swedish vira "to twist," Old High German wiara "fine gold work"), from PIE *wei- "to turn, twist, plait" (cf. Old Irish fiar, Welsh gwyr "bent, crooked;" Latin viere "to bend, twist," viriæ "bracelets," of Celtic origin). Wiretapping is recorded from 1904, from earlier wiretapper (1893). Wirepuller in the political sense is 1848, American English.
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=wire&allowed_in_frame=0
frame (n.)
c.1200, "profit, benefit;" mid-13c. "composition, plan," from frame (v.) and from Scandinavian (cf. Old Norse frami "advancement"). In late 14c. it also meant "the rack."
Meaning "building" is from early 15c.; that of "border or case for a picture or pane of glass" is from c.1600. The meaning "established order, plan" and that of "human body" are both first recorded 1590s. Of bicycles, from 1871; of motor cars, from 1900. Frame of mind is from 1711. Frame of reference is 1897, from mechanics and graphing; the figurative sense is attested from 1924.
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&search=frame&searchmode=none
Quote: ". . .God is White, Wog is Wrong. . ."
http://united-races.blogspot.co.uk/2011/08/god-is-white-god-is-not-almighty.html
Response:
For God to be White, Wog has to be wrong.
Starch
ReplyDeleteEtymology
The word "starch" is derived from Middle English sterchen, meaning to stiffen. "amylum" is Latin for starch, from the Greek αμυλον, "amylon" which means "not ground at a mill". The root amyl is used in biochemistry for several compounds related to starch.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starch
Matthew 7:13-14
ReplyDeleteYoung's Literal Translation (YLT)
13 `Go ye in through the strait gate, because wide [is] the gate, and broad the way that is leading to the destruction, and many are those going in through it;
14 how strait [is] the gate, and compressed the way that is leading to the life, and few are those finding it!
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew%207:13-14&version=YLT