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(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

Watch this skin get beat by a Spic.....I have no idea where it was filmed...(Any takers? It resembles Hayden Lake, at Pastor Butler's 20 acre compound:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABBfWjD-H9s&search=skinhead

You can tell us you're White this and White that and say watching this brave young White man getting beat up by a larger stronger, probably more fight-experienced in our prisons, spic -- bothered you a hell of a lot.

However, actions speak louder than words.

And the very fact that you showed White Patriots (us) this video -- which is one designed to do one thing: to belittle White men -- already constantly belittled and criticized in all jew media, in all Amerikwan institutions, by all non-whites, by all jews, by all feminists, and so on, from the moment of our birth -- places a HUGE star next to your name, "Kolab," in every post I see of yours from now on.

It's going to take a lot of White evidence from you, from this point on, before I remove that star next to your name in my mind.

Right now, the words which seem most fitting in regard to you, "Kolab," are:

FUCK YOU, YOU GOD DAMNED SON OF A BITCH.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 7:41 pm
(@buffscotsman)
Posts: 329
Reputable Member
 

Notice how the spic keeps hitting him after hes down? I think the Russian skins are beyond fighting fair... And fighting fair only makes sense against fellow whites who also fight fair.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 7:50 pm
(@ouphe)
Posts: 45
Trusted Member
 

You can tell us you're White this and White that and say watching this brave young White man getting beat up by a larger stronger, probably more fight-experienced in our prisons, spic -- bothered you a hell of a lot.

Devere, you are exactly right. I know the company that produces these videos. They are notorious for setting up grotesque mismatches. One video showcases a white "skinhead," who clearly weighs no more than 160lbs, against a Mexican who weighs probably 200-210. On top of that, the beaner was obviously a trained boxer, and the white kid knew absolutely nothing. Without going into details, the outcome was quite gory. I honestly thought the savage was going to murder the "skinhead."

Another show shows a big, fat, beastly-looking Hispanic beating up on a tiny white girl. Even when the white girl tries to quit, the savage keeps hammering on her, and nobody even tries to stop it.

I participated in boxing, judo and wrestling when I was younger, and from time to time I check out the mixed martial arts forums. This is how I know about this company. Their clips show up from time to time, and the only thing more heartbreaking than their freakshow bouts is watching how fellow whites sit back, laugh and cheer against their own kind.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 8:20 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

Devere, you are exactly right. I know the company that produces these videos. They are notorious for setting up grotesque mismatches. One video showcases a white "skinhead," who clearly weighs no more than 160lbs, against a Mexican who weighs probably 200-210. On top of that, the beaner was obviously a trained boxer, and the white kid knew absolutely nothing. Without going into details, the outcome was quite gory. I honestly thought the savage was going to murder the "skinhead."

Another show shows a big, fat, beastly-looking Hispanic beating up on a tiny white girl. Even when the white girl tries to quit, the savage keeps hammering on her, and nobody even tries to stop it.

I participated in boxing, judo and wrestling when I was younger, and from time to time I check out the mixed martial arts forums. This is how I know about this company.

I think Kolab had only one real purpose -- to ridicule White men. For that reason, I think both he and his video should be in the Opposition Forum. Very likely, Kolab IS opposed to White Nationalists, IS the Opposition -- so that's where he should be.

That said, I think, though this was not Kolab's intent, that there is value in White men watching and fighting with muds. That value is learning how they fight -- and learning how to street fight.

One thing this video -- and others like it -- illustrate well is that ONLY the White man has innate nobility and a sense of fairness. However, only fellow Whites deserve that nobility and fairness. Muds should be fought at their own level.

As far as the truth about the fighting and athletic ability of White men, we need only remember that the White man throughout history -- and no doubt before -- has proven himself to be the greatest warrior on the planet. That's why the White man conquered EVERY continent of the mud planet. And take a look at how trained White men do in all out cage fighting, for example. The reason they are virtually unbeatable by muds is a combination of intelligence, dilligence, and physical ability. More proof is in athletic competition of all kinds -- when the White man is not discriminated against (in professional sports he normally is). In the Olympics, Whites completely dominate -- and always have. Take a look at the Caste Football website for ample evidence of White athleticism:

http://www.castefootball.us/

The jew, of course, has indoctrinated Whites into the lie that the White man is an unathletic wimp.

Their clips show up from time to time, and the only thing more heartbreaking than their freakshow bouts is watching how fellow whites sit back, laugh and cheer against their own kind.

Yes. Jew brainwashing -- plus Whites' innate sense of fairness.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 8:49 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

Case in point:

http://www.castefootball.us/viewarticle.asp?sportID=15&teamID=0&ID=22934

See below for a look at a good picture of a White boxing champion. (Wonder how your fat spic would do against him, Kolab?)

Joe Kowalski's Column

Two Down, Two to Go
pictured: Sergei Liakhovich

(4/4/06) Last Saturday night, Sergei “The White Wolf” Liakhovich surprised the boxing world with a hard-fought but unanimous decision over Lamon Brewster. The man from Belorussia took Brewster’s WBO title belt and gained instant recognition in a muddled heavyweight division. Perhaps more importantly – from Caste Football's perspective – whites now hold two of the four belts at heavyweight.

Brewster won the title in April 2004 with a knockout of former champion Wladimir Klitschko. In that fight, the younger Klitschko was beating Brewster like he stole something from him before Wlad ran out of gas and was stopped in the 5th round. The iron-chinned Brewster had won five straight fights against white contenders (Tommy Martin, Klitschko, Kali Meehan, Andrew Golota and Luan Krasniqi). Though he was the beneficiary of a gift decision against Meehan in September 2004, he had shown a great heart, chin and punching power in his victories.

Liakhovich was the underdog and coming off a 16-month layoff. His only victory of note was an easy decision win over former contender Dominic Guinn in December 2004. At 6’4, 240 lbs, he was bigger than Brewster but definitely had a lot of question marks hanging over him. The White Wolf had been stopped once (against Maurice Harris) and was said to be “lazy” in the ring.

The fight turned out to be an early candidate for fight of the year honors. It aired live on Showtime during the cable channel’s “free weekend” promotion, meaning many more people than usual got to see the match. And what a match it was! Liakhovich pressed the action early on and defied predictions by actually trading punches toe-to-toe with the dangerous Brewster. Liakhovich had Brewster seriously hurt on several occasions. The former champ even admitted that “I stayed on my feet in round nine on sheer will.” Brewster’s best moment came in round seven when he landed a wicked body shot that made Liakhovich take a knee for a few seconds.

But in the end it was The White Wolf who landed the stronger blows. Liakhovich closed strong and won a unanimous decision from the judges (117-110, 115-112, 115-113). The bloodied and swollen Brewster was gracious in defeat noting, "Liakhovich deserved to win. He earned it. I take my hat off to him.” The former champ went to the hospital after the fight rather than to the press conference. It must be noted that Brewster, unlike several black boxers, has never disrespected any of his white opponents with racial taunts. Moreover, he always fights with a lot of heart. He certainly deserves a rematch.

The new champ, like almost all white athletes, was also a gracious winner. “Lamon was a real great champion. I know he hits real hard with power and has lots of will but I answered him every time. Then he felt my power. After the fourth round I knew I was controlling the fight but Lamon hits like a mule. I felt like I did the right thing when I took a knee at the end of round seven. I almost sent him down twice too. . . I am afraid of nobody."

Liakhovich now joins Nicolay Valuev (WBA) as the other white heavyweight champion. American blacks Hasim Rahman (WBC) and Chris Byrd (IBF) hold the other belts. Byrd’s days are likely numbered as he has a date with Wladimir Klitschko on April 22. Wlad pummeled Byrd in a fight for the WBO title in October 2000, dropping him twice en route to a unanimous decision.

Rahman has a rematch pending with Oleg Maskaev. The Russian knocked him out of the ring – literally – in their first fight in 1999. It might also be remembered that Rahman “won” his belt when Vitali Klitschko retired due to injuries and a desire to pursue a political career. Now that the elder brother has lost his election he could decide to resume his boxing career.

While the possibility of all heavyweight belts soon belonging to whites exists, the future is even more promising. Almost all the best young contenders – Sultan and Timor Ibragimov, Alexander Dimotrenko, Alexander Povetkin, Dennis Boytsov, Ruslan Chagaev – are white. Even white Americans are starting to show some promise. Joe Mesi is a legitimate contender and Tye Fields, Brian Minto, J.D. Chapman, Mike Marrone and Travis Kaufmann could all make some noise in the years to come.

The coming white dominance of the heavyweight division – and perhaps all the middle and upper weight divisions – will be a bracing blow to the Caste System. It wasn’t too long ago that black racist Spike Lee said that whites can only be heavyweight champion in the movies. The media will certainly never confront him with the reality of who dominates who in boxing. But it is satisfying to know that the geeks who proclaim black supremacy in sports hate it when their boys are dominated by the strongest and most athletic race of people in the world.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 8:52 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
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Posted : 10/04/2006 9:02 pm
Cthulhu
(@cthulhu)
Posts: 744
Prominent Member
 

However, I do stick to my guns, that to start fights with innocent people, and I'd take on any white fucker.

By innocent people Blob means any non-White invader of your White homeland, who doesn't physically assault you first, instead of just taking over your country, peacibly like. Devere is right:

FUCK YOU, YOU GOD DAMNED SON OF A BITCH.

A big star right next to your name for wanting to take on any "white fucker" defending his territory.

Again:
FUCK YOU, YOU GOD DAMNED SON OF A BITCH.

Perhaps you should go take on some jew fucker Blob? Oh, but they be innocent, they haven't openly attacked you on the street. Best save all your strength for beating up White people.

Again, let me reiterate:
FUCK YOU, YOU GOD DAMNED SON OF A BITCH.

Got it high priest?


Cursing braces; blessing releases.

 
Posted : 10/04/2006 9:17 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

Another good Kowalski column:

Joe Kowalski's Column

'Great White Hype' or 'Great Black Hype'?
by Joe Kowalski

(3/10/06) Here comes some fun. Can you guess which of the two headlines above appeared on a popular boxing website earlier this month? I’ll give two scenarios and then you can guess as to which title actually appeared online.

SCENARIO 1

A 20-year-old white heavyweight named Mike Marrone made his television debut on ESPN recently. With an undefeated record of 13-0 (10 KO), Marrone is trained by the legendary Lou Duva (now in his 80s and still training fighters). The young boxer, nicknamed “The New Italian Stallion,” has been a pro for less than two years but has made steady progress. Marrone has earned a few mentions on sites like http://www.fightnews.com. But his press is primarily due to his being trained and touted by Duva.

Standing 6'2 and weighing 210 lbs, “The New Italian Stallion” is very small compared to most heavyweights today. But he is still growing and could well grow into a solid 225-230 pounds. Marrone’s opponent, Zack Page, was 10-4 (4 KO). Page is the usual journeyman fighter that prospects fight before stepping up to better competition. At 6'3 198, he was slightly smaller than Marrone. But Page had just beaten a more experienced fighter and had lost two decisions to prospects Tim Williamson (14-1) and the undefeated Michael Alexander (9-0). He had only been stopped once and that was in his first fight. Obviously he was the underdog, but no pushover.

Page started strongly and won the first few rounds. But he was tiring badly and Marrone hurt him and knocked him down in the 5th and 6th. Perhaps too sure of a win, Marrone came out looking to end things in the 7th round and got clocked by Page. He got up but was staggered. Marrone showed great heart in weathering the storm of punches and survived the round. In the 8th and final round both fighters were hurt and tired but traded blows until the end of the fight. On the scorecards one judge had the fight a draw and two had Marrone slightly ahead.

SCENARIO 2

The WBO/IBF super middleweight title unification match between Jeff Lacy and Welshman Joe Calzaghe was supposed to be the coming out party for the black American. Lacy claimed that Joe “slaps with his punches” and that he was going to knock out Calzaghe. With his bulging biceps and six-pack abs Lacy was often compared to Mike Tyson.

Veteran boxer Robin Reid had fought - and lost - to both men but he echoed the opinion of most in favoring Lacy:

“Having been in with Lacy and Joe now at 34 years of age, I just think that Lacy has too much power for him. You can see from the weigh-in today how big he is and I cannot see Joe surviving past five rounds. I can only see one winner and that is Jeff Lacy by KO and inside five rounds.”

But when the bell rang it was all Calzaghe. Lacy lost every round and was knocked down — and almost out — in the final round. He finished the fight with cuts over both eyes and a bloody nose and mouth. He went to the hospital instead of to the post-fight press conference.

Calzaghe’s comments after the fight summed up how easy the match was for him despite all the hype about - and from - Lacy:

“I focused on some of [Lacy’s] comments about me slapping my punches so if I am a slapper then I must slap pretty damn hard judging by the state of Lacy's face. I just used my southpaw jab, my foot speed and he just had no answer to my superior hand speed. But that was my game plan and he had no answer and whilst his face looks damaged I am unmarked and despite his predictions about stopping Joe Calzaghe, in reality I was never hurt."

Answer

Regular readers of Caste Football will not be surprised to know that the answer is number 1. The offending article about Mike Marrone ran on the East Side Boxing website on March 3. Written by a racist named Aaron King, it is a textbook example of the caste mentality so prevalent among almost all American sportswriters. http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news.php?p=6196&more=1

I am not sure whether Aaron King is black or white, but he certainly has a bright future as an American sportswriter if he can keep coughing up such hate-filled propaganda. Perhaps Sports Illustrated or ESPN has an opening? Better yet would be a job on HBO with fellow racist Bryant Gumble.

The bigot closed his column with the following lines: “He’s entertaining, but entertaining doesn’t correlate to wins. America is going to have to wait longer yet for its next “Great White Hope.”

Perhaps Mike Marrone never will be a heavyweight champion or even a contender. Maybe “The New Italian Stallion” should shed 10 pounds and campaign as a cruiserweight. But this article is not really about Mike Marrone. It is about what white athletes have to compete against.

Jeff Lacy will never be called a “Great Black Hype” because he was destroyed by a superior white boxer. Blacks who cheer for Lacy — or other black fighters — will not be criticized.

But let’s face reality. ANY white boxer will be called a “Great White Hope” or a “Great White Hype” as soon as he gets to the point where he is shown on TV. Even if it is his first televised fight. It doesn’t matter whether he is an undefeated boxer with a good trainer and a good amateur background. It doesn’t matter whether he trains and fights hard and often. It doesn’t matter whether he fights back when he is bleeding and out on his feet. All that matters is that he is white and many — perhaps most — sportswriters will hate and despise him for the color of his skin.

Of course, these same “journalists” would beg for mercy if they ever had to step in the ring with the “Great White Hypes” they so like to demonize.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 9:25 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

And then there's the UFC, in which White men completely dominate (as usual):

http://msn.foxsports.com/other/story/5373408

Like it or not, UFC on verge of explosion
Story Tools: XML
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Dave Doyle / FOXSports.com
Posted: 32 days ago

Once branded as human cockfighting and plagued by its own blood-soaked marketing, the Ultimate Fighting Championship and the sport of mixed martial arts almost collapsed before it ever really got started.

The sport, a unique blend of wrestling, jiu-jitsu, boxing and kickboxing, was banned in much of the country in the late 1990s.
But through a combination of aggressive new ownership, sanctioning in pivotal states, and a hot cable television product featuring charismatic stars, UFC is undergoing a successful image remodel.

Also...

Boxing might be in trouble

What's it like being an Ultimate Fighter?

"We're not for everyone, and we don't try to be," UFC president Dana White said. "If you don't like fighting sports, great, this is America, that's your right. All we ask is that people understand what we are."

One thing is quickly becoming understood — mixed martial arts is heading for the mainstream of American sport, whether or not the mainstream is ready. UFC is coming off the biggest event in its history, UFC 57 on Feb. 4, in which light heavyweight champion Chuck Lidell defended his title against former champion Randy Couture.

UFC light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell is the biggest star in mixed martial arts. (Josh Hedges/Copyright Zuffa, LLC)

The show drew a sellout of 10,301 at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas for a paying gate of $3.3 million; another sellout of 2,000 watched the fight at the site on closed-circuit TV; and early pay-per view estimates are 350,000 buys. A live fight special leading up to the show on Spike TV on Jan. 16 drew more viewers than a much-hyped Miami Heat-Los Angeles Lakers game on ESPN the same night.

In fact, nearly 4,000 people showed up for a midweek weigh-in. Contrast that to when Liddell and Couture first fought in 2003, when there were just over 4,000 paid admissions.

"I'm kind of surprised with how fast this has all happened," said the 37-year old Liddell. "People are finally starting to understand what we're all about."

Yahoo even reported that its second-most requested topic in their search engines the weekend of Feb. 4-5 involved Ultimate Fighting, with "UFC results" among the most popular topics. Only that weekend's Super Bowl XL received more inquiries.

If fight fans needed to go online and search for results of the fight — which was not covered by traditional outlets like the Associated Press — that would seem to suggest mainstream media are missing the boat on a sport with a big following.

"There's a huge buzz about the sport right now," said David Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer, who has covered the sport since its infancy. "Old sports editors are set in their ways, and I don't think they'll ever get it."

This is in part because many probably still remember the sport's original surge in popularity, which nearly caused it to be legislated out of existence.

The first UFC event was held in Denver in 1993. It was conceived to answer the age-old question of which fighting discipline was the strongest, a question that sold tons of newsstand karate magazines over the years.

"They didn't know they were creating a new sport," said White. "It was supposed to be a one-off event, but it ended up being so successful they did another."

Rules of the octagon

Nothing frustrates people in the mixed martial arts community more than the misperception of the basics of their sport. "Once a reporter asked me what it was like fighting someone 50 pounds heavier with no referee," said Ultimate Fighter Alex Karalexis. "And I said 'That's not what I do' and explained the rules. Then I picked up the paper and it talked about how I fight to the death with no ref against people 100 pounds heavier."

UFC conducts its bouts under rules that are becoming widely accepted as industry standards in commission states. Here is a partial list of UFC do's and don'ts:

What's legal

Punching
Elbowing
Kicking and kneeing standing fighters
Wrestling takedowns and throws
Olympic judo-style chokes
Submission joint locks
What's not

Head butts
Eye gouging
Hair-pulling
Groin strikes
Strikes to the spine or back of the head
Kicking, kneeing or stomping a grounded opponent
Holding the fence for leverage
Throat strikes

UFC quickly became successful as a pay-per-view attraction in the mid-1990s. But a backlash grew against the nascent sport's Wild West atmosphere, which often produced grizzly visuals. A relative lack of rules led to sideshow-type spectacles, such as a fight between 150-pound martial artist Keith Hackney and 600-pound sumo Emmanuel Yarborough; and another fight in which Hackney repeatedly punched martial artist Joe Son in the groin before Son submitted.

Worse, then-UFC owners Semaphore Entertainment downplayed the inherent skill of the athletes and instead played up the carnival aspect, promising and delivering blood gore.

"I had a debate on Larry King Live with them at the time and told them in no uncertain terms we couldn't sanction them unless they changed their rules," said Marc Ratner, executive director of the Nevada athletic commission. "They really dug in their heels in trying to avoid regulation, and they paid for it."

New York banned the event in 1997, and many of the nation's athletic commissions followed suit. Facing pressure from the likes of Arizona senator John McCain, major cable providers pulled the plug on UFC.

"Honestly, they deserved to be banned," White said. "They made every mistake possible. It wasn't healthy for our sport."

Through the late 1990s, the sport limped by on satellite dish, staging shows at Indian casinos and in the few non-commission states that didn't specifically ban it.

"If someone has an issue with all combat sports, if they're in favor of banning boxing and kickboxing and mixed martial arts, then at least I can respect their consistency, even though I disagree with them," Meltzer said. "The thing that bothers me is the way mixed martial arts was singled out. There's never been a single death in a sanctioned MMA event."

UFC was on life support in the late 1990s, when Semaphore sold the company to Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta III, owners of the Station Casinos, in 2000 and brought along White to run the ship.

"When we bought the promotion, it was something that came from the heart," White said. "Every indicator at the time said this was a bad business move, something you couldn't make money in. We took a gamble because we loved the sport and knew the following was there."

The sport's turnaround began in earnest when it received sanctioning from the Nevada athletic commission in 2001 (New Jersey had given its blessing the previous year).

Long gone were the groin strikes and other dirty tactics. Referees were given far greater leeway to stop fights. Fights were set at five, five-minute rounds for title fights and three five-minute rounds for the rest, with judging instituted in the event a fight goes the distance.

"We got together with the people who run all these groups and told them there needs to be a uniform set of rules, like with boxing or any other combat sport," Ratner said. "The people at UFC have complied with everything we've asked of them."

Unlike previous ownership, the present UFC administration embraces government sanctioning as the key to the sport's legitimacy.

"We welcome the commissions," White said. "The old owners ran from regulation; we want it. Like boxing or football or any contact sport, that most important thing is that we take the care to protect the fighters' health and safety."

Of course, the blessing of a key commission wasn't going to revive a sport left for dead on its own. Enter White, a Las Vegas native who cut his teeth promoting boxing in Boston.

"He deserves a ton of credit for making the sport what it has become," Meltzer said of White. "He's the Vince McMahon of his generation."

Nevada sanctioning helped bring cable pay-per-view back on board, but only hardcore fans remained. The next step was getting back on television.

"I mean, it was ridiculous to me.," White said. "Television was at the point that they had people eating donkey (genitals) in prime time, and you're telling me there's no room on television for our sport?"

Bridging the gap was Spike TV's ,The Ultimate Fighter reality show, which is finishing up production of its third season. The show features would-be UFC fighters training in the Nevada desert, guided by UFC stars like Liddell and Couture.

"It was a way to phase on to television without going straight to showing the fights," White said. "Once people started to see what these fighters do — how much time they spend in training, what level of skills you need to make it — that helped break down the stereotypes about our fighters and helped the people see them as all-around athletes."

The show has helped the public gain an understanding of what the sport has evolved into. Fighters need to be cross-trained in all relevant disciplines; a puncher who can't wrestle will be taken down with ease; a wrestler who isn't versed in submission holds will find himself on the wrong end of a submission lock on the ground; and everyone needs to watch out for someone who can kick.

Wrestling throws are one facet of mixed martial arts, as UFC welterweight champion Matt Hughes demonstrates on Frank Trigg. (Josh Hedges/Copyright Zuffa, LLC)

"When you first see the clips, if it is something you have never seen before, the visuals can be jarring," said welterweight fighter Frank Trigg, a former University of Oklahoma wrestler who has been featured in a UFC main event. "People have always had the idea that boxing is the 'proper' way to fight. So it takes time to understand the differences between what they're used to and all the subtleties of that go into a ground fight."

Another important piece of the puzzle fell into place when California recently legalized competition. The sport has long been West Coast based, but the Golden State was the final major holdout among Western commission states.

"The way I look at it, there were lots of underground shows, shows on Indian reservations, where the athletes weren't getting proper medical attention," said Armando Garcia, executive officer of the California athletic commission. "The sport has grown to the point where we need to make sure things are on the up and up."

All indications are that California is becoming a hotbed for the sport. The first UFC show in the state, UFC 59 on April 15, sold out the 18,000-seat Pond in Anaheim in two days before a single fight was announced — and that's with the cheapest ticket at $50 and no seats in the lower bowl priced under $200. An independently promoted show in San Jose headlined by Frank Shamrock vs. Cesar Gracie on March 10 is expected to draw more than 10,000 fans.

Industry speculation has it that such high-profile success could lead to the remaining mixed martial arts holdout states in the East, like New York and Maryland, getting on board.

"My guess is that every state with a commission that has its act together will legalize the sport eventually," Ratner said. "They're starting to understand this is just another combat sport."

If the notion of protecting fighters doesn't get remaining commissions to change their tune, another factor might.

"Wait until the commissioners in New York and other places get a load of the gate the show in Anaheim," said Meltzer, who served as a judge on two UFC shows in the late 1990s. "And Nevada is bringing in a ton of money on these shows."

Either way, the principals involved say the perceptions of the sport are changing.

"I always knew the sport would get big if we were given the opportunity," Liddell said. "The interest was always there in the underground, it was a matter of getting the chance to show what we can do in front of a bigger audience. We have, and the people have responded."

Dave Doyle is an editor for FOXSports.com.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 10:40 pm
(@devere)
Posts: 2756
Famed Member
 

Chuck Liddell -- Light Heavyweight Champ.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 10:41 pm
(@moose)
Posts: 346
Honorable Member
 

I had been in at least 20 or more fights in my adolescence, all against negroes, all in self-defense or some version of self-defense, such as pro-active solutions to discourage negro verbal aggression. I must say, I dislike being engaged in the act intensely. I try to be a mellow guy, and that kind of adrenaline rushing over me is just not cool, dude.

Watching two men beat each other for the entertainment of others is just depressing to me.

This White person with a shaved head is just as much an animal as the brown one for engaging in a friendly boxing match.

There is only one reason to fight, and that is to kill. And shooting people is a much more effective way of killing than throwing your fists around.

*shrugs* I just don't get why people like watching that kind of stuff.


 
Posted : 10/04/2006 11:03 pm
(@whiteman4whiteland)
Posts: 1023
Noble Member
 

My favorite UFC fighter and one of the best ever.

He was a coach in the UFC reality tv show and he chewed out a nigger in front of all his homies for "showboating". The nigger was pissed at him for the rest of the show. Of course the UFC set up the show so that the nigger would win the show in the end but that's beside the point.


Detroitiscrap.com Bloghttp://detroitiscrap.blogspot.com:Chronicling the last dark days of a once great city.

 
Posted : 11/04/2006 5:00 pm
Oy Ze Hate
(@oy-ze-hate)
Posts: 1565
Noble Member
 

All I kept hearing in the video was, "come on, Chris" -- a white name....If i were videotaping this event..........(not gonna go there, if you know what I mean)....the man who needs his ass beaten was the camera man .....

It was obviously a staged fight. Not that it was fake.

The guys probably wanted to fight and their friends put money on one or the other. So they fought.

Notice the camera and the cardboard ring and it was over in a minute or so. Not mortal combat or anything, "Kolob14".


Yeah, we're all just a bunch of hateful anti-semites

A note of appreciation from the rich

 
Posted : 11/04/2006 6:55 pm
(@anonymous)
Posts: 84005
Illustrious Member Guest
 

did you happen to notice that after it was quite apparent he was already down and beaten, he got right back up and fought til he was unable to fight any more?...til he was virtually knocked unconscious? Shows guts and determination there, pal.

That's what makes a man.
I've told this before but it's worth repeating here: there was a American National Socialist at San Quentin back in spring of 1978 and he held off 50 Black Muslims for a period of time before he was overwhelmed and stabbed hundreds of times before they threw him off the top tier. He died like a National Socialist, like a White Man. You don't always win but you fight like a White Man.

Pretty much if a White guy gets into it with a negro or a mestizo or an asian you can count that the White guy will be alone and every subhuman will join their fellow in the fight. How sick our White brothers and sisters have become.


 
Posted : 11/04/2006 7:05 pm
Steve B
(@steve-b)
Posts: 3091
Famed Member
 

My favorite UFC fighter and one of the best ever.

He was a coach in the UFC reality tv show and he chewed out a nigger in front of all his homies for "showboating". The nigger was pissed at him for the rest of the show. Of course the UFC set up the show so that the nigger would win the show in the end but that's beside the point.

This guy is no slouch either.

UFC heavyweight champ, Andrei "The Pitbull" Arlovski


 
Posted : 11/04/2006 7:12 pm
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