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KKKolorado
06-11-2012, 04:17 PM
http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/11/4552736/kkk-group-aims-to-adopt-highway.html

The International Keystone Knights of the KKK applied last month to adopt part of Route 515 in the Appalachian Mountains. The Georgia Department of Transportation is meeting with lawyers from the state Attorney General's Office on Monday to decide how to proceed.

FourWinds
06-11-2012, 04:18 PM
I've seen this happen before, they will allow them to adopt the highway, then within a year they will officially rename it after Martin Luther King.

southgeorgia ghost
06-11-2012, 04:45 PM
I've seen this happen before, they will allow them to adopt the highway, then within a year they will officially rename it after Martin Luther King.

yea specially here in georgia

FourWinds
06-11-2012, 04:50 PM
Happened in Alabama if I remember right. There used to be a joke along the lines of "Want a street named after MLK? Just pick a road the Klan adopted" basically the community doesn't want the KKK to help them because we're the boogeyman and they like it that way. So they rename the road in the hopes that the Klan will drop their obligation. Its a lousy situation, most feel insulted not by the renaming, but by the principle of their town giving them the finger for trying to help so they stop and the local town can point and say "See? See? Look how bad they are."

Ga.Hillbilly
06-11-2012, 05:34 PM
I've seen this happen before, they will allow them to adopt the highway, then within a year they will officially rename it after Martin Luther King.






Them trying to adopt 515 and them wanting to have a public rally on the court house steps is all over the online topics and news paper round my parts

ga. redneck
06-11-2012, 08:53 PM
To all Ga. members and Friends stay klear of the situation in North Ga. unless told otherwise by myself or the Higher ups. :unskkkk: Thank you .

Ga.Hillbilly
06-11-2012, 09:47 PM
Fully understood Esteemed Sir

whitelegionknight
06-11-2012, 10:34 PM
NSM did it...and the Klan also did it in the past.

varagoi
06-12-2012, 03:00 PM
In my two cents opinion I would even adopt a Jack the Ripper Highway to see the name in public. :fierycross:

Paul coleman
06-12-2012, 03:29 PM
Could also be a road that every homeboy dumps his trash on for the Klan to pick up.:shocked::D

whitelegionknight
06-12-2012, 03:47 PM
Could also be a road that every homeboy dumps his trash on for the Klan to pick up.:shocked::D

Don't give them any ideas!:lol:

FourWinds
06-12-2012, 09:29 PM
The application was denied. This would be a prime time for them to turn the ACLU on them and sue for the application to be accepted.

redneck
06-13-2012, 12:43 PM
They did say they would sue if they was denied. And rightfully so.

JB Books
06-13-2012, 07:33 PM
They did it here in MO... a stretch of I-55 is Klan adopted

Frank L. White
06-15-2012, 02:56 PM
The American Civil Liberties Union and the Ku Klux Klan make strange bedfellows, but they may march into court together to press a Georgia chapter of the white supremacy group's bid to join the state’s Adopt-A-Highway program.
“We have been approached by the group and are now doing research,” said Debra Seagraves, executive director of the civil rights group, told FoxNews.com. “We are considering representing them.”
The Georgia Department of Transportation denied an application by the International Keystone Knights of the KKK in Union County to adopt part of Route 515 in the Appalachian Mountains on Tuesday, saying that "promoting an organization with a history of inciting civil disturbance and social unrest would present a grave concern" and could negatively impact quality of life in the Peach State.

“We have been approached by the group and are now doing research. We are considering representing them.”- Debra Seagraves, executive director, ACLU of Georgia


Despite the group’s controversial history, that denial was “clearly viewpoint discrimination” on behalf of state transportation officials, Seagraves told FoxNews.com.
The civil rights group will now gather facts about the case before ultimately deciding whether to represent the Klan chapter. If the ACLU does represent the group, a lawsuit could follow but other remedies short of legal action may be included, she said.
“We are considering it,” Seagraves said of litigation.
The state's program enlists volunteers to pick up trash, and volunteers are recognized with a sign along the road they adopt. State DOT officials said in a statement that maintaining safety on roadways is the department’s first priority and that "encountering signage and members of the KKK along a roadway would create a definite distraction to motorists."
Harley Hanson, the "exalted cyclops" of the Klan's "Realm of Georgia," who filed the application along with April Chambers on behalf of the group, told FoxNews.com before the request was denied that "all [they] want to do is adopt this piece of road and clean it."
In a letter of denial to the KKK, Department of Transportation Commissioner Keith Golden added that the stretch of highway for which the group applied is ineligible for adoption because its posted speed limit exceeds the program maximum of 55 mph.
Critics have blasted the move as an offensive publicity stunt, and at least one elected official had called on the state to reject the application from a "domestic terrorist group."
"It should be denied just as we would deny the request from any other hate group," state Rep. Tyrone Brooks, head of the Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials, told FoxNews.com. He said that the application even being considered was offensive.
In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Missouri's attempt to reject a local KKK chapter's application, saying membership in the program cannot be denied because of a group's political beliefs. In Kentucky, the transportation department accepted a white-separatist group's contract to participate in the state's highway cleanup program, fearing an unsuccessful legal battle.
Hanson, who was aware of the case in Missouri, told FoxNews.com earlier this week that he thought the application would be approved, as the effort was just another way for the group to assist the community.
"We're not doing this for a membership drive; we've got all the members we want. And we've got intentions to do it more than four times per year," Hanson said.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/06/15/kkk-chapter-seeks-legal-help-from-aclu-georgia/?test=latestnews#ixzz1xtT7aRn2

Michael Liedy
06-16-2012, 04:39 PM
I am going to adopt two roads. "the old dirt road" love the song and a 300yard stone road that leads to my house. If you ain't invited better not see you on it. I am getting tired of all the crap. It stays clean because my kids and I have respect, no road should really need adopted if people have respect.

So for the tangent I went on but wake up America