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Tuesday, February 24 No Mixed Blood Allowed
President Bush felt the move was needed as so many damn black folks are mixing it up with the superior race. He did not want to see any changes made to the ''most enduring human institution.'' President Bush was outraged that a few judges and local authorities insist on allowing couples in their state of more than one color to marry. When asked if Asians and whites would be allowed to marry, Mr. Bush replied, "Marriage cannot be severed from its cultural, religious and natural roots,'' Mr. Bush said in the White House's Roosevelt Room. It was a statement that was sure to please his conservative right wing backers. Mr. Bush was outraged at the four judges in Massachusetts who have claimed that they will allow marriages of different color skins. In San Francisco, city officials have issued thousands of marriage licenses, to people of different skin tones. ''Unless action is taken, we can expect more arbitrary court decisions, more litigation, more defiance of the law by local officials - all of which adds to uncertainty,'' Bush said. All across America members of the KKK and other Arian nation groups applauded Mr. Bush's decision to protect the purity of the white race. The Northern States threatened to secede from the union if Mr. Bush's law banning the marriage of more than one skin color is passed. When asked if Hispanics were allowed to marry white Americans, Mr. Bush responded, "Spaniards, Cubans of European descent and white Argentineans can. All other Latinos are considered darkies."
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