sport historian
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- Dec 18, 2004
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Here (http://www.amnation.com/vfr/archives/016680.html) is a post from View From the Right about Natalee Holloway's activities in the days preceding her death. Here was an apparently intelligent 18 year-old girl drinking from morning to night. The wealthy parents of Holloway and her classmates thought it was a great idea to send their children to what is away from the hotels and casinos, a third-world shanty town, and once there to "party."
There were 7 chaperones for 125 students and the chaperones were "not supposed to keep up with their every move." There were "wild parties, a lot of drinking, lots of room switching every night."
Holloway was last seen by her classmates (who did nothing to stop her) leaving the Aruba bar and night club Carlos'n Charlie's around 1:30 a.m. on Monday, May 30. Holloway left with Joran van der Sloot and his two Surinamese friends. She saw nothing wrong with going off alone with three men she did not know and was never seen again.
Why not? Natalee Holloway was going to medical school to become a doctor. She had been taught the world belonged to her.
I would bet that Natalee Holloway's mother still thinks she didn't do anything wrong by sending her daughter on this trip. As Lawrence Auster writes, "I've said it before, I'll say it again: liberal society is a factory for the production of dead young white women."
There were 7 chaperones for 125 students and the chaperones were "not supposed to keep up with their every move." There were "wild parties, a lot of drinking, lots of room switching every night."
Holloway was last seen by her classmates (who did nothing to stop her) leaving the Aruba bar and night club Carlos'n Charlie's around 1:30 a.m. on Monday, May 30. Holloway left with Joran van der Sloot and his two Surinamese friends. She saw nothing wrong with going off alone with three men she did not know and was never seen again.
Why not? Natalee Holloway was going to medical school to become a doctor. She had been taught the world belonged to her.
I would bet that Natalee Holloway's mother still thinks she didn't do anything wrong by sending her daughter on this trip. As Lawrence Auster writes, "I've said it before, I'll say it again: liberal society is a factory for the production of dead young white women."