Ruskin Heights Tornado Remembrance

Kansas City history of a tragic event that was nearly as destructive as decades of neglect from City Hall . . .

Ruskin Heights Tornado survivors remember storm 60 years later

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - "There's a certain smell. There's a certain look to the sky that has kind of a greenish tint, then I start getting nervous and the hairs on the back of my neck start to pick up," Carolyn Glenn Brewer says, looking out the window.

Comments

  1. Wish a big one would sweep through today! That would fill the skies with the body parts of useless negroes, yes?

    ReplyDelete
  2. You're wishing a disaster on other people? That's not good karma, dude.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good karma is wishing for the total extermination of the negro.

      The person who accomplishes the eradication of the negro will be a national hero forever.

      Delete
  3. No harm can come to a human wishing ill will on the parasitical negro.

    "There's a certain smell."

    That's true today in Ruskin Heights.

    Negroes smell bad.

    ReplyDelete
  4. What does a black person and a tornado have in common? It only takes one to destroy a neighborhood.

    ReplyDelete

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