jimj122...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> Thank white people for:
> - that computer you're typing on
> - the software that drives it
> - recorded music
> - motion pictures
> - tv......
Hispanicks will say one of three things about that:
1) that they would have invented all those things by 1512 if not for
"USA/Anglo interference in their countries.
2) that it was ethnic Hispanicks living in the USA who invented those
things, but they were adopted by Anglos, thus the English names of the
inventors
3) that it was actually Hispanicks that invented those things but that
they credit was wrongly given to Anglos. Just as how Hispanicks claim
Walt Disney was Hispanick:
Snow White and the Siete Enanitos?
Giles Tremlett in Madrid
Friday November 30, 2001
The Guardian
The centenary of Walt Disney's birth, due to be celebrated next week,
has been overshadowed by a controversy over his real birth date and
the theory that he may have been the illegitimate child of a Spanish
washerwoman. The Disney family has consistently rejected claims that
the genius of cartoon moving pictures was anything other than the
legitimate child of Elias and Flora Disney, born in their home in
Chicago on December 5 1901. But the lack of a
birth certificate for Walt and a 60-year-old legend in the southern
Spanish town of Mojacar have led to renewed speculation that he may
have been the love-child of washerwoman Isabel Zamora. She allegedly
went to live with her brother in Chicago and allowed the boy to be
secretly adopted by the Disney family. The first record of Walt
Disney's existence is found on a baptism ledger at St Paul's Church,
Chicago, in June 1902, which puts the birth date
as December 5, 1901. Flora Disney signed sworn affidavits in 1918 and
1934 saying Walt had been born at their home. That version of events
was first challenged in 1993 by Marc Eliot, author of an unauthorised
biography, Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince. He unearthed
do***ents signed by FBI chief Edgar Hoover which, he claimed, showed
that the creator of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Dumbo and Bambi had
doubts about his own origins. Now another
unauthorised biographer, Christopher Jones, is working on the theory
that Walt Disney was actually the illegitimate son of Mojacar's
eccentric doctor, Gines Carrillo, and Isabel Zamora. "The fact is that
Walt Disney is probably the washerwoman's illegitimate son," says
Jones, son of former Disney press agent Tom Jones.


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