From LF Wiki
FreeRepublic Profile Real name Bruce Lewis, born 1965.
Background
Among the first comics artists to bring manga influences to American comics, Lewis wrote and drew the Robotech: Invid War Aftermath (1993-1994) series for Marvel's Malibu/Eternity Comics line. Later, Lewis created the Robotech: Hohsq's Story (1995), and Robotech Aftermath: Megaroad (1996) series for Academy Comics; he also wrote and illustrated the four-issue Gall Force: Eternal Story (1994-1995) miniseries for CPM Manga, and colored, lettered, and produced many more CPM comics titles.
He's also an anime voice actor.
Watching this article
Hi, Bruce. You finally got the attention you craved in writing your own now-deleted wikipedia vanity article. We at LFwiki hope you are quite happy with this feasible free-market replacement good sir.
FreeRepublic
Lewis is a prolific commenter on the FreeRepublic website under the username B-Chan. His tagline (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?) ironically raises several questions. He's referred to Tiger Woods and his recent marital difficulties as "certainly [not] niggardly with his affections." He idolizes Santiago Matamoros, also known as "Saint James the Moor-slayer," for driving out Muslims from the Iberian Peninsula. He's also offered praise for former governor George Wallace, particularly Wallace's opposition to school desegregation.
Personal beliefs include support for the Christian_values, the combination of church and state(akin to Saudi Arabia but based on Judeo-Christian law), as well as banning divorce and remarriage. He is opposed to pacifism, communism, socialism, libertarianism, anarchism, democracy, and popular government in general. His belief is that "those social and economic systems founded upon the Rock of a genuinely Judeo-Christian culture ... can truthfully be called moral and viable over the long term." Given how much he hates outsiders this 'rock' of Judeo-Christianity must refer to the stone he likes pitching from his monarchist glass house at those he despises the idea of sharing a country's breathing space with.
People's Private Information
If B-Chan has your personal phone number he will gladly give it out to anyone who wants it. The number has been x'd out for this page.
“
| Under no circumstances should anyone call
Couet, Rebecca
Position: Principal
508-821-xxxx
especially if one’s intention is to question the sanity of the “educators” of the Taunton, MA school district.
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| —B-Chan, [1]
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15 year old girls
B-Chan's favorite girl, and what he considers the epitome of beauty, is Ai Shinozaki(b. 1992).
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|  15 years old when taken
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| The incomparable Shinozaki Ai (born 1992)
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| —B-Chan
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| She looks like a ten year old girl with a boob job.
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| —Marie2
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| Please. She’s still a minor.
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| —malkee
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| So are all the half-naked cheerleaders at your local high school. So what? The good-natured, harmless appreciation of older teenage girls is as American as apple pie.
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| —B-Chan
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| Miss Shinozaki a legal adult in Japan now, and her eighteenth birthday is on 26 February, 2010. (NB: The age of consent in Japan is 13.) While I'm old enough to be her dad (and happily married besides), I think it's ridiculous to pretend that something magical happens to young women at the stroke of midnight on the day they turn 18 that changes them from innocent children to reproductively-ready adults.
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| —B-Chan
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| I don't advocate the romantic pursuit of such young beauties by men outside of their age cohort — only a cad would do such a thing. (Did we learn nothing from Gigi?) However, I think that it's prudish and hypocritical to pretend that girls like Miss Shinozaki aren't charming and pleasant to behold.
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| —B-Chan
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| My late, beloved grandmother was married at age 14. My own mother, God bless her, married at age 16. While getting married at such a young age isn't advisable for a variety of reasons, biology isn't among them.
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| —B-Chan
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| Beauty standards in Japan are different.
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| —B-Chan
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| LOL Yes, Mrs. Chan is well aware of all my little character faults! She just rolls her eyes and doesn’t take them seriously. You shouldn’t, either.
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| —B-Chan
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Thoughts on Race
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| Most of the employees of our family business are black. Among them is one guy, a longtime employee and family friend, who does cabinetmaking as a side job. About two years ago, this man was in my home building bookshelves when he spied a black teenager ride by our house on a bike. Our friend downed tools, went out the front door, and watched as the kid rode away. He then turned to me and said, "Black people got no business in this neighborhood. That kid is looking for a place to rob." "He's probably just going to the store or something," I replied. He looked at me like I was crazy. "No he ain't. If you see a black kid that age in this neighborhood, he goin' to rob or kill somebody. Call the cops." At the time, I thought he was going a little bit overboard. I no longer think that.
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| —B-Chan
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| I miss that America, too. But you know what a liberal would say if you showed them that picture? “Oh yeah, life was great when black people were forced to go to separate schools.” The thing is: they’re right. Life was better — for both blacks and whites — before desegregation. But if you say it: “you a raciss”.
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| —on school segregation
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| [Tiger Woods] certainly wasn’t niggardly with his affections.
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| I'm with you. It'll never happen, though. The Bill of Rights really is a suicide pact. See you at Covadonga.
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| —on deporting Muslims
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| A new crusade is exactly what will be needed... and like Pelayo at Covadonga, it will only happen when we have nowhere left to run. Santiago matamoros!
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| —on Muslims
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| Typical Amish behavior. I wish we could ship them all back to Moravia.
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| School desegregation was a mistake. The cultures of white and black Americans are too different to be successfully integrated. Kudos to the Berkeley school board for their backhanded recognition of this fact.
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Bruce as a sudden 'expert on tolerance and free speech' after discovering this article
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| Oh, yeah. That guy who wrote my article is obsessed with me. Some sort of homo crush, I think. He follows my posts on several message boards like a teenage girl obsessing over that vampire guy from Twilight. It's weird, but I'm used to it. The risk of attracting the attention of the mentally ill is part of being a (very low-level) public figure.
As long as he limits his hatred to me alone, I don't mind. It's actually kind of flattering.
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| —B-Chan
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| Their problem is that they hate God.
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| —B-Chan
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“
| As for the LFWiki guys: most of them are actually all right. A lot of them are Goons, i.e. members of the Something Awful web community, which is one of those online humor sites that spares no one ridicule. With this in mind, I try not to take their criticisms too seriously. I mean, many of my harshest critics are just naïve kids — young, idealistic liberals who have their hearts in the right places. In other words, they’re basically good people with some mistaken ideas — a situation with which I can sympathize. Believe or not, I was once a young liberal firebrand myself!
The criticism itself is no problem for me. Over the course of my twenty-plus years as a professional artist and writer, my ego has been stomped upon so many times that I’m used to the feeling!
Besides, being in the public eye (even at the very low level that I inhabit) means exposing yourself and your opinions to whatever the world throws at you. Being publicly honest about one’s opinions means becoming a target — and being a traditionalist Catholic and a monarchist is like painting a bullseye on your forehead! If I were not comfortable with this action-consequence relationship, I’d just keep my opinions to myself. I enjoy posting my inflammatory views in these public fora, and in return I accept the risk that every now and then people are going to make fun of me (or even hate me) because of my political opinions and/or religious beliefs.
(Surprisingly, when it comes to my politics, I get far more grief from other Freepers than I do from the S.A. Goons!)
In short: it’s a free country, and people have the right to say what they like about me (within the limits of law) in public. I’d never want to see that right infringed upon, even if it means I myself become the subject of occasional (non-libelous) ridicule. As long as my critics keep it legal, I’ll accept whatever abuse they dish out. It’s really just that simple.
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| —B-chan
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