- Mar 11, 2015
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1. In John Connolly's novel "The Reapers," the protagonist, a black man, meditates on the sort of music he enjoys, Country and Western, and that most blacks can't seem to favor this genre.\
"...Country and Western, .... the black experience in country music. Louis found it hard to understand why so many others of his race failed to connect with this music: it spoke of rural poverty, of love, of despair, of faithfulness and infidelity, and these were experiences known to all men, black as well as white.
Just as poor black people had more in common with poor whites than with wealthy blacks, so too this music offered a means of expression to those who had endured all of the trauma and sadness with which it dealt, regardless of color. Nevertheless, he had resigned himself to being in a minority as far as this belief was concerned,...."
".... poor black people had more in common with poor whites than with wealthy blacks,..."
Interesting perception?
2. Now....those blacks who have been infected by the disease called Liberalism....well, then skin color is the be-all and end-all.
You can see that attitude in several members of this very board.
3. How does it show up in Liberal-indoctrinated blacks?
Well....here's a quote.....see if you know who said this:
[He carried ]"…an old clipping of a quote from Harlem preacher Reverend Samuel D. Proctor. .... put the clipping in his wallet in 1971, when he was studying history at Columbia University, and kept it in wallet after wallet over the ensuing decades.
What were Proctor’s words that [he] found so compelling?
“Blackness is another issue entirely apart from class in America. No matter how affluent, educated and mobile [a black person] becomes, his race defines him more particularly than anything else.”
…When asked to explain the passage, [he] replied, “It really says that… I am not the tall (accomplished and successful professional), I am not the thin (accomplished and successful professional). I am the black (accomplished and successful professional).
And he was saying that no matter how successful you are, there’s a common cause that bonds the black (lawyer, doctor, etc.) with the black criminal or the black doctor/lawyer/whatever with the black homeless person.”…It may seem shocking to hear these racialist views ascribed to America’s top (accomplished and successful professional). But to people who have worked (with him,) these attitudes are perfectly familiar."
"...a common cause that bonds the black (lawyer, doctor, etc.) with the black criminal..."
4. Skin color....all that matters.
For this über-Liberal, lawyer, doctor, whatever....it is exactly the same as being a mugger or a drug dealer.
Sick, huh?
So.....who is the black successful professional who cannot see any further than race?
Take a guess.
I'll tell you in moment.....
Like you would know. You read a novel written by someone black and now you are here running your mouth.