1961 during Democrat Presidency and A KKK Exalted Cyclops Democrat was Senator...

healthmyths

Platinum Member
Sep 19, 2011
29,727
11,123
900
Michael Donald (July 24, 1961 – March 21, 1981) was a young African-American man who was murdered in 1981 in Mobile, Alabama, by two Ku Klux Klan members. The murder has been referred to as the last recorded lynching in the United States because his two attackers hung his body from a tree, in the pattern of mob lynchings.Michael Donald - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

And Van Jones admits it!!!
VAN JONES: You know, I don't understand why the right-wing is so obsessed with trying to point out that the Ku Klux Klan, you know, 50, 60, 70 years ago was a part of the Democratic Party.
The Democratic Party, in that time, was a racist party and there were violent elements.
CNN's Van Jones Blasts Jeffrey Lord's Continued Defense Of Trump's Affiliation With White Supremacists

So I ask all you open minded people... Since when has there been any KKK lynchings ?

In 2012 alone!!!
More importantly how many blacks have killed other blacks during the last 55 years since this last lynching?
The total number of black homicides in 2012 was 6,454, according to the FBI. If the percentages hold, that would mean 5,874 homicides were committed by black criminals in all of 2012, or roughly 2,936 in a six-month span.
Allen West: More black-on-black murders in six months than by 'KKK' in 86 years

Expanded Homicide Data Table 6

Screen Shot 2016-03-04 at 9.39.06 AM.png
 
Blacks don't kill other Blacks BECAUSE THEY ARE BLACK.

That's a pretty significant difference.

And one should not forget that the racist wing of the Democrat party LEFT THE PARTY to join the more-racist REPUBLICAN PARTY, where they became the focus of the "Southern Strategy." When the Democrats started fighting for equal rights for minorities, the Southern Democrats bolted the party.

So it's a little bit (actually a lot) disingenuous to speak of the Democrats as being a historically racist party on the basis of people who LEFT THE PARTY because they were not welcome anymore.
 
Blacks don't kill other Blacks BECAUSE THEY ARE BLACK.

That's a pretty significant difference.

And one should not forget that the racist wing of the Democrat party LEFT THE PARTY to join the more-racist REPUBLICAN PARTY, where they became the focus of the "Southern Strategy." When the Democrats started fighting for equal rights for minorities, the Southern Democrats bolted the party.

So it's a little bit (actually a lot) disingenuous to speak of the Democrats as being a historically racist party on the basis of people who LEFT THE PARTY because they were not welcome anymore.
Killing people is not justified in any event is it?
Are you justifying blacks killing blacks? For shame!
The issue though is you never distinguished pre-KKK lynching Democrats and post lynching Democrats.
As of today has there been any lynching by KKK which by the way for the record...not one GOP one want or has requested KKK endorsement?
 
Blacks don't kill other Blacks BECAUSE THEY ARE BLACK.

That's a pretty significant difference.

And one should not forget that the racist wing of the Democrat party LEFT THE PARTY to join the more-racist REPUBLICAN PARTY, where they became the focus of the "Southern Strategy." When the Democrats started fighting for equal rights for minorities, the Southern Democrats bolted the party.

So it's a little bit (actually a lot) disingenuous to speak of the Democrats as being a historically racist party on the basis of people who LEFT THE PARTY because they were not welcome anymore.

But it took the GOP to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964 are aware of that?
just six Senate Republicans voted against the bill in 1964, while 21 Senate Democrats opposed it. It passed by an overall vote of 73-27.
In the House, 96 Democrats and 34 Republicans voted against the Civil Rights Act, passing with an overall 290-130 vote.
While most Democrats in both chambers voted for it, the bulk of the opposition still was from Democrats.

Time magazine even largely credited Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen (R-Ill.) for pushing the sweeping legislation through, putting him on the cover after final passage.
Who’s Really Responsible for the Civil Rights Act?
 

Forum List

Back
Top