As Republicans imagine the post-Trump era...

C_Clayton_Jones

Diamond Member
Apr 28, 2011
76,717
36,487
2,290
In a Republic, actually
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST

Stupid comment of the day ^^^.
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST

Stupid comment of the day ^^^.
Stupid comment of the day ^^^
.....BLACK lives matter--now, prove it means ALL lives matter or else you are full of shit
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST

Stupid comment of the day ^^^.
....you do see the word BLACK in there, don't you
AND--AND----they didn't make a big deal of the WHITE lady shot by a BLACK cop!!!!
or any blacks murdered by blacks
--BLM is full of shit and racist
 
]But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.

You’re right, we need to deal with the Stain. The Stain of people in this country not pulling their weight and expecting others to cover for them... The Poor, Elderly, Infirm, Unemployable, etc...
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
Jesus H tapdancing Christ....The lame-assed race card AGAIN!?!?

GFY

progressives-losing-debate-shout-racism.jpg
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
Trump's a racist?

Are you idiot children ever going to get around to proving it, or...as you, personally, have shown...are you just going to believe it because idiot children repeated it enough?
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST
BLM is a violent hate group who murders policemen and who beats people in our streets.
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
....it is wrong....if you are for BLM, that means you think other lives don't matter..don't try to babble crap it any other way
...the name itself is RACIST
BLM is a violent hate group who murders policemen and who beats people in our streets.
They use violence to seek to motivate political change.

Unarguably, they're domestic terrorists.

Unarguably, the Democratic Party has endorsed domestic terrorism.
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.

Let me tell you the problem with race in this country: You on the left have used words like "racist" so many times that it lost all meaning. Like the Boy Who Cried Wolf, nobody even pays attention anymore.

The Floyd death had absolutely nothing to do with race. The police didn't mention race once, not before the scene, during the scene, or after the scene. So how did race get involved? Democrats put it there.

The officer was white (as most officers of the law are) and the career criminal was black. And because of that only factor, the left are trying to turn this into a race issue. Now why would Democrats do that? Hmmm, let me think........could it be they want to keep race a major problem in this country; keep us divided as much and as long as possible?

Now try thinking for a moment, what kind of following would the Democrats have if there were no race issues in this country? As long as they keep BSn the blacks that race is still a problem, they are going to have voters, and to hell with the blacks themselves. They are only pawns in the game of Democrat politics.
 
race card still in the deck

‘Tom Cotton's most notable racial dog whistle was a controversial New York Times column calling for sending in federal troops to put down any violence in the racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd.
[…]
Cotton's description of a country ablaze with violence was grossly exaggerated; he cherry picked polls to buttress the military take over of major American cities and distorted historical parallels.
[…]
Cotton's proposals - opposed by leading military leaders like former defense chief James Mattis - had a racial predicate.
[…]
[Josh] Hawley sided with President Trump in strongly opposing removing the names of Confederate generals from current military bases. His stance was in contrast to most Republican congressional leaders and prominent military figures like Gen. David Petraeus, who said replacing those names is long overdue.

The 38-year-old Missouri lawmaker charges this is an effort to "erase that part of our history," and proponents are "using their position to divide us."

Sorry, Senator, this doesn't erase any history and the most bitter division is to celebrate traitors who fought to maintain slavery.
[…]
This isn't a one-off, race-centered trope for Hawley. He also criticized the NBA for allowing professional basketball players to celebrate Black Lives Matter with racial justice pledges on their uniforms - but not slogans opposing China on human rights or supporting police.
[…]
As Republicans sort out their post-Trump posture, there are many more important matters than NBA jerseys or teaching a course on the 1619 project: the Pandemic, the economy, relations with China.

But racial issues continue to plague America; would-be successors should seek to erase Trump's stain of bigotry, not pander to it.’


But Republicans will continue to pander to Trump’s stain of bigotry – as a means to appeal to the ignorance, fear, and hate of the GOP’s base, and to deflect from the real problems facing America; problems for which Republicans have no solution.
what bigotry?? prove it or you are full of shit
 
“One faction of thinkers and prospective presidential candidates (such as Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton) believes that the Trump wave is the new, permanent level of the ideological tide. They seek to practice Trump’s grievance politics minus the crazy. But they underestimate how discredited this type of politics has become because of Trump’s cruelty and deadly incompetence — and how complete the public repudiation of the GOP is likely to be in November.”


It's unlikely Republicans will abandon their policy of race and white grievance politics no matter how complete the public’s repudiation might be.
 

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