Blacks Want to Die on the Karmelo Anthony Hill

They were democrats and we both know it.
View attachment 1273918
Robert Byrd democrat
Senator Robert C. Byrd, who represented West Virginia in the U.S. Congress for over 57 years, was an organizer and Exalted Cyclops in the Ku Klux Klan in the early 1940s. He recruited 150 members for his local chapter before launching his political career. He later renounced the Klan and called his membership his biggest regret
They were conservatives. Today's Republican would have been a Democrat back then.
 
They were conservatives. Today's Republican would have been a Democrat back then.
But they werent in fact the GOP Integrated the schools and democrats fought it. Democrats created the wekafe stste the new form of slavery
 
But they werent in fact the GOP Integrated the schools and democrats fought it. Democrats created the wekafe stste the new form of slavery
Yes they were. That's a fact, and what proves this fact even more is how the south that was formerly Democrat is now solidly Republican. Slavery existed for 109 years before the Democratic Party was formed, and a Northern Republican authored the Corwin Amendment to make slavery a constitutional right. You racist really need to stop using this tactic, because it doesn't work.
 
Yes they were. That's a fact, and what proves this fact even more is how the south that was formerly Democrat is now solidly Republican. Slavery existed for 109 years before the Democratic Party was formed, and a Northern Republican authored the Corwin Amendment to make slavery a constitutional right. You racist really need to stop using this tactic, because it doesn't work.
Democrat crime and social policies destroyed black culture.
Few pieces of social science research have stirred as much controversy or had as great an impact as 1965’s The Negro Family: The Case for National Action. The U.S. Department of Labor report, more commonly referred to as the Moynihan report after its author, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, focused on the deep roots of black poverty in the United States.

Moynihan argued that the decline of the black nuclear family would significantly impede blacks’ progress toward economic and social equality. Over the ensuing decades, the report has been hailed by some as prophetic and derided by others as a classic example of blaming the victim. To this day, scholars and advocates concerned about poverty and economic opportunity continue to revisit the issues raised in the Moynihan report.

This report revisits Moynihan’s analysis and examines the state of black families today, some five decades after Moynihan’s work. In addition to gauging how the circumstances of black families have changed over time, it compares them with other racial and ethnic groups.

Although social progress has opened the doors of opportunity to many talented members of the black community, large socioeconomic gaps between blacks and whites remain. Black poverty rates and unemployment rates are considerably higher than those of whites, and black children are more likely than white children to reside in single-parent households. Indeed, the high rates of single parenting that Moynihan identified in the 1960s have only grown higher since, but they have done so for all racial and ethnic groups.
 
So you choose a rural red s-hole that's even worse.
No I live in a suburb outside Phila but I worked in Phila for many years. At Temple Hospital, MaGee Rehab Hospital and I ran an after school soccer program for poor mostly black schools. I made black children into champions and gave them an experience of success through sports.

All you do is make excuses deny and perpetuate the problem. Youre the problem.
 
No I live in a suburb outside Phila but I worked in Phila for many years. At Temple Hospital, MaGee Rehab Hospital and I ran an after school soccer program for poor mostly black schools. I made black children into champions and gave them an experience of success through sports.

All you do is make excuses deny and perpetuate the problem. Youre the problem.
It's amazing how the biggest racist always babble about being around black folks.
 
15th post
I thought the Supreme Court integrated the schools.
Eisenhower
Yes, President Dwight D. Eisenhower took historic federal action to enforce the integration of public schools. In 1957, following the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education ruling, he deployed the 101st Airborne Division and federalized the Arkansas National Guard to protect the "Little Rock Nine" at Central High School. [1, 2, 3]
This intervention was a critical turning point for the Civil Rights Movement. To break down the events that led to Eisenhower's actions: [1, 2, 3]
  • The Standoff: Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus defied a federal court order to integrate and used the National Guard to block the nine Black students from entering the school. [1, 2]
  • The Federal Response: On September 24, 1957, Eisenhower signed Executive Order 10730, taking away Faubus's control of the National Guard and placing them directly under federal authority. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • The Escort: Over 1,000 U.S. Army paratroopers were deployed to Little Rock. They physically escorted the Little Rock Nine through the hostile crowds and into the formerly all-white Central High School. [1, 2, 3, 4]
The Eisenhower Presidential Library provides official documents detailing the crisis, while the National Park Service Little Rock Nine Site offers background on the students themselves. [1]

Would you like to explore:
  • More about the events that led to the Brown v. Board of Education decision?
  • Biographies or interviews with members of the Little Rock Nine?
  • How this event influenced Eisenhower's Civil Rights Act of 1957?
 
Democrat crime and social policies destroyed black culture.
Few pieces of social science research have stirred as much controversy or had as great an impact as 1965’s The Negro Family: The Case for National Action. The U.S. Department of Labor report, more commonly referred to as the Moynihan report after its author, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, focused on the deep roots of black poverty in the United States.

Moynihan argued that the decline of the black nuclear family would significantly impede blacks’ progress toward economic and social equality. Over the ensuing decades, the report has been hailed by some as prophetic and derided by others as a classic example of blaming the victim. To this day, scholars and advocates concerned about poverty and economic opportunity continue to revisit the issues raised in the Moynihan report.

This report revisits Moynihan’s analysis and examines the state of black families today, some five decades after Moynihan’s work. In addition to gauging how the circumstances of black families have changed over time, it compares them with other racial and ethnic groups.

Although social progress has opened the doors of opportunity to many talented members of the black community, large socioeconomic gaps between blacks and whites remain. Black poverty rates and unemployment rates are considerably higher than those of whites, and black children are more likely than white children to reside in single-parent households. Indeed, the high rates of single parenting that Moynihan identified in the 1960s have only grown higher since, but they have done so for all racial and ethnic groups.
Wrong.

The Moynihan report was debunked almost as soon as it was published.

Whites need to shut up about things in communities they don't live in and rarely interact with. The root cause of our problem is white racism, and you are an example of the root cause. You don't listen to us, then try telling us what somebody white said about our issues.

A few years after that report, the Kerner Commission had a report. You racists don't want to talk about that one because they said this:

“What white Americans have never fully understood but what the Negro can never forget--is that white society is deeply implicated in the ghetto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it, and white society condones it."

And this:

“One of the conclusions of the Kerner Report was that white racism was at work, was the cause of the upsets and the uprisings that we had. In fact, the report stated that white society created it, perpetuates it, and sustains it."

Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders http://www.eisenhowerfoundation.org/docs/kerner.pdf

In other words, “The root cause of the problems blacks face is white racism.”

Not the nonsense you spew.
 
Eisenhower
Yes, President Dwight D. Eisenhower took historic federal action to enforce the integration of public schools. In 1957, following the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education ruling, he deployed the 101st Airborne Division and federalized the Arkansas National Guard to protect the "Little Rock Nine" at Central High School. [1, 2, 3]
This intervention was a critical turning point for the Civil Rights Movement. To break down the events that led to Eisenhower's actions: [1, 2, 3]
  • The Standoff: Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus defied a federal court order to integrate and used the National Guard to block the nine Black students from entering the school. [1, 2]
  • The Federal Response: On September 24, 1957, Eisenhower signed Executive Order 10730, taking away Faubus's control of the National Guard and placing them directly under federal authority. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • The Escort: Over 1,000 U.S. Army paratroopers were deployed to Little Rock. They physically escorted the Little Rock Nine through the hostile crowds and into the formerly all-white Central High School. [1, 2, 3, 4]
The Eisenhower Presidential Library provides official documents detailing the crisis, while the National Park Service Little Rock Nine Site offers background on the students themselves. [1]

Would you like to explore:
  • More about the events that led to the Brown v. Board of Education decision?
  • Biographies or interviews with members of the Little Rock Nine?
  • How this event influenced Eisenhower's Civil Rights Act of 1957?

Th supreme court made that possible. You want to give Republicans of today credit for the things they oppose now, but Eisenhower also implemented the Wet Back policy, and Jim Crow did not end on his watch.
 
Back
Top Bottom