By Arnold Ahlert
7/26/2013
A new poll by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal reveals that public perceptions about race relations in America have taken a devastating hit since the election of Barack Obama. At the beginning of the presidents first term, 79 percent of whites and 63 percent of blacks had a positive view of American race relations. Those numbers have plummeted to 52 percent and 38 percent, respectively. Meanwhile, 45 percent of whites now consider race relations fairly or very bad, compared with 20 percent in 2009, and the negative views held by black Americans has jumped from 30 percent to 58 percent. Thus, the idea that the election of Barack Obama would usher in a golden age of so-called post-racial relations has exploded. And the president and his administration bear the lions share of the responsibility for lighting the fuse.
[Excerpt]
Read more:
How Obama Poisoned Race Relations in America | FrontPage Magazine
Of course even the revelations coming from NBC, somehow will be denied by the Progressive Left.
Yes, the racists have really come to the fore with Obama in office. Just look at how nakedly they spew their shit right here on this forum nowadays. You can't go a day without this board being spammed with at least two or three confirmation bias topics about gays, blacks, the poor, immigrants, or Muslims behaving badly.
And let's not forget the whole birther thing, and Obama being a Muslim, which plainly implies that being Muslim is a bad thing.
Yeah. The racists/bigots have really torn their masks off. It drives them crazy there's a darkie in the White House. It would be nice if we could argue about what is actually wrong with his policies, and offer better solutions, but noooooooooo...! Let's make fun of his negress's big ass instead!
So more black people don't feel as positive as they did when he was elected. Gee, there's a shocker. His election probably made them feel race relations had turned a corner, but then the asshole bigots came running out with their hair on fire, and they get prominently featured on right wing talk shows and convention panels.
I'd be a little worried about that, too, if I were black.