- Dec 5, 2010
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Okay
Thanks for reading my posts, for understanding your massive fail, and acquiescing.Your patronage is greatly appreciated.
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Okay
Thanks for reading my posts, for understanding your massive fail, and acquiescing.Race is always an issue. You're a bit confused, as always.
GO AWAY!YOUR LINK, says otherwise.
THey mentioned Nixon's pardon, and Ford being clumsy. And Carter's playboy interview.
But nothing about race.
Because, once the dems stopped resisting civil rights, equality for minorities became a NATIONAL CONSENSUS.
And elections moved on to other issues.
You leftards are trying to milk a horse that died in the mid 60s.
It's always about race with you lameards.YOUR LINK, says otherwise.
THey mentioned Nixon's pardon, and Ford being clumsy. And Carter's playboy interview.
But nothing about race.
Because, once the dems stopped resisting civil rights, equality for minorities became a NATIONAL CONSENSUS.
And elections moved on to other issues.
You leftards are trying to milk a horse that died in the mid 60s.
Okay
Damn it Dante, from your posting history, it looks like you're used to dudes sucking on the back of your neck like a goddamn Shop-Vac while they treat your asshole like a two-lane highway during the New Jersy Turnpike's rush hour.Now go suck on something.
GO AWAY!
American Presidency Project:
During his 1976 presidential campaign, Jimmy Carter actively sought to bridge the racial divide and appealed to Black voters by framing the legacy of the civil rights movement as a national dream. However, his record that year was complex and included a major controversy that temporarily threatened his coalition. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- The Civil Rights Message: Carter frequently invoked racial equality, famously stating during his campaign that Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream was the nation's dream. He appointed more Black individuals to public office and state boards than any previous Deep South governor, and utilized Black political allies, like the King family, to build nationwide trust.
- The "Ethnic Purity" Controversy: In an April 1976 interview, Carter sparked major national backlash when he stated that the government should not interfere with the "ethnic purity" of neighborhoods, which many civil rights advocates saw as support for segregated housing. He later apologized for the phrasing and clarified that he strongly opposed racial discrimination.
- Coalition and Election: Despite the controversy, Carter maintained robust support from Black Americans in the general election, securing roughly 90% of the Black vote which proved vital to his victory over Gerald Ford.
Your fantasy life is up there with the one mani & paulie showed hereYou already said that, oh superfluous one.
Damn it Dante, from your posting history, it looks like you're used to dudes sucking on the back of your neck like a goddamn Shop-Vac while they treat your asshole like a two-lane highway during the New Jersy Turnpike's rush hour.
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Whatever gave you the impression I'm concerned about old members forum preoccupations?Your fantasy life is up there with the one mani & paulie showed here
Thanks for your proof.
That's not the accolade that you think it is.People send me messages
It's trolling: see below
Dante calls you a troll, then you are a troll. It's not like a Ropey calling you a troll.Carter was pro-civil rights. As was Ford.
So, civil rights, or RACE, was not a political issue. It was POtatoe vs PoTAtoe.
That is not trolling. That is the reality of modern history.
YOUR side is fostering racial division and conflict, and VIOLENCE, with your lies.
An H-1B WarBut you invent words to talk about the defense by the South of the same issues faced by General Washington. The south simply did not want to be ruled by a king.
Dante calls you a troll, then you are a troll. It's not like a Ropey calling you a troll.
Not possible. SC had left the union.It was federal property, over which SC had no legal say. It was not their "house."