New Anne Coulter Book On Racism By The Left Sets The Record Straight. Read It.

nigga please


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So every time a black person mentions a case of racism in this country they are lying?

there was a black woman that was going 20 miles an hour over the speed limit in the school zone. She pulled into the school to drop her kid off with the police right behind her because she would not pull over when the cop put the siren on.

She refused to give the trooper her ID. The cop pulled her out of the car and slapped the cuffs on her.

The husband came into the school and sreamed driving while black.

Is that one good enough for you?

How about the Dukee lacross lie or Tawana Brawley or.....

I could go on.

knock yourself out
 
not without making a mess in its pants

have you no mercy?

i am here to weigh characters.

and i find them wanting, and wanting.

it is a terrible job. but someone has to do it.

truly you are doing a terrible job and we thank you

as long as i am not doing a heckuva job, i feel honored.

while you are never really contributing substance to a debate, you nevertheless scored a surprisingly good character weight value.

but this is a preliminary report.
 
i am here to weigh characters.

and i find them wanting, and wanting.

it is a terrible job. but someone has to do it.

truly you are doing a terrible job and we thank you

as long as i am not doing a heckuva job, i feel honored.

while you are never really contributing substance to a debate, you nevertheless scored a surprisingly good character weight value.

but this is a preliminary report.

if i ever ran across a debate here, i would consider contributing a number of substances to it.
 
truly you are doing a terrible job and we thank you

as long as i am not doing a heckuva job, i feel honored.

while you are never really contributing substance to a debate, you nevertheless scored a surprisingly good character weight value.

but this is a preliminary report.

if i ever ran across a debate here, i would consider contributing a number of substances to it.


illegal substances, according to my scales.

approved.
 
the party that can not get even one percet of the black vote has no right to discuss race as if they know anything about it.

Its kind of hard to get more than 1%, when black people vote based on the color of a persons skin.
 
Set the record straight on racism? Why not ask black people, or is their voice unqualified?

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African Americans Return to Congress, 1929–1970

The Civil Rights Movement And The Second Reconstruction, 1945—1968

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A Herblock cartoon from March 1949 depicts a glum-looking President Harry S. Truman and “John Q. Public” inspecting worm-ridden apples representing Truman’s Fair Deal policies such as civil rights and rent controls. The alliance of conservative southern Democrats and Republicans in Congress who successfully blocked many of Truman’s initiatives is portrayed by the worm labeled “Coalition.”

The broad period from the end of World War II until the late 1960s, often referred to as the “Second Reconstruction,” consisted of a grass-roots civil rights movement coupled with gradual but progressive actions by the Presidents, the federal courts, and Congress to provide full political rights for African Americans and to begin to redress longstanding economic and social inequities. While African-American Members of Congress from this era played prominent roles in advocating for reform, it was largely the efforts of everyday Americans who protested segregation that prodded a reluctant Congress to pass landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s.

During the 1940s and 1950s, executive action, rather than legislative initiatives, set the pace for measured movement toward desegregation. President Harry S. Truman “expanded on Roosevelt’s limited and tentative steps toward racial moderation and reconciliation.” Responding to civil rights advocates, Truman established the President’s Committee on Civil Rights. Significantly, the committee’s October 1947 report, To Secure These Rights, provided civil rights proponents in Congress a legislative blueprint for much of the next two decades. Among its recommendations were the creation of a permanent FEPC, the establishment of a permanent Civil Rights Commission, the creation of a civil rights division in the U.S. Department of Justice, and the enforcement of federal anti-lynching laws and desegregation in interstate transportation. In 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, desegregating the military. Truman’s civil rights policies contributed to the unraveling of the solid Democratic South. Alienated by the administration’s race policies, a faction of conservative southerners split to form the Dixiecrats, a racially conservative party that nominated South Carolina Governor (and future U.S. Senator) Strom Thurmond as its presidential candidate in 1948. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, though more cautious, also followed his predecessor’s pattern—desegregating Washington, DC, overseeing the integration of blacks to the military, and promoting minority rights in federal contracts.

more MUCH more...
 
Set the record straight on racism? Why not ask black people, or is their voice unqualified?

black-americans-in-congress.gif


African Americans Return to Congress, 1929–1970

The Civil Rights Movement And The Second Reconstruction, 1945—1968

3-herblock-cartoon.jpg


A Herblock cartoon from March 1949 depicts a glum-looking President Harry S. Truman and “John Q. Public” inspecting worm-ridden apples representing Truman’s Fair Deal policies such as civil rights and rent controls. The alliance of conservative southern Democrats and Republicans in Congress who successfully blocked many of Truman’s initiatives is portrayed by the worm labeled “Coalition.”

The broad period from the end of World War II until the late 1960s, often referred to as the “Second Reconstruction,” consisted of a grass-roots civil rights movement coupled with gradual but progressive actions by the Presidents, the federal courts, and Congress to provide full political rights for African Americans and to begin to redress longstanding economic and social inequities. While African-American Members of Congress from this era played prominent roles in advocating for reform, it was largely the efforts of everyday Americans who protested segregation that prodded a reluctant Congress to pass landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s.

During the 1940s and 1950s, executive action, rather than legislative initiatives, set the pace for measured movement toward desegregation. President Harry S. Truman “expanded on Roosevelt’s limited and tentative steps toward racial moderation and reconciliation.” Responding to civil rights advocates, Truman established the President’s Committee on Civil Rights. Significantly, the committee’s October 1947 report, To Secure These Rights, provided civil rights proponents in Congress a legislative blueprint for much of the next two decades. Among its recommendations were the creation of a permanent FEPC, the establishment of a permanent Civil Rights Commission, the creation of a civil rights division in the U.S. Department of Justice, and the enforcement of federal anti-lynching laws and desegregation in interstate transportation. In 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, desegregating the military. Truman’s civil rights policies contributed to the unraveling of the solid Democratic South. Alienated by the administration’s race policies, a faction of conservative southerners split to form the Dixiecrats, a racially conservative party that nominated South Carolina Governor (and future U.S. Senator) Strom Thurmond as its presidential candidate in 1948. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, though more cautious, also followed his predecessor’s pattern—desegregating Washington, DC, overseeing the integration of blacks to the military, and promoting minority rights in federal contracts.

more MUCH more...

You speak of black people like they're all one entity like a big blob or something. They all have differing opinions. One cannot speak for all.
 
Set the record straight on racism? Why not ask black people, or is their voice unqualified?

black-americans-in-congress.gif


African Americans Return to Congress, 1929–1970

The Civil Rights Movement And The Second Reconstruction, 1945—1968

3-herblock-cartoon.jpg


A Herblock cartoon from March 1949 depicts a glum-looking President Harry S. Truman and “John Q. Public” inspecting worm-ridden apples representing Truman’s Fair Deal policies such as civil rights and rent controls. The alliance of conservative southern Democrats and Republicans in Congress who successfully blocked many of Truman’s initiatives is portrayed by the worm labeled “Coalition.”

The broad period from the end of World War II until the late 1960s, often referred to as the “Second Reconstruction,” consisted of a grass-roots civil rights movement coupled with gradual but progressive actions by the Presidents, the federal courts, and Congress to provide full political rights for African Americans and to begin to redress longstanding economic and social inequities. While African-American Members of Congress from this era played prominent roles in advocating for reform, it was largely the efforts of everyday Americans who protested segregation that prodded a reluctant Congress to pass landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s.

During the 1940s and 1950s, executive action, rather than legislative initiatives, set the pace for measured movement toward desegregation. President Harry S. Truman “expanded on Roosevelt’s limited and tentative steps toward racial moderation and reconciliation.” Responding to civil rights advocates, Truman established the President’s Committee on Civil Rights. Significantly, the committee’s October 1947 report, To Secure These Rights, provided civil rights proponents in Congress a legislative blueprint for much of the next two decades. Among its recommendations were the creation of a permanent FEPC, the establishment of a permanent Civil Rights Commission, the creation of a civil rights division in the U.S. Department of Justice, and the enforcement of federal anti-lynching laws and desegregation in interstate transportation. In 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, desegregating the military. Truman’s civil rights policies contributed to the unraveling of the solid Democratic South. Alienated by the administration’s race policies, a faction of conservative southerners split to form the Dixiecrats, a racially conservative party that nominated South Carolina Governor (and future U.S. Senator) Strom Thurmond as its presidential candidate in 1948. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, though more cautious, also followed his predecessor’s pattern—desegregating Washington, DC, overseeing the integration of blacks to the military, and promoting minority rights in federal contracts.

more MUCH more...

You speak of black people like they're all one entity like a big blob or something. They all have differing opinions. One cannot speak for all.

No, YOU are the one who uses those words. You and people like Coulter speak of Democrats and Republicans like they're all one entity like a big blob or something.

Why don't you try education instead of obfuscation?

Contrary to the myth Democrats told about themselves—that they
were hairy-chested warriors for equal rights—the entire history of civil
rights consists of Republicans battling Democrats to guarantee the constitutional rights of black people.


That statement is a lie. Let me correct that for you...

Contrary to the myth revisionist conservatives keep telling themselves—that they
were hairy-chested warriors for equal rights—the entire history of civil
rights consists of liberals battling conservatives to guarantee the constitutional rights of black people.


When people like Coulter try to revise the history of the civil rights movement, they talk about 'Democrats', but they never reveal that the Dixiecrats who opposed the civil rights movement were staunch conservatives. Or that the Republican Party had liberal Senators like Jacob Javits.

Were there conservatives who had the moral courage and decency to support John F. Kennedy's Civil Rights Bill in 1964?...Yes...great Republicans like Everett Dirksen who were integral in passing that legislation deserve credit. But not Coulter's bullshit 'Republicans battling Democrats to guarantee the constitutional rights of black people'

"In all those things which deal with people, be liberal, be human. In all those things which deal with people's money, or their economy, or their form of government, be conservative."
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
 
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Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew were painted by the media as crooks.....but they both did a lot for race relations in this country when it wasn't popular.

An old Nixon speech almost sounds like an Obama speech:

Nixon had said, “people in the ghetto have to
have more than an equal chance. They should be given a dividend.”


One of the main reasons Nixon chose a rookie like Spiro Agnew as his
vice presidential nominee was Agnew’s sterling civil rights record. Agnew
had passed some of the first bans on racial discrimination in public housing
in the nation—before the federal laws—and then beaten segregationist
George Mahoney for governor of Maryland in 1966. That was the Mahoney
in “Maddox, Mahoney and Wallace.”

With the segregationist vote split between Democrat Hubert Humphrey
and George Wallace in the 1968 presidential election, Nixon won.
In his inaugural address, he said, “No man can be fully free while his
neighbor is not. To go forward at all is to go forward together. This means
black and white together, as one nation, not two. The laws have caught up
with our conscience. What remains is to give life to what is in the law: to
ensure at last that as all are born equal in dignity before God, all are born
equal in dignity before man.”

President Nixon proceeded to desegregate the public schools with lightning
speed. Just within Nixon’s first two years, black students attending
segregated schools in the South declined from nearly 70 percent to 18.4
percent. There was more desegregation of American schools in Nixon’s
first term than in any historical period before or since.

During the campaign, Nixon had said, “people in the ghetto have to
have more than an equal chance. They should be given a dividend.” As
president, he followed through by imposing formal racial quotas and timelines on the building trades. The construction industry got a lot of business from the federal government and yet had doggedly refused to hire blacks. They had been given long enough do so voluntarily. Nixon was fed up with the union’s foot dragging and demanded results.

Web Extra: Read an Exclusive Excerpt of Ann Coulter’s New Book - ABC News

This shows what has happened to the Republican Party since then.
 

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