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Dear Black Americans: Democrats Deliberately Hold your Children Down

Intentionally crushing the hopes and dreams of your next generation's brightest and best is a gratuitous act of cruelty

Today, in fact right as I post this, D.C. Parents for School Choice and DC Children First, in a city where the student population is 90% black, are holding the DC School Choice Rally in the Freedom Plaza of Washington, DC (details here). Perhaps you should know why it was necessary…..

Says the Black Alliance for Educational Options:

Congress is poised to do away with one of former President George W. Bush’s signature initiatives in education: the taxpayer-funded vouchers that enable students from low-income families in the District of Columbia to attend private schools. About 1,700 children in kindergarten through 12th grade receive the $7,500 annual scholarships. Four times as many apply.

The District of Columbia spends more per pupil than any school district in the nation, but still is plagued by low test scores, high dropout rates and underperforming schools. The voucher program was passed by Congress as a five-year pilot program. But it has been on House Democrats’ hit list for some time……

White House spokesman Thomas Vietor said Tuesday that Obama supports allowing the current students to remain in the program until they graduate from high school but not permitting the addition of new students.

How would you like your daughter to be the student number 1701? The one who will never escape the underperforming public schools, who was not permitted to pursue her dreams for which she is perfectly willing to work hard for?

Dear American Blacks:

Sometimes the very best act of friendship I could do is tell you that the person you think is your best friend actually works against you behind your back, laughing at you, mocking your hardships, secure in the knowledge that you need him too much to ever leave him.

Sometimes — no, actually always — the true friend is the one who tells you what you don’t want to hear. The one who does not indulge you, the one who will neither promise you nor give you candy and other bennies. Instead he tells you to sit down and eat your green beans and spinach — and if you want that nice car, then quit whining, get an education, earn a good job, and earn that nice car.

The really ironic thing is that the slick, good-time “friend” will tell you what a jerk your true friend is. And you will believe him. You will believe him, that is, until you grow up, or until your good-time friend sells you up the river so far that your life is wrecked, and your future is ruined. Your wisdom will have been gained at a steep price.

But your true friend will still be there. And eating your green beans, securing an education, and working hard are still the path to success.

American Blacks, the Democratic Party is that good-time, lying, back-stabbing excuse for a “friend”. The DC Voucher story is an illustration — hardly a unique story — of how Democrats continually seek to set you up as a permanent underclass, so that you’ll depend on them to throw you scraps and believe their lies, in order to secure your votes to keep them in power.

In Jan 2004, the Republican-run Congress passed the DC School Voucher program as part of the fiscal year 2004 budget. The measure was proposed by Democrat DC Mayor Anthony Williams, and championed by President George W Bush. It included money for the school district itself to dedicate to more teacher training and recruitment (i.e., it was designed to improve the district as well, not just punish them). The entire 5-year program cost $40 million – 1/20,000th the size of the Democrat-passed “stimulus” bill passed 2 months ago.

So why did the Democrats kill the DC Voucher Program, a year before the 5-year pilot program expired, over the loud objections of Republicans? It’s not because the Democrats don’t enjoy spending money! Good Lord. In this year’s Democrat-passed spending bill, they found room for $5.8 million for the “Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the Senate, Boston, MA” and $6.6 million for “Formosan Subterranean Termites Research” (and over 9000 other special earmarked projects)

Why has the school voucher program been on the House Democrat hit list? I suppose it’s subject to interpretation, but I’ll offer these notes:

  • Teacher unions, the NEA and the AFT, detest voucher programs.
  • Teacher unions are a very powerful Democrat Party constituent, donating many millions in campaign contributions to Democrat candidates, not to mention spending more money on lobbying than the top 4 oil companies combined.
  • Meanwhile, the DC Mayor and the DC School Superintendent lobbied for the program, and lobbied to keep it.
  • The voucher program accepts 1700 students, while about 7,000 students applied.
  • over 60% of the private schools in DC cost less than $7500 per year, meaning the families of the 1700 students are not burdened with paying any tuition at all.

I leave it to you to decide why the Democrats would cancel a wildly successful, much sought after program that merely seeks to give children a chance at success. In a school district so rife with corruption and waste that the per-pupil spending is the highest in the nation, while producing some of the lowest test scores, some parents want better for their kids.

Democrats stripped spending from the program this year. Republican Senator John Ensign brought Amendment 615 to the spending bill to restore the spending. It was voted down 58-39, with 2 Democrats voting for it,and 56 voting against it. Not only that, but Democrats withheld this official report (executive summary, and full report) showing the success of the program until after debate was over.

A Proposal

So while the Democrats toss your children’s hopes and dreams aside, secure in the knowledge that you’ll always vote for them, remember that your true friend is still here.

I ask you to consider, why is it that you hate Republicans so much? This DC School Voucher was brought in 2004 by Republicans at the request of a Democratic mayor who desperately cared about the future of DC students. It was killed in 2009 by Democrats for reasons that appear cynical and political.

Republicans do not know how to approach you. Democrats and the Democrat-dominated press have misled you and stoked up your wrath to the point that you will not listen to us.

So I propose this: how about listening? How about listening to what Republicans have to say, instead of what the Democrats say we say? How about listening to what we have to say before booing us out of the building?

You may find that we make sense, not just for rich white people, but for everybody. To wit:

  • Republicans stand, as much as anything, for equality of freedom, equality of opportunity. We do NOT stand for equality of outcome. Hard work is rewarded, laziness is not.
  • Want a good job? Get an education.
  • Want special treatment? Tough.
  • Want the opportunity to escape poverty, crime, and poor schools? Then quit voting for the Democrats that put you there.
  • Tired of 15% unemployment in your areas? Then quit supporting the Democrats who raise taxes and force increase regulations on employers. [oh yeah, the Democrats call them the 'rich', but when was the last time a poor man gave you a job?]

Eat your green beans! Do the thing that frees you!

It’s tough love, but I assure you, friend, it’s love. That’s why we fought like hell to restore the DC School Vouchers. That’s why we fought like hell to lower taxes on businesses, so employers could hire more people and create more success for everybody.

We received not one ounce of gratitude from you, but we did it anyway. And we will continue to do what is right for America, for whites, for blacks, for Latinos, for Republicans, for Democrats, for today, and for the future.

Join us. Consider it, anyway.

Sincerely,
E Pluribus Unum

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COMMENTS

  • mom2oneson

    “We do NOT stand for freedom of outcome.”

    That is such a wonderful quote. .

    I didn’t know it was the democrats but I know the PS have set the kids up to be illiterate to control them as adults and that is good point the consquence of that is an underclass.

    I wish I could give you 100 recommends and hugs! :)

    • JDidSaint

      …and an inspiring message in general. That quote has been the exact argument I’ve used with friends/family for the last 6 months and I hope you don’t mind but I plan to “borrow” your analogy about true friends.

      I just hope that all dems won’t have to hit rock bottom before reexamining their lives and finding that conservatives have been their only advocates the whole time.

      Furthermore, it is my opinion that Carthage must be destroyed… ;-)

  • Praying

    Well stated, and gets to the heart of the matter. Rush Limbaugh said that we conservatives NEED to start promoting the message that the democrats are not kind and loving – they are the most dangerous kind of cruel. Their policies and entitlements are designed not to improve the lives of those they purport to help, but rather only to improve their chance for reelection and a continuing culture of corruption. Tough love is TRUE love – people will rise to your level of expectation, and the democrats can only tell the blacks, the latinos, etc. that they are incapable of taking care of themselves. We believe that everyone in America has a chance to attain greatness, to rise above the conditions of their birth or upbringing, and to be successful in whatever way they determine to define success. So Amen!

    • mom2oneson

      How will republicans answer for our part in the bad schools? Things like the ESEA, NCLB, IDEA and Head Start for federal programs that we either started or did not stop and for the states subsidized daycare? This issue is the democrats but how do we answer our part in the policies and entitlements?

      • Praying

        I’m reading (finally) Barry Goldwater’s Conscience of a Conservative – great little book – really brings the focus back to the Constitution, which says absolutely NOTHING about the government controlling schools! My reference to the Dems was in that both with FDR and LBJ, the New Deal and Great Society both radically expanded the entitlement programs in the spirit of “helping the helpless” – while in fact it enslaved them and created an entire generation (or two!) of the Welfare Class.

  • http://hillbillypolitics.com Steph C
  • kra5139

    Tell it like it is!

  • itrytobenice

    And I hope there are many other such seeds sown.

  • gigi36b

    Blacks have had generations to figure out that they are to come to heel when the Democrat master blows his whistle. Even though they are hyper sensitive to their treatment post slavery, they still seem to yearn to be the underclass, ripping down their self-made, successful, black conservative bretheren as directed by their white Democrat handlers.

    It’s a life long head scratcher, that’s for sure.

    I suppose keeping them dumb in the system they get that passes for education is the key, but really, how dumb can you be?

    • E Pluribus Unum

      Before LBJ’s so-called “great society”, before the Civil Rights Act (passed thanks to Republicans), blacks were *actually*, in fact, held down by an oppressive double-standard society.

      I do not even remotely think black Americans are dumb. I know to the contrary, in fact. Russians in the 1970s thought that America wanted to nuke them, and that Americans were jealous of the success of Communism.

      Why, do you suppose? Because they had been fed a steady, relentless torrent of misinformation by their government and press, they did not know any better.

      Black Americans are fed a steady diet of “Republicans suck” by not only the press, but by their own so-called leaders, who are in fact lap dogs for corrupt Democrats.

      • mom2oneson
    • mom2oneson

      Maybe people do not understand how education funding and stuff works. I didn’t when I was in high school. If it wasnt’ for me homeschooling my own son, I would have never known about gov policies in education and stuff like that. I don’t know it all now but I’m learning. If someone doesn’t know something they don’t know it, how can u blame someone for ignorance. This information is not talked about in most circles. I’ve always used public libraries and it wasn’t until I started homeschooling that I learned about it.

      How does anyone “yearn” to be an underclass???? Do you know what it’s like to struggle and struggle day in and day just to have a safe quiet place to live with your children? Nobody yearns to be an underclass and it’s not right to group people together like that. The public schools administrators and teachers have taken federal and state money and scammed the kids and parents by not teaching them how to read and have basic skills but they are collecting billions of dollars. It cost $400 for school in a box they don’t even get those for the kids to at least teach them basic skills. It’s not about dumb or smart it’s about not having basic skills to function in a society that expect those.

      I wish every kid in DC would stay home next year that would totally cut the funds from these scammers but it wouldnt’ surprised me if they falsified attendance and free lunch records anyway.

      • ZootSuit

        Without going into details — and I will admit that my response should be in more detail but I simply do not have time at the moment — there are two primary issues with Blacks voting conservatively:

        1) The hypocrisy of many so-called conservative Republicans does look racist. What I mean by that is that conservatives Republicans talk about small government but they expand government just like liberal Democrats. Case in point, consider the last eight years when a Republican was in the White House: especially the first six years of that when Republicans also controlled Congress. The only difference is that Republicans “coincidentally” talk most about and actually cut (on those rare occasions when they actually do cut something) those programs that are mostly identified with Minorities and the poor. Now please do not misunderstand me, I personally do not think Republicans or true conservatives are racist: if I did, I would not be one. What Republican big spenders are doing is simply buying the votes of their constituents, which for better or worse is more “White” than the general. The hypocrisy is that we conservatives say we have a philosophy that is anathema to buying the votes of constituents with government money. And the problem is, when we do it, it does look racist!

        And since it does look racist, most Black voters do not want to be associated with or support it. In that, I do not blame them. Indeed, although I have publicly identified myself as a conservative for nearly twenty years, I myself did not identify myself with the Republican Party until I was convinced that Republicans were, indeed, not racists.

        2) [White] Republicans are, generally speaking, going after the “wrong” African-Americans to join the Republican Party. Generally speaking, the most conservative Blacks are the most militant. Look at my own signature below. While there is too often a virulent anti-White racism within Black nationalism that must be condemned, the simple fact remains that often the segment of the Black community that preaches and practices most the conservative ideas of self-reliance, entrepreneurship, economic opportunity, and strong families and morals is what is termed the “militant” segment of the community. Even Rush Limbaugh used to have a segment called “Farrakhan without the hate” wherein he (quite correctly, in my opinion) praised the positive self-help message and practices of Louis Farrakhan.

        And while I condemn the racist aspects of not only Louis Farrakhan but also other Black nationalists as they degenerate into Black separatism — indeed, I furthermore think it is an issue that Black nationalist such as myself must address — I still think it is amusing that many White conservatives broadly condemn all Black nationalist as racists and separatist, when if they only listened to “some” (not all, but definitely some) Black nationalist or militants, they would find that they have a lot in common and agree on very much.

        But alas, I will be surprised if not a few here did not take offense at my “point 2″ above.

        • Aaron Gardner

          Ok not really but someone had to say it.

          I think your explanation was great.

          Now since i have questioned your sig in the past I want to address one thing…I get twisted when I see nationalism put out as a good thing…but that is probably more about the word and it’s various meanings rather than what you actually mean by it. Attaching any group to nationalism based on race also comes off wrong because of the various meanings of nationalism…that line between nationalism and separatism gets too blurry too quickly.

          I think your sig line requires more explanation than it is worth, especially since a lot of people would be too afraid of it to even ask about it in the first place.

          • ZootSuit

            Just kidding. I know you are not the Democratic Senior (in more ways than one) Senator from West Virginia.

            But seriously, by Black “nationalism” I mean a sense of culture and community, not race. Unfortunately, and in this respect African-Americans are unique within the American experience, the idea of “culture” was ruthlessly and consciously stripped from us in our assimilation in the United States. Therefore, we Blacks must often use “race” as a substitute for “culture” or ethnicity.

            To give you a brief example, I have very few issues with a “Black Student Union” in a school but I would have problems with a “White Student Union.” However, I would not have any issues or problems with an “Irish Student Union” or “Polish Student Union” or “Jewish Student Union” or even a “WASP Student Union”: the difference is that they would be based on ethnicity and not race. Unfortunately, because of our history within the United States, we cannot have an “Ashanti Student Union” or “Bantu Student Union” or “Mandingo Student Union” or whathaveyou. Thus, we must substitute “Black” not as a race but as our ethnicity.

            I’m not saying that you agree with me. I just want to make myself just a little bit clearer.

          • ZootSuit

            I want to make it perfectly clear to everyone that I am joking with Aaron when I make the “Klan member” comment.

          • Aaron Gardner

            through our discussion about your sig line I have managed to understand and I actually do agree to an extent…the problem, like I said, is that it takes a book to explain your sig line…and we have a lot of people who just can’t be troubled to read a book.

            Anyhow…my main reason for commenting was to agree with your explanation…we don’t get to hear that “from the horse’s mouth” perspective enough.

            On another note….EPU is trying to get a good email address for you…you should email him.

          • ZootSuit

            And if he still wants to e-mail me, I updated my profile.

          • Aaron Gardner

            but if you email me aaronbg.gardner@gmail.com I will pass it along to EPU.

          • E Pluribus Unum

            And meanwhile, I hear what you are saying on multiple counts. I don’t have all the answers ( or even a whole lot of them). But I know the whole thing starts by listening, each side.

            And obviously I can’t defend the whole party. As anybody at RedState would agree, the party has drifted far, far from its roots, and we are trying to reclaim it.

            But what acual conservatives want, and what I think most American blacks want, I think there is alot of common ground.

          • ZootSuit

            zootsuit_redstate@att.net

          • Mike gamecock DeVine
          • ZootSuit

            Sorry but that was just too easy. :-)

          • Mike gamecock DeVine
          • Aaron Gardner
          • ZootSuit

            Very well played!

          • http://andrightlyso.com/ civil_truth

            …to wit, that the word “black” can refer either to race of to culture/ethnicity.

            I had always failed to see the consistency between allowing a “black” student organization but not a “white” student organization – assuming that the “black” referred to a grouping based on race.

            And indeed, I suspect that many have viewed it that way and promoted it that way.

            However, when you indicate that “black” by necessity has also had to become a shorthand for “ethnicity/culture” – that at least puts it on equal footing with other ethinic groups.

            (And while I don’t think that WASP quite works, since this is – as I understand it – a sociological category rather than a distince ethnic identity, certainly a British Isles or Celtic groups, for instance woud qualify.)

            To me, the test of your argument for any particular group as being culturally versus racially based would be its membership criteria and the way it treats its participants. But I’m sure you know the difference.

            So again, thanks for that explanation. It gives me a different way to view and assess various “black” groups and movements.

  • Aaron Gardner
  • Kyle-MI

    Whether minorities (or anyone) understands all the policies details or not, they do understand that their schools are failing their children. The GOP is offering their children a way out of those schools. The Democrats will sacrifice those children to placate the teachers’ unions. And if the Democrats are wrong about school choice, maybe they are wrong about taxes, abortion, and a few other things. This is the clearest way for the GOP to reach out to minorities.

  • TxCon

    but someone explain to me why black conservatives are trashed by their fellow blacks and why election after election blacks continue to vote for the party that has destroyed their families and contributes to the conditions that many of them are in.

    • mom2oneson

      I don’t know how the dems have supposedly destroyed their family but I think many are distanced from politics all together.

      • TxCon

        has destroyed many black families byhaving the government replace the father. It is not exclusive to black American but it is certainly most prominent in that segment of society.

    • ZootSuit

      Generically, we Black conservatives are trashed and condemned as allies to racists.And if White conservatives were racists — which except for exceedingly rare instances, they are not — then my fellow Blacks would be right in condemning me. To that, see my comments above.

      But on a personal note, I myself am VERY rarely trashed and condemned as a traitor or whatnot. And quite frankly, the reason is … well … those who know me know that I was and remain a “Black nationalist” and even many who don’t know me as a person can and do recognize and respect the themes of “Black nationalism” that animates much of my conservatism. For more on that, also see my comments above.

      Indeed, while I do think that many of the “rank and file” among African-Americans condemn Black conservatives as traitors carte blanc, I also think that the majority of condemnation you hear is from the so-called “Black leadership” who see conservatism within the Black community as a threat to their power and is amplified by the so-called mainstream media that is pushing its Leftist agenda.

      • penguin2

        that you were African-American. I mean right off the bat. I think I might have registered in my mind one time, your sig line, but usually, I am so busy taking in the comments, that the only thing that stood out was the conservative thought. Do you see what I mean? We have conservative thoughts in common and race never enters into it. The wonderful power of the internet! Maybe, if people could just ‘hear’ the message from the conservatives, we would make progress.

        That said, your last paragraph above is significant. As an outsider, looking in, the perception I have is that the “Black leadership” has done a disservice to the Black community. They have kept them in a dependent, welfare state of victimhood. To me, any group that this happens to is being enslaved. Maybe, the Dems early on had “good intentions” but it has led to a perpetual state of dependency, and circles back to being about power.

  • gigi36b

    To be truthful, I am a Canadian living in the U.S. I honestly have trouble making heads or tails of the whole “race relations” debacle here in the U.S.

    When I first moved here from Toronto, it was to a small town just south of Cleveland. On our get aquinted tour I sat slack-jawed in the car. I cannot believe how segregated society is here, with definite “black” areas. Maybe I am spoiled by living shoulder to shoulder with many different cultures (all encouraged to keep their original national identity by the government) In Canada it is illegal to ask someone their ethnic background on a school form, job application etc. A persons race is so secondary to who they are. It is very common to go into an Irish pub in Toronto and find a virtual U.N., all enjoying a beer while watching the hockey game.

    To come here and see how everything here hinges on race is astounding. I can see clearly why it is impossible to move forward.

    To see how the people in Cleveland were segregated and how they lived was pitiful. It is this experience that brings me to my speculation. How can anyone walk out their sorrowful front door, into their pathetic, crime riddled neighbourhood and not want something different? It is astounding that generation after generation keep falling for the empty promises of Cleveland’s constantly reinstated Democrat leadership. Nothing ever changes for them. Their schools are still pathetic, housing abysmal, job opportunities meager. I think that my observation of keeping blacks within geographic boundaries, and then offering those families a pathetic excuse for a school marginalizes blacks and “keeps them down” and keeps them as reliable water carriers for tomorrows Democrats.
    Of course there are always novel little “programs”, for the families, a little bit of dazzlement to make recipients think the government is doing right by them, but none seem to be life altering opportunities to break the cycle of government reliance. As has been stated, the Democrats are masters at getting people to the point of neediness, and I suppose when one reaches that point they are not “dumb”, but rather, desperate. Programs that in any way, change up the du rigour of a life in the black urban areas have to be enacted, such as the DC voucher program. Taking families out of the stifling urban environment and out to the burbs for better school and job opportunities would ensure future generations true freedom. I’m not sure the Democrats would sign on to such a prospect, for obvious reasons.

    Bringing in the Black leadership aspect only confuses me. Why would a black minister, or community worker NOT want to see a natural progression to success for his community? Why keep convincing them that the stauts quo is the way to go?

    I’m not asking you to explain it all to me, as I think several tomes would be required, but in the end I have to assume that possibly the need for belonging to a black community is greater than for ones own or a family’s success.

    My view is maybe outside looking in and it is quite possibly uninformed, but there is so much lost potential there.

    Maybe my original post was far too simplistic, yet I think EPU did touch on the point I was making when he summed up with
    “Black Americans are fed a steady diet of ?Republicans suck? by not only the press, but by their own so-called leaders, who are in fact lap dogs for corrupt Democrats” . If I were black, I’d like to think I’d have a general mistrust for all politicians and decide that I had to go it alone and rethink any political affiliations when I was on my own two feet. At that point I would assume the propensity would be toward a conservative mindset. My point was (with shock language used intentionally), why do blacks continually lay their entire future, and hope for opportunities at the feet of government, only to be controlled like a dog by the same people I instilled all my hopes in? Something has to be a wake-up call at some point.

    This has gotten too long.

    • Brian Hibbert

      Republicans don’t see everything based on race. We tend to see people and program,s based on individuals and how they effect people. It’s why we are usually shocked when we are charged with being racist because of supporting or not supporting specific non-race based programs. The issue of skin color of the individuals involved just doesn’t occur to us.

      • mom2oneson

        “The issue of skin color of the individuals involved just doesn?t occur to us.”

        I hate the phrase disadvantaged minorities.

      • http://hillbillypolitics.com Steph C

        gigi specifically pointed out that it’s a Democratic leadership that keeps Cleveland where it is, as is true with most cities. She also pointed out she’s an outsider looking in but most of it should appeal to conservative thinkers as she’s looking for a few “why” answers.

        Otherwise, like Mom, amen for the sentiments expressed in the comment.

        • Brian Hibbert
          • http://hillbillypolitics.com Steph C

            :-)

  • http://www.800cart.com Ron Robinson

    ..and it’s NOT just blacks!!!

    Two generations have been educated in our public schools since I received a quality civics education in the backwoods school in Oklahoma where I received the basics of my education. Secondary education may be much more important than many of us are willing to admit.

    Some of us even spoke out across those two generations – that we were witnessing a leftist take-over of our school systems.

    But we did not do enough at the time and now we witness the result.

    My son is being educated in the west LA area where the ‘Hollywood elite’ have most of their children ‘educated’.

    About 3 months ago I asked him where our rights come from. He said ‘the government’, and I began his program of real political education in earnest.

    Last weekend I asked again and this time he said ‘the Declaration of Independence’ and I gave him 1/4 credit because at least if he fact-checks his answer he will learn the actual answer from that document.

    Both times I asked I gave him the correct answer to the question: God. I’m no longer worried that he will not learn the correct answer to this and other crucial questions because I have his political education firmly in hand now.

    If we accept that our rights come from God, and our Decalration of Independence documents this fact, and our Constitution guarantees the protection of those rights, then we might consider that this Federal government of ours is in fact on a Holy Mission from God.

    Sure doesn’t feel like it does it?

    We need to re-establish control over the education of our children.

  • regroupthink

    How can anyone take the advice of conservatives when it comes to education for Blacks in the US.. If not for the Liberal bayonet, Blacks would legally banned in the Confederacy from all types of quality of life issuses including education.

    • Aaron Gardner

      although you apparently think it does…maybe you are the real racist….oh and I know I am already talking to a ghost.

    • IJB

      Please stick around.

      I think I love you.

      Wanna make some babies?…

    • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

      P.S. It was principled Republicans, tired of judicial activism forcing them into pro-slavery positions, who fought and won the Civil War in the USA.

      Your party was the party of slavery. Your party was the party of Jim Crow. Your party is the party of racists in groups like La Raza.

      • Doc Holliday

        Moe stop trying to start another Civil War in our party and get on these trolls please :)

      • randy streu

        Don’t forget the KKK.

    • Doc Holliday

      nt

  • bluejoni2525

    The party of Lincoln would not recognize the Republican party of today !!

    • Aaron Gardner

      bye troll.

      • Aaron Gardner
    • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

      From the party that brought you unrepentant racists like Maxine Waters.

      • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens

        Hint: Not the Republicans.

    • http://www.hakubi.us/ Neil Stevens
    • JadedByPolitics

    • http://www.georgeclaghorn.com George Claghorn

      A special Redstate welcome just for you!

      Troll.

  • izoneguy

    The Long, Sad, Violent History of Democrats’
    Racial Hatred for Blacks

    http://www.tysknews.com/Depts/pcism/sad_history.htm

    DYK-KKK Terrorist Arm of the Democrat Party
    History shows that the Ku Klux Klan was the terrorist arm of the Democrat Party.

    http://www.nationalblackrepublicans.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=pages.DYK-KKK%20Terrorist%20Arm%20of%20the%20Democrat%20Party

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