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Democrats To African Americans: Your Degree Of *Blackness* Determines Our Fortune

Strom Thurmond was an unapologetic segregationist. He unsuccessfully ran for President once, but for some reason South Carolina saw his talents as a Politician to be sufficiently satisfactory to put him in office as their Governor for 4 years, and in the US Senate for 48 years (both as a Democrat AND a Republican)…this, DESPITE his views on race. He never withdrew those positions, nor did he apologize for them, although he is said to have ‘moderated his tone over time.’

Strom Thurmond, segregationist or not, was also a staunch believer in the 10th amendment to the US Constitution (my personal favorite): “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people” and it was his stand on State’s rights that gained him much favor in South Carolina and around the political world.

“[We] want that federal government to keep their filthy hands off the rights of the states.”

Racist or not, he was who he had always been-open, honest, and forthright… and most importantly… these traits never cost him his job.

So when Trent Lott suggested that “we wouldn’t be in the mess we are today” back in 2002 had Thurmond been elected President 54 years earlier, the Democrats were quick to tie the segregationist element of Thurmond around Lott’s neck (rather than the State’s rights element) and summarily had Lott tarred, feathered, effigied, and FIRED from his leadership position in the US Senate. Note to class-NEVER did Lott affirm his support of segregation, and NEVER were we asked to consider Thurmond’s embrace of the 10th amendment. We were just told Thurmond’s segregationist ideology HAD to be what Lott was talking about and that he must, therefore, be run outta Dodge.

How, then, does Harry Reid get to keep his job when he sees the quality of African Americans according to their skin tone and linguistic prowess? The answer shouldn’t be looked for in Michael Steele’s paid-to-be-mad rants, nor in Republican wails against double standards. The answer needs to found in the opinion of the people he represents where it should be…not with the media, the elites and the professional pundits. It’s not hard to see that Reid, just as with Bill Clinton, sees African Americans as political tools and foregone voting bloc conclusions. Let THEM express themselves in the voting booths. Let the rest of us just sit back and watch.

Democrats clearly see African Americans as coffee-fetching errand boys and linguistically challenged “children” that need to be ‘taken care of’…and only so black as the color of their skin as opposed to the content of their character. Reid needs to keep his job long enough to be fired by those very same people…the ones we care most about-the AMERICAN Voter (African and otherwise).

Apologies notwithstanding, however many of them the Democrats make…Americans have a much longer memory than does our media cycle and the Politicians’ lives that desperately cling to it.

COMMENTS

  • Tbone

    for voting for Democrats as a block or whether it is the Jews.

    • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

      http://www.redstate.com/gamecock/2010/01/10/trent-lott-clean-light-skinned-articulate-non-negro-dialect-and-carried-clintons-impeachment-coffee/

  • 10ksnooker

    Was a closet segregationist. The Democrat party was … Well you didn’t think it was Abe Lincoln’s KKK did you?

    • blooch

      http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2009/09/when_jimmy_carter_ginned_up_ra.html

  • nessa

    part of the 82nd Airborne Division. They are currently the 325 Airborne Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team of The Division.

  • jeffreywturner

    Also, I don’t really think he was a racist. Even when he was supportive of segregation, I think he was doing so in order to reflect the will of the majority of his constituents, and not because he couldn’t stand the thought of blacks and whites together.

    It is interesting to note, that AFTER he changed parties to the GOP he hired black folks (most notably Armstrong Williams) and went out of his way to garner support for South Carolina’s HBCU’s. Now, he didn’t HAVE to do these things. After all, he was a Republican now, and therefore guaranteed to receive almost zero support from black voters. So, I would conclude he did them because he felt it was morally right, and a racist would not feel that those things are morally right.

    • SteveLA

      He (Thurmond) conducted the longest filibuster ever by a lone U.S. Senator in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957, at 24 hours and 18 minutes in length, nonstop.

      Or his candidacy on the States Rights Democratic party, what would you call that?

      I’m not impressed with Strom Thurman’s legacy on civil rights as someone who saw first hand Jim Crow in action in the South of the 60′s. I’ll leave it to other to spin Strom as something he wasn’t.

      • Warrior

        in my latest diary entitled, “Harry Reid, Windsock”

        at redstate.com/warrior/

        • haystack

          .

          • Warrior
          • fleta

            Notice that Ann Coulter said “FOREIGN-BORN” Muslim men attacking our commercial airliners. The comment is true. But many Muslims born in this country fail to recognize that truth…and the “would be Socialists” in our government pounce on that to promote their agenda.

            If we lose our freedom in the USA, it will be because we are closing our eyes to what is happening to our country. We began losing our freedoms when we began exporting our jobs overseas….also when some of our leaders shared our national security info. in exchange for contributions.

      • merryj1

        State’s Rights was Thurmond’s big bug bear. That’s not a “code” for Segregation, it’s a 10th Amendment issue. His 1948 run for the presidency was against fellow Democrat Harry Truman, remember, and Truman was a member of the Ku Klux Klan.

        I really don’t know exactly what Thurmond’s racial philosophy was – I do recall that he recognized, interacted with, and financially supported his bi-racial daughter, which suggests he probably wasn’t a raving bigot.

      • jeffreywturner

        His opposition to Civil Rights (the Acts of 1957 & 1964, as well as Voting Rights in 1965) is well documented, and I acknowledged that in my post.

        My only point, is that I don’t think he was driven by hatred, because if he had been, he wouldn’t have hired black staffers or helped to secure funding for HBCU’s. Now, if he were a Democrat when he did these things, you could say he was only trying to curry favor with black voters, but he had already changed parties, so there was no chance for him to garner any significant portion of the black vote. Accordingly, the only logical conclusion is that he felt it to be right in his heart.

      • jnoeagle

        Get a grip please. Strom stayed in office for all those years because he was very closely tuned to his constituencies. Professional politicians have very little of their own beliefs on display. Regardless of anyone’s opinion of his civil rights record, SC citizens approved of it and his history of consistency in supporting them. That was and is the American system.

        I thought the candidacy you reference was the central point of this newly activated review of ol’ Strom. You include the reference in your comment as if it were unknown before your missive pointed it out. Thank you though. What should we call it? Perhaps he was early to awareness of the failures of the Democratic Party approach to governance. I was in Louisiana during that era and saw the same problems you say you saw. Every politician in Louisiana was a Democrat. Maybe it was their bad luck that led them to support Jim Crow.

      • Jack_Savage

        He filibustered the old-fashioned way.

  • http://thefilthybeast.com KathW

    I doubt Harry Reid’s racism will change votes here, especially Dem votes. He’s down to garnering a quarter percent of independent voters now, not much room between that and the bottom. He’s in the toilet because he’s a leftist tool, which I’m sure you know. I wish we had the kind of country where his kneejerk racism outraged liberals, but I suspect most of them are racists too and don’t see anything wrong with what he said. He spoke “the truth,” after all. The fact that he defines people by their skin color should, in a just world, outrage everyone. Regardless, he’s going down.

  • http://keydesignsllc.com bkeyser
  • mom2oneson

    I didn’t think he was for segregation just that he opposed the federal gov making laws about it.
    His first daughter was black and he supported her mother and her. There is a nice book his daughter wrote called Dear Senator. He even paid the way for her college education.
    What I think is horrible is that he was with a fifteen year old employee of his home, that is where he should be criticized and fits thrown about!!! I can’t believe we did all that with Clinton, Vitter, Sanford and the rest when this man was with a teenage employee under him and he was not removed or anything.

    • mom2oneson

      http://books.google.com/books?id=-mpUQgfA3fwC&dq=dear+senator&printsec=frontcover&source=bn&hl=en&ei=74tKS-nhIMm0tgeixpzkDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result#v=onepage&q=&f=false

      It’s an easy read. I read it at the bookstore. The author has so much class and is not jaded at all, she shows nothing but pride for her father and his wives, it’s a good read.

  • jayburd

    Where The One flips on the shuck and jive button in his speeches (depending on who he is talking to) to at least help illustrate part of poor Mr. Reid’s statement. I recall The One used to drift in and out of it all the time. It was as if there was a special setting on his teleprompter. If there was, what would it be labeled? Imagine Mc Cain talking with a southern drawl when he was giving a speech down south.

    • Warrior

      1)Professional black
      2) Classic white
      3) Blue collar white
      4) Activist black
      5) Heavy black ethnic
      6) Mild ghetto
      7) Thug
      8) Gangsta
      9) Gimme all the cash in the drawer

      • aesthete
        • blooch
        • Warrior

          It probably should read:

          “Gimmie all the tax money I need for my wild schemes and if there’s not enough, borrow it or print it…”

      • Tbone
      • jayburd

        How many times have you heard him sound like he was in an opening statement or closing argument? And Gibbs reminds me of this sleazy lawyer I had to suffer on jury duty once. His client was guilty also.

      • CincoSolas_del_Bronx
  • ilgop24

    So that a Republican can pick up his seat. Him staying as Senate majority leader only makes the left look worse.

    Republicans should stay out of this and say it is an internal matter in the democratic party.

    If he decides to drop out a la Dodd I don’t want the Dems to hang on to his seat.

  • throwback59

    to the democrats: first as a category in the 2010 census and now Reid’s gaffe.
    Supremely ironic & Karma-tastic.

    • jnoeagle

      Was it Jessie Jackson who invented or at least popularized (“authenticated”) the currently popular term “African American”? He was an early adopter at least.

      What if an Algerian or a Moroccan finds him or herself in America. Would he or she be qualified (authorized) to consider himself/herself an African American? Why not? Ancestral heritage is from the African continent. Check. Now present in America. Check. Therefore: An African American.

      Because of Jessie (or whoever had the power to rename an entire race of people), it now takes 6 syllables to reference a group of people previously described with two or even one syllable. What if we developed this further, to include Asian-Americans, Australian-American, European-Americans, and American-Americans (not Indians). It seems only fair. Also, of course, all other terms have to made illegal and use of bad terms subject to police action and fines.

  • izoneguy

    Blagojevich: ‘I’m Blacker Than Barack Obama’

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/01/11/blagojevich-im-blacker-barack-obama/?test=latestnews

    Ousted Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich says he’s “blacker than Barack Obama” and tells Esquire magazine that he was a real person in a political arena dominated by phonies.

    Blagojevich, referring to the president as “this guy,” says Obama was elected based simply on hope.

    “What the (expletive)? Everything he’s saying’s on the teleprompter,” Blagojevich told the magazine for a story in its February issue, which hits newsstands Jan. 19.

    “I’m blacker than Barack Obama. I shined shoes. I grew up in a five-room apartment. My father had a little laundromat in a black community not far from where we lived,” Blagojevich said. “I saw it all growing up.”

    The White House refused to comment.

    I was going to add some funny pun – but I think Rod said it all.

  • sarge324

    we all must all remember he is a democrate.he gets away with everthing,even destroying the american way of life.vote these monsters out in 2010.stay mad.

  • DefendUSA

    What’s her degree of blackness when she goes to SC and says, “I ain’t no ways tah-red(tired)?”
    I personally laughed out loud at how ridiculous she sounded.

    However, the Pied Piper does indeed morph to fit the day, environ, or what ever.
    Joey called him clean and articulate…but then he is the homeboy, back to the articulate one and finally the real truth…Chicago thug.

    Harry Reid should be treated just like Trent Lott. Smart people truly know the intent of Lott’s words, but dems didn’t really care. They just wanted to oust him. And then harry Reid gets away with what he said? And it’s all okay? Even if we know what the intent of the words were? yeah.

    What’s good for the goose is good for the gander. Double standards are a no-go, all day, every day in my book and the dems have a lot of those, don’t they?
    File this under “if a Repblican did it”! And forget about Newt, Dole. Libby, Rove….Do remember Sandy Burglar, Timmy Geithner, Billy Jeff, Frank, Dodd, Rangel. After all they said they were sorry and it still wasn’t as bad as what some Republicans did. (sarc.)

  • bigalsouth

    child when he was 22 years old. Remember?

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2003-12-17-thurmond_x.htm

    Some say that this proves that he was a racist, some say otherwise. Just thought I would throw this log on the fire.

  • http://stores.lulu.com/iconicfreedom iconicfreedom

    I had not followed the Lott story as closely when it happened but wondered what Trent was referring to, as I could not imagine a politician, at least a Republican, would be so callous to make such a racial statement in public.

    Your story validates my instinct which was that he was likely speaking about Thurman “politically” in some manner, and in this case, the 10th Amendment – which EVERY American ought to find worthy of upholding.

    Racism is opinion, not fact. It is based in the mind of the beholder, utilized to silence the opposition, avoid personal responsibility and push a personal agenda.

    Are there people that dislike people because of the color of their skin? I’m sure there are, no more than they dislike their eye color, their hair style, their weight, their sense of fashion.

    The problem lays at whether or not someone is not allowed to pursue his life, liberty and happiness BECAUSE of such dislike and the answer is no, he is free to do so.

  • bk

    He’s certainly darker than our “first black President” Bill Clinton, so doesn’t it work out something like this?
    Light – Bill C.
    Medium – Barack O.
    Dark – Michelle O.

    • blooch
  • renny

    because a Rep. would be forced to resign.
    It would end this Reid-Pelosi Obamanationcare nexus. No one else in the Sen. now would fit into Reid’s shoes the way he has promoted the melange of insupportable ideas and deals to get this monstrous leg. passed.
    Any newly appointed Sen. would be the jr. from NV. And as the gov. is a Rep., he’d prob. appoint a Rep. I’m sure Reid would choke on that.