Last night during the Founding Truth radio program, as we discussed today's issues with an emphasis on the United States Constitution, and the original intent of the Founding Fathers, a load of trolls moved into the chat room. The liberal entourage of intended distraction named themselves after democrat talking points and sexual innuendo, placing an exclamation point at the beginning of their user names in order to make sure they resided at the top of the list of chatters. The rhetoric they threw at us was hateful, and oozing with collectivist ideology. I responded to a few, because if anything, they are entertaining. Sure, it reminds us of the small-minded sheep-like devotion to liberalism that exists out there, but they can be fun to talk to if you don't take their antics serious.
In one of my chat responses I called them racist, because one of them proclaimed it was time to "tax rich whitey." A herd of them launched attacks against me, calling Republicans racist, and crying out that no democrat has ever uttered a racist word. Besides, one added, "You can't be racist against whitey."
Definition of racism: Noun
1. The belief that all members of each race possess characteristics or abilities specific to that race, esp. so as to distinguish it as...
2. Prejudice or discrimination directed against someone of a different race based on such a belief.
Racism goes both ways.
On the air we began to recount democrat party racism. The democrats were the pro-slavery party. The democrats created the KKK to be the militant arm of the Democrat Party. Woodrow Wilson, a rabidly progressive President of the United States, was the one that segregated the United States Military. Margaret Sanger, a liberal activist, and the founder of Planned Parenthood, supported abortion for the purpose of eliminating unwanted races, such as the "negro race". The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a Republican Bill, and was filibustered against by the Democrats - including Al Gore Sr. Democrat Senator Robert Byrd was, at one time, a high ranking member of the Ku Klux Klan.
As for quotes by Democrats that were obviously racist?
"You cannot go to a 7-11 or Dunkin Donuts unless you have a slight Indian Accent." -Senator Joe Biden
“A handkerchief-head, chicken-and-biscuit-eating Uncle Tom.” -Spike Lee referring to Clarence Thomas
“I am a former kleagle of the Ku Klux Klan in Raleigh County and the adjoining counties of the state …. The Klan is needed today as never before and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West Virginia …. It is necessary that the order be promoted immediately and in every state of the Union. Will you please inform me as to the possibilities of rebuilding the Klan in the Realm of W. Va …. I hope that you will find it convenient to answer my letter in regards to future possibilities.”- Robert Byrd
“White folks was in caves while we was building empires… We taught philosophy and astrology and mathematics before Socrates and them Greek homos ever got around to it.”- Rev. Al Sharpton
"I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy,...I mean, that's a storybook, man." - Joe Biden
"Obama is Electable Because he is Light Skinned with no Negro Dialect." - Harry Reid
‘Hymietown.’ - Jesse Jackson describing New York City
"Listen he's a nice person, he's very articulate" this is what's been used against him, "but he couldn't sell watermelons if it, you gave him the state troopers to flag down the traffic." -Dan Rather
"I'll have those n*ggers voting Democratic for the next 200 years." Lyndon Johnson!
“A few years ago this guy would have been getting us coffee.” Bill Clinton
“I am not going to use the federal government’s authority deliberately to circumvent the natural inclination of people to live in ethnic homogeneous neighborhoods.”- Jimmy Carter
“Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds.”- Robert Byrd
"You'd find these potentates from down in Africa, you know, rather than eating each other, they'd just come up and get a good square meal in Geneva." -- Fritz Hollings (D, S.C.)
Mahatma Gandhi "ran a gas station down in Saint Louis." -Senator Hillary Clinton
“In the days of slavery, there were those slaves who lived on the plantation and [there] were those slaves that lived in the house. You got the privilege of living in the house if you served the master … exactly the way the master intended to have you serve him. Colin Powell’s committed to come into the house of the master. When Colin Powell dares to suggest something other than what the master wants to hear, he will be turned back out to pasture.”- Harry Belafonte
“Jews — that’s J-E-W-S.”- State Senator Bill McKinney explaining why his daughter Cynthia lost in 2002
"Is you their black-haired answer-mammy who be smart? Does they like how you shine their shoes, Condoleezza? Or the way you wash and park the whitey's cars?" -- Left-wing radio host Neil Rogers
Some junior high n*gger kicked Steve's ass while he was trying to help his brothers out; junior high or sophomore in high school. Whatever it was, Steve had the n*gger down. However it was, it was Steve's fault. He had the n*gger down, he let him up. The n*gger blindsided him." -- Roger Clinton, the President's brother on audiotape
Other highlights of racism by the democrats, and responses to that racism:
It was the Democrats that passed legislation under Jim Crow that prohibited blacks from running for offices in Democratic primaries in the South.
Democrats also imposed Poll Taxes and instituted test for Negroes. If the Negro failed the test, they weren't allowed to vote. Even though blacks passed the test, the persons supervising the voting place would tell them that they failed.
Republicans regularly supported anti-lynching bills, and other laws that would help desegregation in the South, but they were filibustered by Southern Democrats in the Senate.
Woodrow Wilson: In 1915 the Democrat President of the United States (and member of the KKK), premiered the film Birth of a Nation in the White House, film used as a recruiting tool for the KKK. The Klan saw a great boom in numbers after this. A series of intertitles (text on the screen), drawn from A History of the American People, published originally in 1902 by Woodrow Wilson, who in 1915 just happened to be president of the United States; Wilson’s prose introduces the Reconstruction section of the film.
James Thomas Heflin, nicknamed "Cotton Tom", was a leading proponent of white supremacy and very anti-Catholic, most notably as a Democratic United States Senator from Alabama. He also helped draft the language in the 1901 Constitution that essentially barred African American Alabamians from voting.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed two segregationists to the United States Supreme Court: South Carolina segregationist Democrat Jimmy Byrnes to the court (who was later made a top advisor), and Democrat Senator Hugo Black of Alabama, a former member of the Ku Klux Klan.
Georgia-born Democrat Nathan Bedford Forrest, was the first Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan. He wrote on page 21 of the September 1928 edition of the Klan’s “The Kourier Magazine”: “I have never voted for any man who was not a regular Democrat.
1921, Republican President Warren Harding delivered the first speech by a president condemning the lynching of blacks by Southerners.
Legislation seeking to curb the lynching of blacks was initially sponsored in 1918 by Rep. Leonidas Dyer (R-Mo.); Sen. Charles Curtis (R-Kan.).
Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt headed up and implemented one of the most horrible racist policies of the 20th Century – the Japanese Internment Camps during World War II.
Republican President Eisenhower proposed to Congress the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960 and signed those acts into law. The 1957 Act for the first time established a permanent civil rights office inside the Justice Department. Although both Acts were weaker than subsequent civil rights legislation, they constituted the first significant civil rights acts since the Civil Rights Act of 1875, signed by President Ulysses S. Grant.
When Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson became senator, he observed, “These Negroes, they’re getting pretty uppity these days, and that’s a problem for us since they’ve got something now they never had before, the political pull to back up their uppityness.”
President Lyndon Johnson, a Democrat, signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act (a watered-down version, by the way, of the Republican 1957 Civil Rights Act, which Johnson and the Democrats opposed).
Democrat Alabama Governor George Wallace stood in front of the Alabama schoolhouse in 1963 and thundered, “Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”
In 1963, when in his famous, "I have a Dream" speech, Martin Luther King said, "I have a dream that one day down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification," he was referring to Democrat George Wallace, 45th governor of Alabama, having served four nonconsecutive terms: 1963–1967, 1971–1979 and 1983–1987.
Blacks in the South started running for office on the Democratic ticket, only because they wanted to reduce the number of white racist Democratic candidates (from the South) who would vote or had a track record of voting against Civil Rights legislation, such as Fannie Lou Hamer in 1964 (a member of the SNCC), who started the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and infilitrated the Democratic Convention and asked to be seated as delegates. President Johnson used J. Edgar Hoover and Dr. King to stop her.
A coalition of civil rights proponents led by Republican Minority Leader Everett Dirksen invoked cloture so that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 could pass. Dirksen, when asked how he had become a crusader in this cause, replied, "I am involved in mankind, and whatever the skin, we are all included in mankind."
The Democrats have put men in office like Robert Byrd who said just a few years before entering into politics that; "I shall never fight in the armed forces with a Negro by my side … Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels"
In 1989 then-Gov. Bill Clinton was sued as one of three top Arkansas officials responsible for the intimidation of black voters in his state as part of a legal action brought under the 1965 Voting Rights Act: a year earlier the U.S. Supreme court ruled that Clinton had wrongfully tried to overturn the election of a black state representative in favor of a white Democrat.
1992, Bill Clinton belonged to a country club in Arkansas at the Little Rock Country Club, which excludes blacks from membership. Clinton's club membership flared into an issue when the Washington Times published a story about it and Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, who is black, issued a statement declaring that the front-runner had "gravely damaged the Democratic Party by recreating at a racially exclusive club."
2000: Every election cycle, Democrats falsely accuse Republicans of “disenfranchising“ blacks, citing the 2000 election, even though second recounts of the votes in Florida by the Miami Herald and a consortium of major news organizations confirmed that President George W. Bush won the election.
Most of the members of the Congressional Black Caucus were voted in - in predominately black Congressional Districts, not predominately white Democratic districts.
In 2001, Sen. Robert Byrd referred twice to "white ni**ers," during a March 4, 2001 "Fox News Sunday" interview, where the one-time Ku Klux Klan member had the outburst. Despite the appalling nature of the remark, it went largely ignored by the mainstream media and the self appointed "civil rights" leadership. He has been known by Democrats as the "conscience of the Senate." Democrats made Byrd the chairman of the powerful Appropriations Committee and President Pro Tempore of the Senate.
2002: Harry Belafonte publicly denounced Gen. Powell as a "House Negro." Powell Responded, "I think it's unfortunate that Harry used that characterization...But to use a slave reference, I think, is unfortunate and is a throwback to another time and another place that I wish Harry had thought twice about using."
Democrats today still have a track record of trying to keep black Democrats from gaining positions of power or positions that they feel whites should occupy.
In 2003, Senator Ted Kennedy called black Republican judicial nominees “Neanderthals.”
In 2004, Democrat Senator Harry Reid slurred Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas as an incompetent Negro who could not write good English. “Slap at Thomas stinks of racism,” was the headline of the New York Daily News’ December 7, 2004 editorial.
In 2005, the Senate Issues Apology Over Failure on Lynching Law, issued decades after senators blocked anti-lynching bills by filibuster. In that resolution, Congress stopped short of acknowledging that all of the lynchings took place in regions controlled by Democrats.
In 2007, A video was shot by WKRN Video Journalist Beau Fleenor at Tennessee State University in Nashville, Tennessee that shows Rev. Al Sharpton demeaning Gen. Powell and Dr. Rice, when Rev. Sharpton was asked to give his opinions about whether Gen. Powell and Dr. Rice were “House Negroes".
In 2008 Bill Clinton and other leading Democrats supported the Independent Candidate (Charlie Crist) in Flordia over Kendrick Meek for the Flordia Senate seat.
In 2009, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid brazenly compared Republican health care reform opponents to supporters of slavery, ignoring the fact that the Democratic Party fought to expand slavery while the Republican Party fought to end it. Not satisfied with just playing the race card on the senate floor, the Nevada Democrat also accused Republicans of opposing women’s suffrage, never mind that the Republican Party also championed women’s rights.
Class Action Lawsuit against President Obama and Democratic Party: The case (No. C11-1503), cites the collective work of over 350 legal scholars and includes Congressional records, case law, research from our nation’s top history professors, racist statements from Democratic elected officials, citations from the Democrat’s National Platforms regarding their support of slavery, excepts of speeches from Senator Obama, individual testimonies from blacks who lived in the Jim Crow South and opinions from the NAACP." They want an apology.
In March, 2012, Republican Congressmen Peter King and Patrick Meehan wrote a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging the State Department to designate Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist organization, the letter stated, in part: "Attacks on northern and central Nigeria's Christian community come as no surprise in light of Boko Haram's genocidal declarations to kill Christians in the North, yet sadly they were avoidable. Despite the fact that the world has been on notice about religiously motivated terrorism in Nigeria due to sustained terrorist activity occurring against perceived "Western" concepts including churches, schools and even the United Nations, governments at home and abroad have largely ignored or underestimated the growing problem of interreligious strife and terrorism within Nigeria." That was March, since then the almost daily attacks continue to kill Christian Africans in Nigeria. Hillary Clinton has ignored the plea.
Chris Matthews called the GOP the "Grand Wizard Crowd" (and was called on it by Michael Steele)
Kenneth Gladney, a 38-year-old conservative activist from St. Louis, said he was attacked by some SEIU activists as he handed out yellow flags with "Don't tread on me" printed on them. Six people were arrested. He was later called an "Uncle Tom" by the Missouri NAACP. The SEIU activists were found "not guilty."
Regarding Herman Cain, Bill Maher sarcastically said "My black friend Herman Cain says racism is over and they should just suck it up. That's my black friend [who] said that. So you know its okay," Maher went on to accuse Cain's supporters of being the real racists because they view Cain as their "black friend."
When Artur Davis dared to switch from the Democrats to the Republicans, one article implied that Davis is "bitter" about losing a primary election in his bid for governor of Alabama and actually said that he may be "jealous" of Obama.
Michael Steele was pelted with Oreo cookies in Maryland during a campaign appearance, was called an "Uncle Tom," and was depicted as a black-faced minstrel on a liberal Web log with the caption“Simple Sambo wants to move to the big house.”
State Sen. Lisa A. Gladden, a black Baltimore Democrat, said,“Party trumps race, especially on the national level,” she said. “If you are bold enough to run, you have to take whatever the voters are going to give you. It’s democracy, perhaps at its worse, but it is democracy.”
Delegate Salima Siler Marriott, a black Baltimore Democrat, said Michael Steele invites comparisons to a slave who loves his cruel master or a cookie that is black on the outside and white inside because his conservative political philosophy is, in her view, anti-black.
Democrats must keep racism alive in order to continue to win.
-- Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary
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