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Don't forget the wetbacks and chinks!
Posted like a true redneck!
You really need to put the weed down that those wetbacks smuggled into here
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Don't forget the wetbacks and chinks!
And this is what I was refuting, btw.
And I don't know why redneck Philbert is mad about the N1663s, wetback, and chinks when they are only about 35 % of the total US population.
Guess not every European decent people here are not hate monger rednecks.
Posted like a true redneck!
You really need to put the weed down that those wetbacks smuggled into here
Ha ha, you are a trip living ion the past.
Real clever redneck!
Keeping getting pissed but the President for now on will be a minority or a women in the great USA
Rednecks will win mid terms with the TEA party because N1663s don't vote in those
Young Jezzy- My President is Black
And I don't know why redneck Philbert is mad about the N1663s, wetback, and chinks when they are only about 35 % of the total US population.
Guess not every European decent people here are not hate monger rednecks.
Read again and the clever spelling N word people are the the ones that don't meet up your standards of African Americans. Like Powell . Rest are by you with the hide spelling is saying imo that the rest are the lazy MF on welfare and stamps and they are bringing down America. The hell twith them. By 2 cents. Bad enough they are last hired and first fired. All because of Wall ST greed some stockholder somewhere else in this great country to get his 5th German luxury car.
Maybe the same view like the Florida guy on trial, fake gun, leave the scene, lie........killing because they where playing loud rap music. Wow. Must of been that young Jezzy song I posted that got him irate. My opinion, not fact.
debating 101: when you have no logical rebuttal, resort to insults and name calling
Do you ever read any posts here except in the Biggest Tits You Wanna Fuck thread.
Damn, you are actually TRYING to be an ignorant shithead...at least you're good at that.athead:
Well, at least you own up to it.
Why am I not surprised you find his posts insightful, to the point (what point isn't clear, but for you...he's A+), intellectually stimulating, and just all around great?
I wasn't sure you were a native English speaker the first few of your posts I read...still not sure.:rofl2:
You two seem to have a lot in common...pretty lame.
Gosh, you really are a truly special kind of stupid, aren't you? Are you even able to get the days of the week right without help? Seriously, dude. Most people, once it becomes apparent that they don't know shit from shellac, will just let it pass and keep walking. But no, not our Philbert. He has to put his ignorance and stupidity on display daily.
I'm going to put this to you one more time, you pathetic, talking, clueless chimpanzee: you claimed that the Klan was 100% Democrat. Whether I gave you 3 examples or 3 million examples, assuming you made it past 2nd grade math in school (which I am not convinced of!), ANY example I gave you of Republican members of the Klan destroys your foolish and incorrect claim that the Klan was 100% Democrat. The Klan (especially the 1st KKK) supported Democrats (in the South) because it was Republicans who kicked their asses, burned their houses down, freed their slaves, put them in prison and took away their voting rights.
And it doesn't matter what sort of lies and misinterpretations you dream up from what you (may have) watched on TLC, PBS or Fox News. Nothing that I said here was incorrect. That you are too simple to comprehend it does not make it incorrect. That you continue to make the idiotic claim that the current Democrat party has meaningful social/racial ties to the Democrat party of the 1860's, or even the 1920's, completely amazes me. But, why should it? I guess you really are just that fucking stupid.
Again with the cracking ice come-back? Still putting on the act that you possess any amount of wit, are you? Did it truly bother you that much? Get over it already. Or don't. Either way :dunno:
P.S. When have I ever said that I don't watch PBS? Just curious as to how you managed to get that wrong too? PBS is one of the stations that I said I do watch and would be willing to use a digital antennae to continue receiving when I kill DirecTV later this year. You just can't get a damn thing right, can you? How do you survive out in the world every day, man? Really!
Just give up already, Philbert. Even people who might be inclined to agree with some portion of your idiotic and factually incorrect position would be afraid to agree with you in public now. I don't know if you're high when you post here (Gotcha??? What? Does the post you made above this one make any amount of sense even to you? Really?), mentally/socially retarded or just plain ol' naturally dumb. But I'm going to let you go on about your business now.
I'm not clear on what you're refuting. That the parties reversed polarity? That was the point.
(I made no mention of LBJ being altruistic)
You really take this seriously, huh?That's right, Philbert. By choosing not to continue a meaningless, foolish conversation with someone who is either on drugs, insane or retarded, I'm giving up. When caught in a spot with a street corner preacher near the Inner Harbor years ago, I did the same thing: kept walking after I got done saying what I had to say. You're no different. You don't even have made up facts to battle me with now. Now it's some sort of gibberish that I doubt anyone here (but you) even understands.
And no, I have no desire to see you get banned. You're clearly pitiful. This is likely all you have for an outlet. Life has already punished you more than I ever could. But stop being a little girl and bringing whatever issues you have with me into threads that are not meant for that foolishness. Leave the OCSMs and their fans out of it. Trust me, you are not impressing anyone here. If you choose not to do that, then it won't be "Ray Ray" that bans your dumb ass, it will be Queen Mother Petra or one of her mods. Fuck with her and you'll be sitting in a one room shack giving handjobs to the last guy that wigged out and forgot whose board this really is: and you don't have a Countach or a law degree to fall back on.
LBJ, whom I personally liked, was a mean as a snake hardcore politico.
He was buying votes intentionally with his give aways and knew it...no love for minorities but loyal to his party and power.
Not a lot different than old school Dems, who were less circumspect with their minority dislike.
Strom wasn't the only one less than open hearted to all Americans in that party.
Johnson's grandfather, Samuel Ealy Johnson, Sr., was raised as a Baptist. Subsequently, in his early adulthood, he became a member of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). In his later years the grandfather became a Christadelphian; Johnson's father also joined the Christadelphian Church toward the end of his life. Later, as a politician, Johnson was influenced in his positive attitude toward Jews by the religious beliefs that his family, especially his grandfather, had shared with him (see Operation Texas). Johnson's favorite Bible verse came from the King James Version of Isaiah 1:18. "Come now, and let us reason together..."[
For nine months, from 1928 to 1929, Johnson paused his studies to teach Mexican-American children at the segregated Welhausen School in Cotulla, some 90 miles (140 km) south of San Antonio in La Salle County. The job helped him save money to complete his education, and he graduated in 1930. He then taught in Pearsall High School in Pearsall, Texas, and afterwards took a position as teacher of public speaking at Sam Houston High School in Houston. When he returned to San Marcos in 1965, after having signed the Higher Education Act of 1965, Johnson looked back:
"I shall never forget the faces of the boys and the girls in that little Welhausen Mexican School, and I remember even yet the pain of realizing and knowing then that college was closed to practically every one of those children because they were too poor. And I think it was then that I made up my mind that this nation could never rest while the door to knowledge remained closed to any American."
Kennedy, however, made efforts to keep Johnson busy, informed, and at the White House often, telling aides "I can't afford to have my vice president, who knows every reporter in Washington, going around saying we're all screwed up, so we're going to keep him happy."[42] Kennedy appointed him to jobs such as head of the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunities, through which he worked with African Americans and other minorities. Though Kennedy may have intended this to remain a more nominal position, Taylor Branch in Pillar of Fire contends that Johnson served to push the Kennedy administration's actions for civil rights further and faster than Kennedy originally intended to go. Branch notes the irony of Johnson, who the Kennedy family hoped would appeal to conservative southern voters, being the advocate for civil rights. In particular he notes Johnson's Memorial Day 1963 speech at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania as being a catalyst that led to more action.
In mid-1964, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) was organized with the purpose of challenging Mississippi's all-white and anti-civil rights delegation to the Democratic National Convention of that year as not representative of all Mississippians. At the national convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey the MFDP claimed the seats for delegates for Mississippi, not on the grounds of the Party rules, but because the official Mississippi delegation had been elected by a primary conducted under Jim Crow laws in which blacks were excluded because of poll taxes, literacy tests, and even violence against black voters. The national Party's liberal leaders supported a compromise in which the white delegation and the MFDP would have an even division of the seats; Johnson was concerned that, while the regular Democrats of Mississippi would probably vote for Goldwater anyway, if the Democratic Party rejected the regular Democrats, he would lose the Democratic Party political structure that he needed to win in the South. Eventually, Hubert Humphrey, Walter Reuther and black civil rights leaders (including Roy Wilkins, Martin Luther King, and Bayard Rustin) worked out a compromise with MFDP leaders: the MFDP would receive two non-voting seats on the floor of the Convention; the regular Mississippi delegation would be required to pledge to support the party ticket; and no future Democratic convention would accept a delegation chosen by a discriminatory poll. When the leaders took the proposal back to the 64 members who had made the bus trip to Atlantic City, they voted it down. As MFDP Vice Chair Fannie Lou Hamer said, "We didn't come all the way up here to compromise for no more than we'd gotten here. We didn't come all this way for no two seats, 'cause all of us is tired." The failure of the compromise effort allowed the rest of the Democratic Party to conclude that the MFDP was simply being unreasonable, and they lost a great deal of their liberal support. After that, the convention went smoothly for Johnson without a searing battle over civil rights.
In conjunction with the Civil Rights Movement, Johnson overcame southern resistance and convinced the Democratic-Controlled Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed most forms of racial segregation. John F. Kennedy originally proposed the civil rights bill in June 1963.[61] In late October 1963, Kennedy officially called the House leaders to the White House to line up the necessary votes for passage.[62][63] After Kennedy's death, Johnson took the initiative in finishing what Kennedy started and broke a filibuster by Southern Democrats in March 1964; as a result, this pushed the bill for passage in the Senate.[64] Johnson signed the revised and stronger bill into law on July 2, 1964.[64] Legend has it that, as he put down his pen, Johnson told an aide, "We have lost the South for a generation", anticipating a coming backlash from Southern whites against Johnson's Democratic Party. Moreover, Richard Nixon politically counterattacked with the Southern Strategy where it would "secure" votes for the Republican Party by grabbing the advocates of segregation as well as most of the Southern Democrats.[65]
In 1965, he achieved passage of a second civil rights bill, the Voting Rights Act, which outlawed discrimination in voting, thus allowing millions of southern blacks to vote for the first time. In accordance with the act, several states, "seven of the eleven southern states of the former confederacy" – Alabama, South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Virginia — were subjected to the procedure of preclearance in 1965, while Texas, home to the majority of the African American population at the time, followed in 1975.[66]
After the murder of civil rights worker Viola Liuzzo, Johnson went on television to announce the arrest of four Ku Klux Klansmen implicated in her death. He angrily denounced the Klan as a "hooded society of bigots," and warned them to "return to a decent society before it's too late." Johnson was the first President to arrest and prosecute members of the Klan since Ulysses S. Grant about 93 years earlier.[67] He turned the themes of Christian redemption to push for civil rights, thereby mobilizing support from churches North and South.[68]
At the Howard University commencement address on June 4, 1965, he said that both the government and the nation needed to help achieve goals:
“
To shatter forever not only the barriers of law and public practice, but the walls which bound the condition of many by the color of his skin. To dissolve, as best we can, the antique enmities of the heart which diminish the holder, divide the great democracy, and do wrong — great wrong — to the children of God...[69]
”
In 1967, Johnson nominated civil rights attorney Thurgood Marshall to be the first African American Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. To head the new Department of Housing and Urban Development, Johnson appointed Robert C. Weaver—the first African-American cabinet secretary in any U.S. presidential administration.
In 1968 Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, which provided for equal housing opportunities regardless of race, creed, or national origin. The impetus for the law's passage came from the 1966 Chicago Open Housing Movement, the April 4, 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., and the civil unrest across the country following King's death.[70] On April 5, Johnson wrote a letter to the United States House of Representatives urging passage of the Fair Housing Act.[71] With newly urgent attention from legislative director Joseph Califano and Democratic Speaker of the House John McCormack, the bill (which was previously stalled) passed the House by a wide margin on April 10.