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The Far-Left Democratic Party and their Obsession with Race
Conservative for Change ^ | August 31, 2010 | Roger F. Gay

Posted on 08/31/2010 6:30:05 AM PDT by RogerFGay

The Democratic Party expected that having a half-black man in the White House would come with a free Platinum Race Card that would never be questioned. But as the mid-term elections unfold, they're still waiting nervously by the mail box for delivery. Their continuing efforts to get what they can't pay for in fact and reason come off looking more like clumsy caught-on-camera shoplifting attempts at the mall.

Bill Press compared Glenn Beck and attendees at the Restoring Honor Rally to Al Qaeda. He rationalized this bizarre comment on CNN, saying that the Lincoln Memorial, for all Americans, is one of our sacred places, and that he thinks that allowing Glenn Beck to speak there was just as offensive as giving those who carried out the 9/11 attack permission to speak at Ground Zero.

If you're just tuning in, wondering if you'll bother to go to the polls to vote, feeling entirely confused about what that was supposed to mean, let me explain. Press was attempting to wag a racial slur in your face. The Restoring Honor Rally was held on the 47th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's revered I Have a Dream speech, which was also delivered at the Lincoln Memorial.

Still a bit confused? The back story is important. Since Obama entered office, the Democratic Party faithful have gone to extremes to divide the nation along racial lines. In their imaginations, the racial division is now perfectly clear, in everything. (You might think that there was a racial divide to begin with; but that's nothing. It's more like they've been pressing for an all out race war.)

Lincoln presided over the American Civil War, the war that ended slavery. Dr. Martin Luther King was black. His speech is symbolic of the Civil Rights Movement (circa. 1955-1968). Glenn Beck is a white guy who is not a Democrat. (Same as Lincoln, but never mind.) So rather than thinking, you should immediately imagine Glenn Beck as a rampant dedicated racist trampling on the sacred ground of progressive politics.

Progressive politics? Maybe I'm skipping through the long progression of leftist propaganda a bit too quickly. I'll assume that even if you're just crawling out of the crib somewhere near a television, you've felt the vibrations associating Democrats with new (yes, just like soap and toothpaste) and Republicans with old. This superficial marketing ploy has been very effective in the young and female market. (What soap and toothpaste companies already knew.)

New isn't quite the same thing as progressive is it? (You might ask.) We need to probe a little more deeply than a comparison with a soap commercial. Let's get clarification on the talking point from someone who better deserves the title of the the Democratic Party's Joseph Goebbels (or at least his writing staff): Chris Matthews. Listen to this.

What is the argument? You may need to listen again, but it's just as superficial as old verses new. Let me give you a hint. A big, all-powerful federal government is good. The federal government does the right thing. His statement is unconditional. There is no current issue involved, just an event. Don't think. Just imagine that anyone who opposes unconditional federal control, particularly if they support or reference the Constitution, is standing in the way of a better world; crazed and mean-spirited racist punks if you'd like – for the sake of concrete imagery.

Matthews did touch my emotions. References to the civil rights struggle that I grew up in as well as he tend to do that. Matthews did manage to make me feel offended – by him. There is a huge divide between those who led the Civil Rights Movement and the progressive left, including Barack Obama – especially including Barack Obama (yes, even though he's half-black). It is hard to imagine a group more solidly opposed to civil rights than today's Democratic Party – and they really weren't much for it back then either. I am terribly offended by their use of the Civil Rights Movement in their propaganda.

The Civil Rights Movement built its success on lawsuits. Its participants asserted Constitutional rights. When Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, they did so to avoid chaos in response to Supreme Court decisions on Constitutionally derived civil rights, and even moreso to claim political credit for something that had to be done to preserve Constitutional order. President Johnson took to the airwaves to address the nation with exactly that in mind, noting that a president from the Democratic Party, known as the party of racism, would sign the bill. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 facilitated cashing in that credit.

The success of the Civil Rights Movement was a triumph of individual rights over the collective that had erected social, legal, economic, and physical barriers to integration. Their success depended directly on our Constitutionally defined three-branch system of government, in which each branch has equal (but separate) power. It required an independent judicial branch with its highest obligation to the Constitution, not to a congress or a president – and definitely not to a political party.

The Democratic Party has and continues to push for a shift in power from Constitutional rule to one in which the political parties have absolute power, concentrated at the top. Barack Obama has made this preference perfectly clear. He has expressed his dissatisfaction with – not merely the results of the Civil Rights Movement – but with the fundamentals; maintaining and asserting individual rights over the power of the collective. (By the way Barack, the United States already has – or did have – the largest wealth redistribution system in the world.)

(If the video doesn't post, click here for original article.)



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Extended News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: beck; civilrights; democrats; glennbeck; liberalfascism; obama; racistleft; restoringhonor; restoringhonorrally; teaparty
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To: RogerFGay

“The Democratic Party has and continues to push for a shift in power from Constitutional rule to one in which the political parties have absolute power, concentrated at the top, Barack Obama.”

Just a little punctuation change ;-)


21 posted on 08/31/2010 7:40:44 AM PDT by vanilla swirl (We are the Patrick Henry we have been waiting for!)
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To: RogerFGay

They only use race as a wedge issue to bloc voting demographics.

If you are black, hispanic, female, etc. and you vote for a Republican, you are a race traitor, an uncle tom, an aunt jemimah (all of these terms have been used). A “sell out”.

Recall that Barack Obama wrote about how in college he hung out smoking with the Marxist professors, feminist activists, etc. so he would NOT be a “sell out”.

Your skin color only matters to a Democrat if you can serve The Party. Otherwise you are an enemy of the state.


22 posted on 08/31/2010 7:41:01 AM PDT by a fool in paradise (I want IMPROVEMENT, not just CHANGE.)
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To: Ev Reeman

The government wants control of all of the school kids, not just the black ones.

Yes, uneducated minds filled with liberal agenda mush.


23 posted on 08/31/2010 7:43:12 AM PDT by a fool in paradise (I want IMPROVEMENT, not just CHANGE.)
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To: RogerFGay

24 posted on 08/31/2010 7:58:10 AM PDT by Iron Munro (I carry a gun because I'm too young to die and too old to take any more beatings.)
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To: RogerFGay; Ev Reeman
The Civil Rights movement was indeed a part of the Left's assault on the USA. Its intent was to create division along racial lines, the same as Feminism did along gender lines. Below was supposed to be an AP photo of MLK protesting against the war in Vietnam but only the caption will copy.

53 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., leads a crowd of 125,000 Vietnam War protesters in front of the United Nations in New York on April 15, 1967, as he voices a repeated demand to "Stop the bombing." (AP Photo)

The Civil Rights movement and the protests against the war were all part of the same Marxist effort. LBJ was very active in furthering the Leftist cause with his Great Society social programs, including Medicare, and his attempt to outdo FDR.

After signing the Civil Rights law into effect in 1964 he called Senator Richard Russell of Georgia and said, "That'll keep the n----rs voting Democrat for the next 200 years."

It was all about moving the socialist agenda forward and maintaining power.

25 posted on 08/31/2010 9:52:22 AM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done needs to be done by the government)
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To: Mind-numbed Robot
Your assessment does seem a little off, although not entirely. There were no doubt (at all) political leftists hanging about, and LBJ used "the N word." The quote you gave captures the party's, and particularly his intentions perfectly.

The article is specifically about the African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968) (as Wikipedia calls it), not the broader use of the term by corrupt extremists friends of Barack Obama. I don't know you, so I don't know your age. Blacks suffered a great deal in America, and their Civil Rights Movement is one we can all identify with - as humans. Martin Luther King was key to the character of the movement, which was peaceful and aimed at positive results.

His I Have a Dream speech is one of the greatest speeches ever given by an American, right up there with Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.

MLK's niece Alveda King verses Al Sharpton on the matter of race make the difference between her uncle's vision and the corrupt far-left perfectly clear. It's about whether people are lifted up or dragged down.

Addressing the Restoring Honor Rally, she said it beautifully. "I too have a dream, that white privilege will become human privilege and that people of every ethnic blend will receive everyone as brothers and sisters in the love of God.”

On the other end, Al Sharpton preaching hate and an end to "privilege" (also known as "human rights").
26 posted on 08/31/2010 10:23:02 AM PDT by RogerFGay
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To: Mind-numbed Robot
BTW: You might also want to read up on the Gulf of Tonkin Incident.
27 posted on 08/31/2010 10:24:56 AM PDT by RogerFGay
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To: RogerFGay

I was born in Jackson, MS in 1938, so I doubt you have more personal knowledge of this subject than I do. We probably share many of the same experiences. From the 1st grade through completing college I never attended an integrated school.

However, I was fortunate that although my family grew up in rural MS, moving to town during the depression to try to find work, they never taught me prejudice nor did they ever mistreat anyone, black or white. I remember being surprised as a young adult that there was prejudice against Jews by some folks. I then realized I had many friends whose names indicated they were Jews and I never even knew it. The subject was never broached. We were just friends. There was no prejudice against Jews at all that I knew of.

I don’t need to read about the Gulf of Tonkin as I remember it very well. Before that I remember growing up during WWII, with two uncles in the midst of it there was rapt attention paid to all news about the war. I remember the Korean War and a young neighborhood favorite, J.E. Allgood, being killed there. I remember the Vietnam war and all the street protests, not in Jackson but elsewhere, when the Left came out of their shell big time. There was an organized protest against segregation at Jackson State College, and all black university and alma mater of Walter Payton.

I remember all about the civil rights protests, the politics of the time and that the same people who were against the war were agitating for civil rights laws. I also remember our few black friends were not in agreement with that approach, thinking prayer and good Christian political leadership could solve the problem better, faster and that it would last longer. I agree with them. If you disagree, explain how those laws have not eliminated the racial problems, how Obama has not bridged the racial divide as they said he would. The answer is that the Left keeps it alive. Ingrained American racism is not the truth. That is simply a charge by the Left to keep the issue alive and the races divided.

I could write a book on this going back to when Vladimir Lenin dispatched Dr. Julius Hammer to the USA to raise money to support the Communists in their fight against the Tsar in Russia. He founded the Workers Party of America in 1907, later changed to Communist Party USA, before he was sent to prison (for a botched abortion that killed a society woman) and his son Armand took over. Armand enlisted the Sulzbergers, Publishers of the NYTimes, and Senator Albert Gore, Sr., as well as many others into the cause.

The Communist effort to subvert the USA has continued from President Woodrow Wilson through FDR, LBJ, Jimmy Carter, Slick Willie, and now Obama.

And yes, the civil rights movement was and is part of it.


28 posted on 08/31/2010 11:56:27 AM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done needs to be done by the government)
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