To: rhema
When I was a very young boy here in the south I can remember older blacks approaching a white man with hat in hand saying 'master' or 'boss man', wrong but it was done. Here we are today, 2005. the elected politicians on the Democrat side still have the blacks bowing to them with hat in hand saying 'master' or 'boss man' as they have them schooled them to depend on their 'help'.
5 posted on
01/17/2005 4:59:33 AM PST by
gulfcoast6
(The Lord is my Shield and Protector)
To: gulfcoast6
I remember the same things from my youth, and today most blacks in this area cannot accept equality, they are either looking to the government for help which is not given to whites or they are imagining themselves superior to whites or both things at the same time. True equality seems
unreachable.
The most amazing part is to see the continuing outcry against "discrimination" when it is obvious that the only real discrimination in this area favors the black race.
32 posted on
01/17/2005 8:11:57 AM PST by
RipSawyer
("Embed" Michael Moore with the 82nd airborne.)
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