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Home Front: Politix
Today's Great Black Dilemma
2020-03-12
[TOWNHALL] I was proud recently when Marc Little, chairman of my organization, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, stood behind President Donald Trump
...The man who was so stupid he beat fourteen professional politicians, a former tech CEO, and a brain surgeon for the Republican nomination in 2016, then beat The Smartest Woman in the World in the general election...
at a White House event for Black History Month and prayed for him.

Then a parade of black liberals did their thing in the media to try to deflate and devalue this important event. Their actions help us understand why so little progress has been made after more than half a century of civil rights activism.

CNNs Keith Boykin called the black Christians grouped around the president "Uncle Toms." Chris Redd of "Saturday Night Live" called them "White House negroes." And Spike Lee mocked them, writing, "We Gonna Pray Fo' You Massa."

How can we miss the irony of black liberals, their lives dedicated to keeping blacks on the government welfare plantation, using insulting plantation imagery to attack conservative black Christians working for freedom and better lives for African Americans?

The Economist magazine last year ran an article with the headline "The black-white wealth gap is unchanged after half a century."

"(I)n 1962," the article reports, "two years before the passage of landmark civil-rights legislation ... the average wealth of white households was seven times greater than that of black households. Yet after decades of declining discrimination and the construction of a modern welfare state, that ratio remains the same."

The article fails to mention that total spending on government anti-poverty and welfare programs over these years is estimated at $20 trillion.

Why do significant gaps in wealth and income persist between black Americans and the rest of the country?

Racism?
Related:
Urban Renewal and Education: 2019-01-03 Star Parker: ' Some Food Stamp Recipients Too Busy ‘Watching Porn' Instead of Finding Jobs
Urban Renewal and Education: 2015-03-04 Herman Cain: Three not-so-famous black Americans you should know
Related:
Black History Month: 2020-03-06 Belgium: ‘White People Not Welcome' event to be held in Brussels this month
Black History Month: 2020-03-03 As Disdain for Prayer Grows, Media Take Shots at Trump and Pence for Bowing Their Heads Last Week
Black History Month: 2019-02-19 African Cardinal: Abortion Is ‘THE Hate Crime of Our Era'
Related:
Spike Lee: 2019-02-26 Spawn of Maverick Defends Spike Lee Against Attack from ‘Reality Show President'
Spike Lee: 2018-08-16 Kareem Abdul Jabbar compares National Anthem protests to SLAVERY songs
Spike Lee: 2015-05-21 'It Sure Looks Like Some Ferguson Protestors Were Paid To Do So By Liberal Organize Missouri'
Related:
The Economist: 2019-11-08 NATO experiencing 'brain death', France's Macron says
The Economist: 2019-09-01 Boris Johnson shows the steel and U.K.'s Tories soar in the polls
The Economist: 2019-05-18 American life is improving for the lowest paid
Posted by:Fred

#5  The preferred real estate of the La Bastida would have been on the 'high ground' I take it? Some things never change.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-03-12 08:16  

#4  Thanks Skidmark, very interesting link.
Posted by: Cesare   2020-03-12 08:12  

#3  "The black-white wealth gap is unchanged after half a century."

Scientists discover differences in the diets of rich and poor go back 4,000 years ago - including more animal protein consumed by the 'elite'
Posted by: Skidmark   2020-03-12 07:44  

#2  If the black man's situation improved, he would lose his grievance and the left lose their power. Thus there is substantial motivation to ensure blacks never get any better.

"There is (a) class of colored people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the Negro race before the public. Having learned that they are able to make a living out of their troubles, they have grown into the settled habit of advertising their wrongs -- partly because they want sympathy and partly because it pays. Some of these people do not want the Negro to lose his grievances, because they do not want to lose their jobs ... There is a certain class of race problem-solvers who don't want the patient to get well, because as long as the disease holds out they have not only an easy means of making a living, but also an easy medium through which to make themselves prominent before the public."
-- Booker T. Washington
Posted by: Herb McCoy   2020-03-12 04:10  

#1  Between being African-Americans and being African-Americans?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-03-12 02:40  

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