an under-appreciated view.
almost home

oozey mess

ellievsbear
NASA
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wallacepolsom
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH
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blake kathryn
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document

#extradirty
$LAYYYTER

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we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
Cosimo Galluzzi

⁂

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
seen from India

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from South Korea

seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
@pretty-irish
an under-appreciated view.
Imagine hearing “well done, my good and faithful servant” at the end of your life. Imagine the emotion you’d feel. The sheer joy of that “I’m proud of you” from your Heavenly Father. I think I can say Witt a degree of certainty that I’d never stop crying
Prepping for Civil Unrest and Riots
I’ve written similar posts before about how to prepare for civil unrest and social order breakdown, but with recent events I thought I’d do an update.
Last night Minneapolis saw fires, looting, and rioting with tear gas and rubber bullets fired at protesters by police. Given the anger and frustration and the fact that similar protests and riots are popping up in other major cities, this is a great time to review your family’s plan in case of riots in your neighborhood.
Riots usually begin in a downtown area of a city, often centered around a government building or company that was being protested. Peaceful protests can turn violent and chaotic quickly, and the news often doesn’t do a great job of keeping up. Social media then becomes the quickest way to track what’s happening, and independent citizen journalists can be crucial to getting accurate information out.
Try to identify those independent news sources in your community who would be the first on the scene and follow them on social media. For instance, Unicorn Riot was out in Minneapolis for more than 8 hours following the events and relaying information shared by those who were out there, including where protesters could get medical attention, water, and other help. These journalists may be your first indicator that something is happening in your city.
Your response will depend on where you live. But regardless of where you live, keep your gas tank at least half full at all times so you don’t have to try to get gas when unrest is happening.
- If you live near downtown or near the focus of the protests (the police station, city hall, capitol building, etc), you should plan to leave as soon as there is any indication of rioting. Your bugout bags should always be ready to go, because unrest can happen quickly and reach your area before the local news picks it up. You may even choose to leave any time something happens that could incite protests and unrest, such as an officer-involved shooting or a court ruling on a highly-publicized, controversial case.
- If you live in the city but not in the area where unrest is occurring, watch updates from those journalists to see if the chaos is spreading and in which directions. Make sure you have your bugout bag ready to go. You also may choose to leave as soon as rioting begins or if you stop hearing updates from the sources you’re following.
- If you live in the suburbs you will usually not need to leave, but you may want to be prepared to shelter in place if the rioting brings National Guard, curfews, and so on. Make sure you have 2 weeks of food stored up and consider getting a backup generator if destruction during the riots damages power lines or substations that could cause power outages in your area.
Where you can go if rioting begins in your area:
If you have a friend or family member who lives in the suburbs or outside of town, talk with them about your concerns and ask if you could come stay with them should unrest happen in your city. Important: Don’t just assume you can go to them. Ask. Have the conversation. Make a plan.
If you can’t stay with someone outside of town, set aside some cash (consider keeping it in your bugout bag) for a couple of nights in a motel. Identify a few possible motels or hotels that aren’t usually fully booked in the suburbs or outside of town and print out a list of their locations and typical nightly rates. Make sure you have at least enough cash in your bag for three nights. You might need to stay away from home longer, but you should be able to make other arrangements by then.
If you can’t afford to set aside the cash for a motel and you don’t have someone you can stay with outside of town, identify truck stops or public rest areas outside of town. These are places with bathrooms and in most cases food and water where you can park your car overnight.
What if you’re participating in the protests when they turn into riots?
If you plan to participate in a protest that has the potential to turn violent and destructive, there are a few things you can do to be prepared.
- Carry your bugout bag with you. Your bugout bag should have some food and water as well as a first aid kit, all of which could be crucial if things turn bad quickly.
- Make sure your family knows the plan if things get out of hand. If you have kids, consider having them stay with a relative who either lives in the suburbs or is prepared to get out quickly if violence spreads to their neighborhood.
- Consider bringing walkie-talkies or handheld radios that can be used if cell towers are jammed or overloaded.
- Set a designated rally point if you are separated from friends or family.
- If you are able to do so in your city, consider carrying a concealed handgun for self-defense. Try to avoid having to use it as just the sound of gunshots could escalate things further, but if you need to defend yourself you’ll be glad you can.
- Consider bringing a gas mask (you can make your own) in case tear gas is used. If someone is exposed to tear gas, remove any contact lenses and flush their eyes with water or a saline solution (like contact solution). There are some reports that using milk can neutralize capsaicin-based tear gas or pepper spray, but there has been some dispute about how effective or safe those measures are. Proceed with caution.
- Review alternate routes home from the protest location in case roads are blocked when you try to leave.
We will likely see more protests and riots in the coming months. Be careful, stay safe, and be prepared!
Is there a way to intervene in a situation similar to why happened with that arrest? Do you call an emergency?
Assuming you’re talking about George Floyd?
Calling 9-1-1 would probably be the first step, and especially doing so such that the officers know that’s what you’re doing. That alone may scare them enough to back off, especially if you’re also recording video.
If the bystanders had tried to rush the cops, it could have turned even uglier, especially if the police felt threatened and pulled their weapons. We could have ended up with multiple dead.
Now, if those bystanders had been armed and trained, perhaps there could have been an opportunity to make the officer back off. You’d have to be careful though, if people start intervening in every arrest we could see some serious social order issues. Also, you might end up with legal charges, but if you’re willing to go to jail to save a life...
Hindsight is 20/20. But between Eric Garner and George Floyd, maybe we need to have a discussion on what takedown/hold maneuvers police are and aren’t allowed to use and how the public can intervene if they see an officer using a dangerous/illegal maneuver.
They STILL aren’t pressing charges. We have video evidence of an officer, hands in his pockets, relaxed, not having to put up a fight, pressing his knee against a man’s neck who wasnt even resisting, who was aware the man couldn’t breathe, who rejected medical attention for the man, as a couple more officers held the man in place. THAT is not enough evidence? THIS is what we should be outraged about. But these idiots rioting in the streets and burning the city down have exploited this problem, added horribly to the mess, and stolen the narrative. George Floyd deserves justice, but that’s not what he’s getting ... from anyone.
Officers also fired a water cannon at protesters who defied social distancing rules to demonstrate against Beijing’s plan to impose security
Hong Kong doing it again.
Protests about an unjust killing? Yes, I can fully understand that.
Destroying innocent people’s property as part of your “protest”? Fuck off. That accomplishes nothing.
Ask yourself what this is accomplishing. You are not impacting just those cops. You are impacting each and every person who lives in these apartments. Those are innocent lives you are destroying and putting at risk for your “fuck you” to those police officers. Take your protests to the police departments. If your riots can’t go without impacting dozens of innocent people, then you need to go home.
This is just one of those buildings, but I assume there are more. I so hope no one was injured and killed in these riots, but I wouldn’t be surprised if these assholes did kill an innocent person in these fires.
Actually, I have more images to share over this.
Here’s a neighborhood caught on fire due to these riots.
Look at that stop sign. Those fires are so hot, they’re melting signs.
And it wasn’t just homes burned down. No, they also burned cars, as well.
Stores that had no affiliation with this were burned to the ground and completely destroyed.
Whatever you were trying to accomplish, was it worth it? Ruining those lives and stores? Putting all those people out onto the street? You’ll be damn lucky if no one was killed.
(…I don’t think they’d like the multiple videos that disprove the party switch theory…)
The switch is a myth and democrats are still operating on the same old racist roots.
Woodrow Wilson, democrat president, supported the KKK and helped revive it by popularizing KKK revisionist film Birth of a Nation.
Blacks began voting blue in 1936 in the proposal of the New Deal, not because they aligned with democrat party values but for political expediency.
“I’ll have them niggers voting democrat for the next 200 years.” - Lyndon B. Johnson, democrat president.
Democrats continuously filibustered the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and it was passed in spite of democrats, not by democrats.
Democrats voted 61% and Republicans 24% against the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which passed 333-85. The Senate passed with the support of 94 percent of the Republican caucus and 73 percent of the Democratic caucus.
From the National Review:
The Democrats have been sedulously rewriting history for decades. Their preferred version pretends that all the Democratic racists and segregationists left their party and became Republicans starting in the 1960s. How convenient. If it were true that the South began to turn Republican due to Lyndon Johnson’s passage of the Civil Rights Act, you would expect that the Deep South, the states most associated with racism, would have been the first to move. That’s not what happened. The first southern states to trend Republican were on the periphery: North Carolina, Virginia, Texas, Tennessee, and Florida. (George Wallace lost these voters in his 1968 bid.) The voters who first migrated to the Republican party were suburban, prosperous New South types. The more Republican the South has become, the less racist.
From Liberty Voice:
All but the redoubtable Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the Southern Democrat who managed to stay Democrat for well over 40 years; despite all the mythical ship-jumping which is supposed to have occurred. All of the modern liberal Democrats who adored him, like Bill Clinton, Barrack Obama and Al Gore, must not have been told Byrd was a Grand Klegal in the KKK before he ran for the Senate as a Democrat. Byrd was a celebrated member of the Democrat party up til his death, in 2010. So it is not as if the discussion of his affiliations is somehow ancient history.
Such a tired old argument. Ignorance is bliss!
I wish I could credit whoever made what I posted below. Unfortunately I didn’t think to do that. Whoever you are, thank you.
Party switch
June 17, 1854
The Republican Party is officially founded as an abolitionist party to slavery in the United States.
October 13, 1858
During the Lincoln-Douglas debates, U.S. Senator Stephen Douglas (D-IL) said, “If you desire negro citizenship, if you desire to allow them to come into the State and settle with the white man, if you desire them to vote on an equality with yourselves, and to make them eligible to office, to serve on juries, and to adjudge your rights, then support Mr. Lincoln and the Black Republican party, who are in favor of the citizenship of the negro. For one, I am opposed to negro citizenship in any and every form. I believe this Government was made on the white basis. I believe it was made by white men for the benefit of white men and their posterity for ever, and I am in favor of confining citizenship to white men, men of European birth and descent, instead of conferring it upon negroes, Indians, and other inferior races.”. Douglas became the Democrat Party’s 1860 presidential nominee.
April 16, 1862
President Lincoln signed the bill abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia. In Congress, almost every Republican voted for yes and most Democrats voted no.
July 17, 1862
Over unanimous Democrat opposition, the Republican Congress passed The Confiscation Act stating that slaves of the Confederacy “shall be forever free”.
April 8, 1864
The 13th Amendment banning slavery passed the U.S. Senate with 100% Republican support, 63% Democrat opposition.
January 31, 1865
The 13th Amendment banning slavery passed the U.S. House with unanimous Republican support and intense Democrat opposition.November 22, 1865
Republicans denounced the Democrat legislature of Mississippi for enacting the “black codes” which institutionalized racial discrimination.
February 5, 1866
U.S. Rep. Thaddeus Stevens (R-PA) introduced legislation (successfully opposed by Democrat President Andrew Johnson) to implement “40 acres and a mule” relief by distributing land to former slaves.
March 27, 1866
Democrat President Andrew Johnson vetoes of law granting voting rights to blacks.
May 10, 1866
The U.S. House passed the Republicans’ 14th Amendment guaranteeing due process and equal protection of the laws to all citizens. 100% of Democrats vote no.
June 8, 1866
The U.S. Senate passed the Republicans’ 14th Amendment guaranteeing due process and equal protection of the law to all citizens. 94% of Republicans vote yes and 100% of Democrats vote no.
March 27, 1866
Democrat President Andrew Johnson vetoes of law granting voting rights to blacks in the District of Columbia.
July 16, 1866
The Republican Congress overrode Democrat President Andrew Johnson’s veto of legislation protecting the voting rights of blacks.
March 30, 1868
Republicans begin the impeachment trial of Democrat President Andrew Johnson who declared, “This is a country for white men, and by God, as long as I am President, it shall be a government of white men.”September 12, 1868
Civil rights activist Tunis Campbell and 24 other blacks in the Georgia Senate (all Republicans) were expelled by the Democrat majority and would later be reinstated by the Republican Congress.
October 7, 1868
Republicans denounced Democrat Party’s national campaign theme: “This is a white man’s country: Let white men rule.”
October 22, 1868
While campaigning for re-election, Republican U.S. Rep. James Hinds (R-AR) was assassinated by Democrat terrorists who organized as the Ku Klux Klan. Hinds was the first sitting congressman to be murdered while in office.
December 10, 1869
Republican Gov. John Campbell of the Wyoming Territory signed the FIRST-in-nation law granting women the right to vote and hold public office.
February 3, 1870
After passing the House with 98% Republican support and 97% Democrat opposition, Republicans’ 15th Amendment was ratified, granting the vote to ALL Americans regardless of race.
February 25, 1870
Hiram Rhodes Revels (R-MS) becomes the first black to be seated in the United States Senate.
May 31, 1870
President U.S. Grant signed the Republicans’ Enforcement Act providing stiff penalties for depriving any American’s civil rights.
June 22, 1870
Ohio Rep. Williams Lawrence created the U.S. Department of Justice to safeguard the civil rights of blacks against Democrats in the South.
September 6, 1870
Women voted in Wyoming in first election after women’s suffrage signed into law by Republican Gov. John Campbell.
February 1, 1871
Rep. Jefferson Franklin Long (R-GA) became the first black to speak on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.
February 28, 1871
The Republican Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1871 providing federal protection for black voters.
April 20, 1871
The Republican Congress enacted the Ku Klux Klan Act, outlawing Democrat Party-affiliated terrorist groups which oppressed blacks and all those who supported them.
October 10, 1871
Following warnings by Philadelphia Democrats against black voting, Republican civil rights activist Octavius Catto was murdered by a Democrat Party operative. His military funeral was attended by thousands.
October 18, 1871
After violence against Republicans in South Carolina, President Ulysses Grant deployed U.S. troops to combat Democrat Ku Klux Klan terrorists.
November 18, 1872
Susan B. Anthony was arrested for voting after boasting to Elizabeth Cady Stanton that she voted for “Well, I have gone and done it — positively voted the straight Republican ticket.”January 17, 1874
Armed Democrats seized the Texas state government, ending Republican efforts to racially integrate.
September 14, 1874
Democrat white supremacists seized the Louisiana statehouse in attempt to overthrow the racially-integrated administration of Republican Governor William Kellogg. Twenty-seven were killed.
March 1, 1875
The Civil Rights Act of 1875, guaranteeing access to public accommodations without regard to race, was signed by Republican President U.S. Grant and passed with 92% Republican support over 100% Democrat opposition.
January 10, 1878
U.S. Senator Aaron Sargent (R-CA) introduced the Susan B. Anthony amendment for women’s suffrage. The Democrat-controlled Senate defeated it four times before the election of a Republican House and Senate that guaranteed its approval in 1919.
February 8, 1894
The Democrat Congress and Democrat President Grover Cleveland joined to repeal the Republicans’ Enforcement Act which had enabled blacks to vote.
January 15, 1901
Republican Booker T. Washington protested the Alabama Democrat Party’s refusal to permit voting by blacks.
May 29, 1902
Virginia Democrats implemented a new state constitution condemned by Republicans as illegal, reducing black voter registration by almost 90%.
February 12, 1909
On the 100th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth, black Republicans and women’s suffragists Ida Wells and Mary Terrell co-founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
May 21, 1919
The Republican House passed a constitutional amendment granting women the vote with 85% of Republicans and only 54% of Democrats in favor. In the Senate 80% of Republicans voted yes and almost half of Democrats voted no.
August 18, 1920
The Republican-authored 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote became part of the Constitution. Twenty-six of the 36 states needed to ratify had Republican-controlled legislatures.
January 26, 1922
The House passed a bill authored by U.S. Rep. Leonidas Dyer (R-MO) making lynching a federal crime. Senate Democrats blocked it by filibuster.
June 2, 1924
Republican President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill passed by the Republican Congress granting U.S. citizenship to all Native Americans.
October 3, 1924
Republicans denounced three-time Democrat presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan for defending the Ku Klux Klan at the 1924 Democratic National Convention.
June 12, 1929
First Lady Lou Hoover invited the wife of black Rep. Oscar De Priest (R-IL) to tea at the White House, sparking protests by Democrats across the country.
August 17, 1937
Republicans organized opposition to former Ku Klux Klansman and Democrat U.S. Senator Hugo Black who was later appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by FDR. Black’s Klan background was hidden until after confirmation.
June 24, 1940
The Republican Party platform called for the integration of the Armed Forces. For the balance of his terms in office, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (D) refused to order it.
August 8, 1945
Republicans condemned Harry Truman’s surprise use of the atomic bomb in Japan. It began two days after the Hiroshima bombing when former Republican President Herbert Hoover wrote that “The use of the atomic bomb, with its indiscriminate killing of women and children, revolts my soul.”
May 17, 1954
Earl Warren, California’s three-term Republican Governor and 1948 Republican vice presidential nominee, was nominated to be Chief Justice delivered the landmark decision “Brown v. Board of Education”.
November 25, 1955
Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s administration banned racial segregation of interstate bus travel.
March 12, 1956
Ninety-seven Democrats in Congress condemned the Supreme Court’s “Brown v. Board of Education” decision and pledged (Southern Manifesto) to continue segregation.
June 5, 1956
Republican federal judge Frank Johnson ruled in favor of the Rosa Parks decision striking down the “blacks in the back of the bus” law.
November 6, 1956
African-American civil rights leaders Martin Luther King and Ralph Abernathy voted for Republican Dwight Eisenhower for President.
September 9, 1957
President Eisenhower signed the Republican Party’s 1957 Civil Rights Act.
September 24, 1957
Sparking criticism from Democrats such as Senators John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, President Eisenhower deployed the 82nd Airborne Division to Little Rock, AR to force Democrat Governor Orval Faubus to integrate their public schools.
May 6, 1960
President Eisenhower signed the Republicans’ Civil Rights Act of 1960, overcoming a 125-hour, ’round-the-clock filibuster by 18 Senate Democrats.
May 2, 1963
Republicans condemned Bull Connor, the Democrat “Commissioner of Public Safety” in Birmingham, AL for arresting over 2,000 black schoolchildren marching for their civil rights.
September 29, 1963
Gov. George Wallace (D-AL) defied an order by U.S. District Judge Frank Johnson (appointed by President Dwight Eisenhower) to integrate Tuskegee High School.
June 9, 1964
Republicans condemned the 14-hour filibuster against the 1964 Civil Rights Act by U.S. Senator and former Ku Klux Klansman Robert Byrd (D-WV), who served in the Senate until his death in 2010.
June 10, 1964
Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen (R-IL) criticized the Democrat filibuster against 1964 Civil Rights Act and called on Democrats to stop opposing racial equality. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was introduced and approved by a majority of Republicans in the Senate. The Act was opposed by most southern Democrat senators, several of whom were proud segregationists — one of them being Al Gore Sr. (D). President Lyndon B. Johnson relied on Illinois Senator Everett Dirksen, the Republican leader from Illinois, to get the Act passed.
August 4, 1965
Senate Leader Everett Dirksen (R-IL) overcame Democrat attempts to block 1965 Voting Rights Act. Ninety-four percent of Republicans voted for the landmark civil rights legislation while 27% of Democrats opposed. The Voting Rights Act of 1965, abolishing literacy tests and other measures devised by Democrats to prevent blacks from voting, was signed into law. A higher percentage of Republicans voted in favor.
February 19, 1976
President Gerald Ford formally rescinded President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s notorious Executive Order 9066 authorizing the internment of over 120,000 Japanese-Americans during WWII.
September 15, 1981
President Ronald Reagan established the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities to increase black participation in federal education programs.
June 29, 1982
President Ronald Reagan signed a 25-year extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
August 10, 1988
President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, compensating Japanese-Americans for the deprivation of their civil rights and property during the World War II internment ordered by FDR.
November 21, 1991
President George H. W. Bush signed the Civil Rights Act of 1991 to strengthen federal civil rights legislation.
August 20, 1996
A bill authored by U.S. Rep. Susan Molinari (R-NY) to prohibit racial discrimination in adoptions, part of Republicans’ “Contract With America”, became law.
July 2, 2010
Clinton says Byrd joined KKK to help him get elected
Just a “fleeting association”. Nothing to see here.
Only a willing fool (and there quite a lot out there) would accept and recite the nonsensical that one bright, sunny day Democrats and Republicans just up and decided to “switch” political positions and cite the “Southern Strategy” as the uniform knee-jerk retort. Even today, it never takes long for a Democrat to play the race card purely for political advantage.Thanks to the Democrat Party, blacks have the distinction of being the only group in the United States whose history is a work-in-progress.
The idea that “the Dixiecrats joined the Republicans” is not quite true, as you note. But because of Strom Thurmond it is accepted as a fact. What happened is that the **next** generation (post 1965) of white southern politicians — Newt, Trent Lott, Ashcroft, Cochran, Alexander, etc — joined the GOP.So it was really a passing of the torch as the old segregationists retired and were replaced by new young GOP guys. One particularly galling aspect to generalizations about “segregationists became GOP” is that the new GOP South was INTEGRATED for crying out loud, they accepted the Civil Rights revolution. Meanwhile, Jimmy Carter led a group of what would become “New” Democrats like Clinton and Al Gore.
There weren’t many Republicans in the South prior to 1964, but that doesn’t mean the birth of the southern GOP was tied to “white racism.” That said, I am sure there were and are white racist southern GOP. No one would deny that. But it was the southern Democrats who were the party of slavery and, later, segregation. It was George Wallace, not John Tower, who stood in the southern schoolhouse door to block desegregation! The vast majority of Congressional GOP voted FOR the Civil Rights of 1964-65. The vast majority of those opposed to those acts were southern Democrats. Southern Democrats led to infamous filibuster of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.The confusion arises from GOP Barry Goldwater’s vote against the ’64 act. He had voted in favor or all earlier bills and had led the integration of the Arizona Air National Guard, but he didn’t like the “private property” aspects of the ’64 law. In other words, Goldwater believed people’s private businesses and private clubs were subject only to market forces, not government mandates (“We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone.”) His vote against the Civil Rights Act was because of that one provision was, to my mind, a principled mistake.This stance is what won Goldwater the South in 1964, and no doubt many racists voted for Goldwater in the mistaken belief that he opposed Negro Civil Rights. But Goldwater was not a racist; he was a libertarian who favored both civil rights and property rights.Switch to 1968.Richard Nixon was also a proponent of Civil Rights; it was a CA colleague who urged Ike to appoint Warren to the Supreme Court; he was a supporter of Brown v. Board, and favored sending troops to integrate Little Rock High). Nixon saw he could develop a “Southern strategy” based on Goldwater’s inroads. He did, but Independent Democrat George Wallace carried most of the deep south in 68. By 1972, however, Wallace was shot and paralyzed, and Nixon began to tilt the south to the GOP. The old guard Democrats began to fade away while a new generation of Southern politicians became Republicans. True, Strom Thurmond switched to GOP, but most of the old timers (Fulbright, Gore, Wallace, Byrd etc etc) retired as Dems.Why did a new generation white Southerners join the GOP? Not because they thought Republicans were racists who would return the South to segregation, but because the GOP was a “local government, small government” party in the old Jeffersonian tradition. Southerners wanted less government and the GOP was their natural home.Jimmy Carter, a Civil Rights Democrat, briefly returned some states to the Democrat fold, but in 1980, Goldwater’s heir, Ronald Reagan, sealed this deal for the GOP. The new “Solid South” was solid GOP.BUT, and we must stress this: the new southern Republicans were *integrationist* Republicans who accepted the Civil Rights revolution and full integration while retaining their love of Jeffersonian limited government principle
Wilson and FDR carried all 11 states of the Old Confederacy all six times they ran, when Southern blacks had no vote. Disfranchised black folks did not seem to bother these greatest of liberal icons.
As vice president, FDR chose “Cactus Jack” Garner of Texas who played a major role in imposing a poll tax to keep blacks from voting.
Among FDR’s Supreme Court appointments was Hugo Black, a Klansman who claimed FDR knew this when he named him in 1937 and that FDR told him that “some of his best friends” in Georgia were Klansmen.
Black’s great achievement as a lawyer was in winning acquittal of a man who shot to death the Catholic priest who had presided over his daughter’s marriage to a Puerto Rican.
In 1941, FDR named South Carolina Sen. “Jimmy” Byrnes to the Supreme Court. Byrnes had led filibusters in 1935 and 1938 that killed anti-lynching bills, arguing that lynching was necessary “to hold in check the Negro in the South.”
FDR refused to back the 1938 anti-lynching law.
The tiniest cracks in the Democrats’ southern bloc began to appear with the backlash to FDR’s court-packing scheme and the recession of 1937.
Republicans would pick up 81 House seats in the 1938 election, with West Virginia’s all-Democrat delegation ceasing to be so with the acquisition of its first Republican.
Kentucky elected a Republican House member in 1934, as did Missouri, while Tennessee’s first Republican House member, elected in 1918, was joined by another in 1932.
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, the Republican Party, though marginal, began to take hold in the South — but not very quickly: Dixie would not send its first Republican to the Senate until 1961, with Texas’s election of John Tower.
At the same time, Republicans went through a long dry spell on civil-rights progress.
Many of them believed, wrongly, that the issue had been more or less resolved by the constitutional amendments that had been enacted to ensure the full citizenship of black Americans after the Civil War, and that the enduring marginalization of black citizens, particularly in the Democratic states, was a problem that would be healed by time, economic development, and organic social change rather than through a second political confrontation between North and South.
As late as 1964, the Republican platform argued that “the elimination of any such discrimination is a matter of heart, conscience, and education, as well as of equal rights under law.”
The conventional Republican wisdom of the day held that the South was backward because it was poor rather than poor because it was backward.
And their strongest piece of evidence for that belief was that Republican support in the South was not among poor whites or the old elites — the two groups that tended to hold the most retrograde beliefs on race.
Instead, it was among the emerging southern middle class.
This fact was recently documented by professors Byron Shafer and Richard Johnston in The End of Southern Exceptionalism: Class, Race, and Partisan Change in the Postwar South (Harvard University Press, 2006).
Which is to say: The Republican rise in the South was contemporaneous with the decline of race as the most important political question and tracked the rise of middle-class voters moved mainly by economic considerations and anti-Communism.
The South had been in effect a Third World country within the United States, and that changed with the post-war economic boom.
As Clay Risen put it in the New York Times: “The South transformed itself from a backward region to an engine of the national economy, giving rise to a sizable new wealthy suburban class.
This class, not surprisingly, began to vote for the party that best represented its economic interests: the GOP. Working-class whites, however — and here’s the surprise — even those in areas with large black populations, stayed loyal to the Democrats.
This was true until the 90s, when the nation as a whole turned rightward in Congressional voting.” The mythmakers would have you believe that it was the opposite: that your white-hooded hillbilly trailer-dwelling tornado-bait voters jumped ship because LBJ signed a civil-rights bill (passed on the strength of disproportionately Republican support in Congress). The facts suggest otherwise.
There is no question that Republicans in the 1960s and thereafter hoped to pick up the angry populists who had delivered several states to Wallace.
That was Patrick J. Buchanan’s portfolio in the Nixon campaign.
But in the main they did not do so by appeal to racial resentment, direct or indirect.
The conservative ascendency of 1964 saw the nomination of Barry Goldwater, a western libertarian who had never been strongly identified with racial issues one way or the other, but who was a principled critic of the 1964 act and its extension of federal power.
Goldwater had supported the 1957 and 1960 acts but believed that Title II and Title VII of the 1964 bill were unconstitutional, based in part on a 75-page brief from Robert Bork.
But far from extending a welcoming hand to southern segregationists, he named as his running mate a New York representative, William E. Miller, who had been the co-author of Republican civil-rights legislation in the 1950s.
The Republican platform in 1964 was hardly catnip for Klansmen: It spoke of the Johnson administration’s failure to help further the “just aspirations of the minority groups” and blasted the president for his refusal “to apply Republican-initiated retraining programs where most needed, particularly where they could afford new economic opportunities to Negro citizens.”
Other planks in the platform included: “improvements of civil rights statutes adequate to changing needs of our times; such additional administrative or legislative actions as may be required to end the denial, for whatever unlawful reason, of the right to vote; continued opposition to discrimination based on race, creed, national origin or sex.”
And Goldwater’s fellow Republicans ran on a 1964 platform demanding “full implementation and faithful execution of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and all other civil rights statutes, to assure equal rights and opportunities guaranteed by the Constitution to every citizen.” Some dog whistle.
Of course there were racists in the Republican Party. There were racists in the Democratic Party. The case of Johnson is well documented, while Nixon had his fantastical panoply of racial obsessions, touching blacks, Jews, Italians (“Don’t have their heads screwed on”), Irish (“They get mean when they drink”), and the Ivy League WASPs he hated so passionately (“Did one of those dirty bastards ever invite me to his f***ing men’s club or goddamn country club? Not once”).
But the legislative record, the evolution of the electorate, the party platforms, the keynote speeches — none of them suggests a party-wide Republican about-face on civil rights.
Neither does the history of the black vote.
While Republican affiliation was beginning to grow in the South in the late 1930s, the GOP also lost its lock on black voters in the North, among whom the New Deal was extraordinarily popular.
By 1940, Democrats for the first time won a majority of black votes in the North. This development was not lost on Lyndon Johnson, who crafted his Great Society with the goal of exploiting widespread dependency for the benefit of the Democratic Party.
Unlike the New Deal, a flawed program that at least had the excuse of relying upon ideas that were at the time largely untested and enacted in the face of a worldwide economic emergency, Johnson’s Great Society was pure politics.
Johnson’s War on Poverty was declared at a time when poverty had been declining for decades, and the first Job Corps office opened when the unemployment rate was less than 5 percent.
Congressional Republicans had long supported a program to assist the indigent elderly, but the Democrats insisted that the program cover all of the elderly — even though they were, then as now, the most affluent demographic, with 85 percent of them in households of above-average wealth.
Democrats such as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Anthony J. Celebrezze argued that the Great Society would end “dependency” among the elderly and the poor, but the programs were transparently designed merely to transfer dependency from private and local sources of support to federal agencies created and overseen by Johnson and his political heirs.
In the context of the rest of his program, Johnson’s unexpected civil-rights conversion looks less like an attempt to empower blacks and more like an attempt to make clients of them.
If the parties had in some meaningful way flipped on civil rights, one would expect that to show up in the electoral results in the years following the Democrats’ 1964 about-face on the issue.
Nothing of the sort happened: Of the 21 Democratic senators who opposed the 1964 act, only one would ever change parties.
Nor did the segregationist constituencies that elected these Democrats throw them out in favor of Republicans: The remaining 20 continued to be elected as Democrats or were replaced by Democrats.
It was, on average, nearly a quarter of a century before those seats went Republican. If southern rednecks ditched the Democrats because of a civil-rights law passed in 1964, it is strange that they waited until the late 1980s and early 1990s to do so. They say things move slower in the South — but not that slow.
Republicans did begin to win some southern House seats, and in many cases segregationist Democrats were thrown out by southern voters in favor of civil-rights Republicans.
Debunked party switchmaster post 2 electric boogaloo
black communities have been witnessing executions like the one that happened to George Floyd throughout generations of oppression. this is terrorism, and it is not the burden of these communities to demand change. so, white people. how can we show up to support our black communities during this time?
1. call the mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey: (612) 673-2100 and the DA: (612) 348-5550. demand the prosecution of all of the officers involved in the murder of George Floyd, including Derek Chauvin (badge 1087) and Tou Thao (badge 7162).
2. text “Floyd” to 55156 and demand that the officers in charge of George Floyd’s death be charged with murder.
3. black people are asking that we STOP sharing the video of George Floyd’s death. we do not need to witness a murder in order to care about it. cruelty like this exists and it is REAL. period.
George Floyd was face down on the ground with a grown man’s knee in the back of his neck, begging them to let him breathe. the officer’s knee remained there even after losing consciousness. the officer continued to kill him. no one deserves a death of that manner and we should all be outraged. to be black in the U.S. should not be a death sentence.
https://traffickinghub.com/
Here's the link to the petition people in the comments are discussing
Shut Down Pornhub and Hold Its Executives Accountable for Aiding Trafficking
If God exists then why is there suffering? If there’s suffering then God would have prevented it
To truly understand, I feel like we have to touch on everything from the beginning so you can see how it all comes full circle, but I will try my best to explain it coherently in a few short paragraphs.
Because of the fall (when Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit) we are separated from God. Illness and pain etc are a direct result of this. And we cannot be good and righteous on our own (why we need our Savior). This is why evil happens. This is why pain, suffering, oppression, illness, torture, etc happen. Because we are not righteous and good on our own.
We are never promised a “good” life here on Earth with wealth and health. We are never promised the absence of evil or no trials or hardships. In fact, it is just the opposite. We are told it will be hard. We are told to die to ourselves and pick up our cross. It is not easy. And He never said it would be.
But, God is gracious and merciful. Like I already said, we are not righteous on our own, but God is entirely righteous. And He sent Jesus (the righteous) to die for us (the unrighteous) to pay our debt because He loves us so. He loves us all so, so much, and His desire is to save everyone. There is nothing we have to do — nothing we can do, for that matter — to earn His mercy or salvation. We just have to come to Him with a truly repentant heart and trust in Him. Life on Earth will definitely have its hardships, but nothing can compare to the joy that is in heaven OR the suffering that is in hell.
So the reason there is suffering on Earth? Because we are confined to our own humanity and separate from God - the source of all that is good and righteous.
“I’m training them boys right,” he says.
What the actual fuck
He paid…..for his sons……to be s*xually assaulted. Not to derail the post but I am tired of society’s hypersexualization of men and boys which I feel our society overlooks. Sure men and boys are naturally more sexual (as I have heard) but society often teaches them they have to be driven by their urges and sex makes a man and whatnot. This is why you hear these rappers talk about how they lost their virginity as CHILDREN and say it as if it is something to be proud of when it’s not. They were assaulted and because of how men and boys are viewed, statements like this are usually swept under the rug. We need to stop turning a blind eye to this. And I also command the black community because I find this a little rampant in our community. I’m quite upset right now. This ain’t right.
How the media depicts the Apollo 11 mission:
Actual quotes from the Apollo 11 mission:
also according to michael collins when the three of them were discussing what neil armstrong should say when he first stepped on the moon, collins suggested armstrong say “Oh, my God, what is that thing?” and then scream and cut out his mic.
all you’ve done is convince me that michael collins was one of the funniest men alive tbh
I’m ready to get into a fight with moral relativism once again.
There is objective truth. Whether you take that from the natural world or from faith or from both, there are things we can point to and say ‘this is so’.
Not every opinion is correct, not every belief is correct, you cannot validate every person.
If everything is true, then nothing is true.
James Marsden as Prince Edward
ENCHANTED (2007) - Dir: Kevin Lima
I think this is also an excellent exhibit of the urban / rural divide in America.
The cities (broadly speaking, a more liberal demographic) are seeing firsthand the Corona virus taking its toll. Many people there probably have friends who are healthcare workers, they likely know more people who are getting sick. They have more resources and more impetus to stay home - it’s easier to get restaurant delivery in a city. They probably know a lot more people classified as “essential workers” and are rightly concerned with keeping as many people off the streets as possible in order to help protect those people.
More rural areas (broadly speaking, a more conservative demographic) are, by virtue of their geographic separation from population centers, not seeing as much of the impact. The people there, already in smaller towns or being farmers with a tighter margin of budget and general financial survival, are frustrated at being given restrictions that are meant for people in cities. They see no results from those restrictions, they don’t know many people getting sick, and they’re worried about their continued livelihood.
This then gets boiled down to “conservatives are so selfish, they only care about money!” vs. “the liberals are just trying to tell us what to do so they can keep us at home while they take over!” And each side has a little truth on their side and neither side considers the other sides perspective.
so that’s fun
#not everyone is having the same experience in this crisis but are all having An Experience
@nogoawayok you’re the only person allowed to comment on this