Tuesday, September 25, 2007

The Ugly Side of Another Failed Black Democrat

On July 30th 1866:

White Democrats, led by police, attacked a convention of Black and white Republicans in New Orleans. More than 40 persons were killed, and at least 150 were wounded. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, Military commander of the state, said, "It was not riot; it was an absolute massacre...which the mayor and the police of the city perpetrated without the shadow of a necessity."
Those ugly democratic attacks continue to this day.
At The New York Times today, another failed black leader, Bob Herbert, attempts to rewrite history with his ugly hit piece "The Ugly Side of the G.O.P." . And, of course, MoveOn.org's favorite discount rag is more than happy to push the democratic line:

I applaud the thousands of people, many of them poor, who traveled from around the country to protest in Jena, La., last week. But what I’d really like to see is a million angry protesters marching on the headquarters of the National Republican Party in Washington.

The G.O.P. has spent the last 40 years insulting, disenfranchising and otherwise stomping on the interests of black Americans...

...Republicans improperly threw black voters off the rolls in Florida in the contested presidential election of 2000, and sent Florida state troopers into the homes of black voters to intimidate them in 2004.

Blacks have been remarkably quiet about this sustained mistreatment by the Republican Party, which says a great deal about the quality of black leadership in the U.S. It’s time for that passive, masochistic posture to end.
Of course, Herbert has no facts to back up his liberal talking points.
If Herbert was honest at all, maybe he would report which party has really helped the blacks in this country.

Deroy Murdock wrote a brilliant history lesson at National Review that Herbert ought to read some time. Not only does Murdoch go over the numerous lynchings, murders and violent attacks on blacks by democrats, but he adds these facts that Herbert failed to mention in his liberal smack piece today:

Republicans also have supported legislation favorable to blacks, often against intense Democratic headwinds:

In 1865, Congressional Republicans unanimously backed the 13th Amendment, which made slavery unconstitutional. Among Democrats, 63 percent of senators and 78 percent of House members voted: "No."

In 1866, 94 percent of GOP senators and 96 percent of GOP House members approved the 14th Amendment, guaranteeing all Americans equal protection of the law. Every congressional Democrat voted: "No."

February 28, 1871: The GOP Congress passed the Enforcement Act, giving black voters federal protection.

February 8, 1894: Democratic President Grover Cleveland and a Democratic Congress repealed the GOP's Enforcement Act, denying black voters federal protection.

January 26, 1922: The U.S. House adopted Rep. Leonidas Dyer's (R., Mo.) bill making lynching a federal crime. Filibustering Senate Democrats killed the measure.

May 17, 1954: As chief justice, former three-term governor Earl Warren (R., Calif.) led the U.S. Supreme Court's desegregation of government schools via the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision. GOP President Dwight Eisenhower's Justice Department argued for Topeka, Kansas's black school children. Democrat John W. Davis, who lost a presidential bid to incumbent Republican Calvin Coolidge in 1924, defended "separate but equal" classrooms.

September 24, 1957: Eisenhower deployed the 82nd Airborne Division to desegregate Little Rock's government schools over the strenuous resistance of Governor Orval Faubus (D., Ark.).

May 6, 1960: Eisenhower signs the GOP's 1960 Civil Rights Act after it survived a five-day, five-hour filibuster by 18 Senate Democrats.

July 2, 1964: Democratic President Johnson signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act after former Klansman Robert Byrd's 14-hour filibuster and the votes of 22 other Senate Democrats (including Tennessee's Al Gore, Sr.) failed to scuttle the measure. Illinois Republican Everett Dirksen rallied 26 GOP senators and 44 Democrats to invoke cloture and allow the bill's passage. According to John Fonte in the January 9, 2003, National Review, 82 percent of Republicans so voted, versus only 66 percent of Democrats.

True, Senator Barry Goldwater (R., Ariz.) opposed this bill the very year he became the GOP's presidential standard-bearer. However, Goldwater supported the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts and called for integrating Arizona's National Guard two years before Truman desegregated the military. Goldwater feared the 1964 Act would limit freedom of association in the private sector, a controversial but principled libertarian objection rooted in the First Amendment rather than racial hatred.

June 29, 1982: President Ronald Reagan signed a 25-year extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

The Republican party also is the home of numerous "firsts." Among them:

Until 1935, every black federal legislator was Republican. America's first black U.S. Representative, South Carolina's Joseph Rainey, and our first black senator, Mississippi's Hiram Revels, both reached Capitol Hill in 1870. On December 9, 1872, Louisiana Republican Pinckney Benton Stewart "P.B.S." Pinchback became America's first black governor.

August 8, 1878: GOP supply-siders may hate to admit it, but America's first black Collector of Internal Revenue was former U.S. Rep. James Rapier (R., Ala.).

October 16, 1901: GOP President Theodore Roosevelt invited to the White House as its first black dinner guest Republican educator Booker T. Washington. The pro-Democrat Richmond Times newspaper warned that consequently, "White women may receive attentions from Negro men." As Toni Marshall wrote in the November 9, 1995, Washington Times, when Roosevelt sought reelection in 1904, Democrats produced a button that showed their presidential nominee, Alton Parker, beside a white couple while Roosevelt posed with a white bride and black groom. The button read: "The Choice Is Yours."

GOP presidents Gerald Ford in 1975 and Ronald Reagan in 1982 promoted Daniel James and Roscoe Robinson to become, respectively, the Air Force's and Army's first black four-star generals.

November 2, 1983: President Reagan established Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday as a national holiday, the first such honor for a black American.

President Reagan named Colin Powell America's first black national-security adviser while GOP President George W. Bush appointed him our first black secretary of state.

President G.W. Bush named Condoleezza Rice America's first black female NSC chief, then our second (consecutive) black secretary of State. Just last month, one-time Klansman Robert Byrd and other Senate Democrats stalled Rice's confirmation for a week. Amid unanimous GOP support, 12 Democrats and Vermont Independent James Jeffords opposed Rice — the most "No" votes for a State designee since 14 senators frowned on Henry Clay in 1825.

"The first Republican I knew was my father, and he is still the Republican I most admire," Rice has said. "He joined our party because the Democrats in Jim Crow Alabama of 1952 would not register him to vote. The Republicans did. My father has never forgotten that day, and neither have I."
Maybe next time Herbert really wants to help out the blacks in this country, he will condemn the party with the only former Ku Klux Klan Kleagle sitting in the US Senate.
If he really wanted to be honest and cared about helping blacks, that would be a good start.

More... Heather Mac Donald writes more about the "orgy of Jena coverage that will impede performance improvement and strengthen the black victim mentality."
Via Michelle Malkin

UPDATE: Michael Menkus sends a report on another Dem Slaughter of Blacks and Republicans:

I saw your post about the New Orleans Massacre. In 1870, Georgia had one as well. Basically, the Democrats in the General Assembly expelled all of the newly elected Black Legislators under the claim that Blacks could vote but were not allowed to hold office. Several hundred armed Blacks and Republicans marched from Albany GA to Camillla GA. As they arrived at the Courthouse Square, the whites of the town fired upon the marchers. As the marchers fled, the Sheriff's men pursued the blacks and killed the wounded and the ones that they could catch.
See HERE and HERE.

Well, at least democrats are making some slight progress, anyway.

More... Texas Rainmaker has the Facts on the Jena 6.

15 comments:

  1. Great, well-sourced argument to another lib black writer in the Times' stable of company men.

    Our earlier reaction to this piece here; our reaction to the Original NYTimes' piece here.

    Again, nice job; I wish I'd have thought of your title.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:12 AM

    This is totally dishonest. You are dredging through ancient history, ignoring the fact that following the civil rights legislation of the 60's, southern Dixiecrats defected to the GOP en masse (except for Zell Miller) and took it over. The crude racists who blocked civil rights back then are still doing it today, just in a different party. The GOP has not been the party of Lincoln for a very long time; instead it's the party of ignorant, backward fundamentalist racists.

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  3. Anonymous: The GOP has not been the party of Lincoln for a very long time; instead it's the party of ignorant, backward fundamentalist racists.

    Apparently the GOP isn't even the party of Eisenhower and 1957 Little Rock Central HS in your keen anonymous mind.

    And of course you're right: I've tried responding to your comment twice and keep drooling on the keyboard and shorting it out.

    And no, "Dixiecrats" were still in the Democrat Party en masse well after the 60s: George Wallace called both Alabama and the Democrats home well into the 70s.

    And...oh well, I guess I won't be keeping you. Your recall of history is too sharp--and besides, I'm late for my 'Breathing for Dummies' meeting.

    ReplyDelete
  4. ++

    Anonymous @ 11:12 AM

    This is totally dishonest.


    hah, it's mirror time!!

    ps: i highly recommend you do some research before stating your opinions as if they were facts..

    ==

    ReplyDelete
  5. bg, research? We don' need no stinkin' research. We demo-crats we look at it an' unnerstand. Simple, we don' need manual.

    ReplyDelete
  6. And I imagine you will be replacing J.C. Watts (The *last* black GOP memmber of Congress, now retired) any day now.

    Yes, I'm afraid "Dixicrats" does cut it. The Southern Strategy was well documented. Southern Dems opposed to integration fled the party in droves to join the GOP. The South is now solid for the GOP exactly for that reason.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous2:00 PM

    It's pretty amazing that you lead off with a 150 year old case to illustrate the current Democratic party. The majority of instances that you cite happened over 50 years ago.

    Sure, Bob Herbert's piece lumps Republicans into one large, bigoted group when they are not all necessarily that way. Your argument somehow manages to be more ridiculous than his.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Gotta love the LLL trolls.

    The only "history" they know is the revisionist crap they have been indoctrinated with.

    No, LLL's, it was not civil rights that made the southern Democrats leave in droves. It was the amoralistic, nihilist, anti American, Marxist bull shite and San Francisco family values that has been the policy of the party since 1972. In fact if you want to name one event that split the party it was not the Civil Rights act it was Roe v. Wade and the Democratic party's support of it. That was further exasperated by the lunacy and ineptitude of St. Jimmah of Plains.

    Ever hear of a term called "Reagan Democrat" my LLL trolls? They were a result of the party policies adopted when the radical left wing started taking over the party in 1972.

    But the exodus out of the party did not stop there. The party has been hemorrhaging voters all through 1980's and 1990's as the radical left pushed the centrists and conservative Democrats out. There was another big loss of Democrat voters after 9/11 when the party went beyond the pale with it's actions. I am one of the "9/11 Republicans". You see, unlike all of you trolls I am a 3rd generation Democrat who's family was actually involved in the party. I have a photo of my father with FDR that is autographed by him, I met JFK, RFK and LBJ. My family were on a first name basis with many luminaries of the party. I worked Democratic conventions as a pagem I worked on campaigns. And, unlike you, I was an actual card carrying member of the party. Like Ronald Reagan, I did not leave my party-my party left me. In 30 years the policies of the party have taken my solidly Democratic family and turned them all into Republicans. Even my mother did not vote for the Democrats in 2004. As she put it "This is no longer the party of FDR, Truman and JFK. There is no longer a place in it for me.

    ReplyDelete
  9. ++

    Nahanni @ 6:14 PM.. :)

    i too was a Dem all my life until
    a few short weeks post 9/11..

    i'm still a registered Dem who voted for Bush.. not exactly a Republican, though the more i've learned about their role in freeing the slaves the more i appreciate the party on the whole.. don't rightly know what i am politically, call me a conservative independent or whatever.. all i know is it's like Zell Miller said.. "a party no more".. as i also feel the Dems abandoned everything JFK stood for.. *sigh*

    ==

    ReplyDelete
  10. bg,

    If FDR, Harry Truman and JFK were alive today the LLL moonbats would be calling them "Neocons" and much worse. Not only that but they would have also been run out of the party just like Joe Lieberman was.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Amazing. The only incident post-1964 that you come up with is Reagan's extension of the Voting Rights Act (which you conveniently forget was sent to him by a Democratic Congress.

    Thanks to Nixon's "Southern Strategy," all those evil, racist, lynching Democrats of the 1960's flocked to the Republican Party.

    Give it up.

    ReplyDelete
  12. ++

    Earth to Bryce..

    one does not negate the other..

    and btw.. if Dems supposedly fled their party & flocked to the Reps, that just proves how intolerable the Dem party had become.. one certainly never hears about it being the other way around..

    ==

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous8:30 AM

    Deroy Murdocks article on GOP civil rightd heritage is copied from the "2005 Republican Freedom Calendar," which I wrote. See http://www.republicanbasics.com and http://grandoldpartisan.typepad.com for more information.

    Cheers,

    Michael Zak

    ReplyDelete
  14. Anonymous8:33 AM

    Deroy Murdock's article on GOP civil rights heritage is copied from the "2005 Republican Freedom Calendar," which I wrote. See http://www.republicanbasics.com and http://grandoldpartisan.typepad.com for more information.

    Cheers,

    Michael Zak

    ReplyDelete
  15. Amazing. The only incident post-1964 that you come up with is Reagan's extension of the Voting Rights Act

    Not entirely true--there's also Reagan signing the bill making King's birthday a national holiday.

    A bill Reagan himself adamantly opposed, and signed only after it passed with veto-proof majorities.

    Yeah, the Republicans sure deserve credit for that one...

    ReplyDelete