President Biden and Vice President Harris tour the south expressing their brotherhood with oppressed minorities and branding Republicans as racist. But it’s the Democratic Party which has carried the banner of racism. It didn’t stop with the Civil War or the Civil Rights Act, and the racial motivations of the two parties haven’t changed. Alfonzo Rachel and Bill Whittle explore the roots of widespread ignorance that allows Biden and Harris to keep peddling the same false narrative.
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16 replies on “Are They Stupid or Just Ignorant? The Democrat Secret to Hiding the Truth About Racism”
Welcome to America, Zo! Here to stay or scouting for another mass exodus from the People’s Republic?
Welcome to Texas Zo! Bill, Your messages have been reaching me since pj tv
Not intended as an offense to blacks, but MOST blacks are politically illiterate. They have listened to their “leaders” lie to them, and have bought into the democrats’ fear-mongering, to their detriment and the detriment of us all. Blacks, whites, browns– we’re all in this together, and just laws are just for us all. Similarly, laws that are unjust are unjust for us all. If a government policy is intended to favor one subset of the population at the expense of the remainder, it is misguided at best and evil at worst.
Divisiveness is a big part of our current political problems. Divisiveness serves the Left, we all know the old saying “Divide and Conquer”.
We all also know the Left lies, spins, slants and practices deception in all its myriad forms.
The problem with the current ignorance is that the ignorant don’t know they’re ignorant. Because there is a political element of the Left that actively promotes ignorance. This promotion of ignorance is presented in the guise of false righteousness. A prime example of this sort of thing is “I’m not a Republican because I’m not a racist.”
We all know Republicans are even less racist than the Leftists currently in control of the Democrat Party. We all also know that we’re being portrayed in an untruthful, dishonest manner. The problem then is what to do about that?
Until knowing and acting on the truth can become a signal of virtue — That situation is going to continue. The way to accomplish getting across the idea that knowing and acting on truth is virtuous in the public eye is to expose and shame untruth. Our political adversaries are masters at this idea of shaming people into becoming their supporters. It works.
We need to do that too, we need to take a page from their playbook and apply it to our own agenda. The difference is that we’re not “becoming like our enemies” because our enemies are deceivers. Shaming people for promoting deception is not us becoming what we despise, it’s return fire from a point of genuine righteousness.
Which will in the short term add to divisiveness. There’s no magic switch that we can throw to right our ship of state. We’re going to have to drive through this storm if we want to come out on the other side of it with our ship afloat.
You guys really need to help Zo out with that audio. I understand that he just moved and is still bringing us shows not only without interruption but even filled in for Bill when he was sick. He might not have unpacked his audio gear yet. Whatever the problem, it would be good to hear Zo’s voice without it being wrung through a poor mic and whatever is between the mic and the finished video.
Bill is usually a stickler for production values and yes, it does make a difference. It’s hard to listen to Zo and I really want to hear all of what Zo has to say.
The first black Senator was Hiram Rhodes Revels from Mississippi in 1870. The first black governor was PBS Pinchback in1871 in Lousiana. Both were Republicans.
Hiram Rhodes Revels – Republican Senator Mississippi 1870 – Appointed to vacant seat. Born a free man and had stated that as far as he knew, as far back as his knowledge went, his family had never been enslaved.
Joseph Hayne Rainey – Republican US Congress, South Carolina, 1869 – 1879. Served 5 terms.
Like a broken record , does anybody know what that means anymore, Anyway I’ve been lamenting for decades that the stupid party cannot make that fact clear Lincoln was a republican etc. even last week I didn’t hear anybody come out and point out that everyone Biden mentioned was a Democrat. This is a major problem, stupid Republicans
Can Zo’s system be made as clear as it used to be? It’s a little hard to understand.
I noticed and commented on that too. I’m listening to these videos on a fairly decent sound system and I can’t clear up Zo’s audio even with that. I can’t imagine how hard it must be to understand on a computer, pad or phone speaker but I can imagine it’s even worse.
I like Zo a lot and want to hear what he has to say. Clearly and distinctly. The terrible audio detracts from that significantly. It’s more than “a little hard to understand” for me, my hearing isn’t all that great to begin with.
Alfonzo’s microphone is awful but I’m still grateful he’s on so I won’t complain.
Amen on the butchery of language! The Radical Left has done a great job of twisting our language, and until we do we’re walking into a headwind. I wrote about this nine years ago. Sadly, it’s no less relevant today:
https://www.floppingaces.net/2013/03/18/the-language-is-why-we-keep-losing-reader-post/
Ah, the “green energy” thing… sunshine from cucumbers. If we mandate it, it will happen. The Officer Shrift mindset from “The Phantom Tollbooth” … it’s the sentencing that matters, not the actual carrying out of the sentence.
Watched a movie last night with my wife. A romance. In it, the female protagonist is into designing “sustainable” buildings – solar, with greywater recycling and solar power, “sustainable” materials (all fine things, don’t get me wrong … see the GW Bush ranch in Texas).
She “wins” an old inn in New Zeland that she ends up finding needs a LOT of work.
Not only that, she starts out continuously turning down help from the male protagonist in a very hostile manner, the term “mansplaining” comes up, strong woman, blah, blah, blah — the only strong male character IS the male protagonist (because women still DO want a strong, motivated, capable man) … anyway, they felt the need to make this an “important” subtext. It wasn’t a great movie by any means – if you ask both my wife and me, that had a lot to do with it.
Eventually she admits that help is not ALWAYS offered out of a feeling of male superiority. So I guess they threw us that little bone.
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Oh, you wouldn’t assume your waiter be the prime audience BECAUSE of the narrative. It’s the narrative that your audience is all angry white males. It’s not.
One of the early Tea Party events I went to was a “Rally for Common Sense” just north of Jefferson City … there were two of these. Zo Rachel was actually a headliner at the first one (which I missed, and I really wanted to see him). That rally was organized by a lady who was Herman Cain’s Missouri campaign manager. Open carry event, too.
I went the second year (no Zo, sadly). Half the headliners were black, and half the people there were black. Consider that we’re still at maybe 15-17% black as a population. All these black and white people, their kids swinging together on tree swings and playing together and with ALL THOSE GUNS … nobody got shot! Amazing! 😀
Several of the Politichicks were there. I got to meet Anne Marie Murell and Sonnie Johnson (who was a speaker there) – I think Gina Lauden was a speaker. I got to meet C.L. Bryant (who was THE headliner – man, what a speaker!) and Bev Zaslow. There was a black group there that was aimed at countering the progressive narrative about Republicans (FDR, or Fredrick Douglas Republicans) At any rate, it was far from a crowd of angry white males. It rained hard all morning, which suppressed turnout, but as with all of these events, it just felt good to be in a crowd of like-minded people, supporting each other. Nobody gave a flip about race or gender.
I forgot to add my favorite part. She got special solar panels that “wouldn’t be ugly”. At the unveiling, she shows the solar “device” that will power the place … a sculpture of a flower about 6 feet across whose petals were solar panels. That ain’t gonna power an inn. It wouldn’t power a house.
Whenever you do point out the history, it always comes to the mystical “great party switch” that “happened” (supposedly) … strangely RIGHT after the Civil Rights acts were passed … the Republican party took a stance that precipitated the war that ended up ending slavery – spent the next CENTURY pushing for civil rights, and then as SOON as they got it passed, they thought, “welp, that’s that, now let’s UNdo it!”
Insane.
Great video that’s been out there for a very long time by a Bob Parks that summarizes all of the history you’ve gone over (and more) very, very well. It would do a LOT of good if it went viral as far as dispelling a lot of this ignorance.
Black History Month – YouTube
Whenever you do point out the history, it always comes to the mystical “great party switch” that “happened” (supposedly) … strangely RIGHT after the Civil Rights acts were passed … the Republican party took a stance that precipitated the war that ended up ending slavery – spent the next CENTURY pushing for civil rights, and then as SOON as they got it passed, they thought, “welp, that’s that, now let’s UNdo it!”
Insane.
Great video that’s been out there for a very long time by a Bob Parks that summarizes all of the history you’ve gone over (and more) very, very well. It would do a LOT of good if it went viral as far as dispelling a lot of this ignorance.
Black History Month – YouTube
As Steve likes to say, Embrace the healing power of “And”.