On February 18th 2009, Eric Holder, our first African American Attorney General gave a well-publicized speech in which he called Americans cowards for, among other things, refusing to engage in an open, frank dialogue about our race relations. [More]It's called "projection."
The cowards are Holder and his co-conspirators in citizen disarmament who refuse to engage in open and frank dialogue about race and "gun control."
[Via Ron W]
I submit AG Holder, in calling Americans 'cowardly racists', has uttered fighting words and he shall bear the fruit of his poison seed.
ReplyDeleteI'd tell him so to his face but don't expect he'd take my call.
Of course the cynic in me knows he'd revel in organized confrontation and the opportunity to not waste another crisis.
May this charlatan and provoker of racial hatred rot in one of Dante's most fearsome levels of hell.
Hmm. I've been doing some digging. There is The Black Panther Party, now operating as a foundation, and there is the New Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, which is basically the marginally polite front for the Nation of Islam.
ReplyDeleteAt least, that is what the surface reveals. I'm still digging, though.
Open and honest: I have always wanted to know the truth behind the simple fact that black males are 6 percent of the US population and are the criminals behind 47.4 percent of all murders. If this question was addressed without the cowardly Politicly Correct BS controlling the agenda of the topic I might find some credit to the AG's words.
ReplyDeleteSo until we have open and honest dialogue on this topic I now see the AG as a race baiter who is part of the problem and not part of the answer.
GreyHawk--I talk a bit about that that in a comment over at today's Examiner column.
ReplyDeleteI was in elementary school during the social-engineering '60s. Taking children -- white AND black -- out of their neighborhood schools and putting them on a bus for sometimes as long as an hour across town to change the racial ratio of schools accomplished something, yes it did. It made parents -- white AND black -- realize (not just "feel") that choices were being taken away from them in the name of SOMEONE'S *IDEA* of the "greater good." It taught them that some bureaucracies are intractable, unassailable through letters and lawsuits. What came to be known as Massive Resistance began shortly after Brown vs. the Board of Education in 1955. Whites and blacks built their own neighborhood schools or taught their children in neighborhood churches or, if necessary, outdoors, rather than surrender their parental authority to Uncle Slam.
ReplyDeleteIf schools are racially balanced now, it's because NEIGHBORHOODS are more so. What could not be done with force is happening through choice. My black neighbors and I don't NEED a dialogue on race. We get along perfectly well. We talk about the weather, and sometime about how there are so many laws today and isn't it oppressive? The laws, not the weather.
Black schools STILL are allocated fewer funds and inferior staff, even if the mayor and governor AND secretary of education AND school superintendent are black. Corruption and bureaucracy know no color barrier. Mr. Holder is trying the stage magician's trick: distraction.