A
Trump-nominated federal judge has halted the removal of the Reconciliation Monument in Arlington National Cemetery, which the cemetery indicated Saturday would otherwise take place by week's end. While the iconoclasts have been momentarily restrained, the fate of the historic monument, also ca.....
Look, the reason I think you're being disingenuous is I explicitly stated "Do not pretend the confederacy was good." To me, that's a clear indication that I don't support the confederacy. So to just be absolutely clear, I do not support slavery, slavery is evil, and I think what you're asking is a trap somehow, even if I can't spot exactly how it's a trap.
And that goes doubly so that you're still deflecting. Is rebellion worse than slavery?
You correct. It represents the Democrats and their attempt to keep slavery. It's exactly why it should be kept to remind people that the Democrats fought for slavery and continue to divide people by race even now.
It represents the Democrats and their attempt to keep slavery
The slavery-loving, anti-civil rights malignancy that were the Southern Democrats shifted over to the Republican party, beginning with the contemptuous Strom Thurmond after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The heritage of the Lost Cause is in the Republican party these days.
The article basically argues that the switch did happen, but it's hard to say it's because of racist sentiments.
Does this mean that a change in white voters’ perceptions of the parties’ racial sympathies, particularly in the South, is the only explanation for the long-term switch that occurred in this demographics’ party loyalty from the 1960s to today? Certainly not. Univariate explanations for shifts in the political landscape are always tempting. But race-related policies and prejudices are but one explosive factor in the multifaceted set of causes that have led American politics to evolve as they have.
Like...yeah, but the racists still moved over to the Republican party. It may not have been because they were racists, but the switch still happened nonetheless, and they took their racist views with them.
Not really. Which party still wants to divide people into races? The Democrats. The Democrats is all about dividing people into groups that are not important. People should be treated as people and not classifications.
The Democrats is all about dividing people into groups that are not important. People should be treated as people and not classifications.
Divisions of the world aren't inherently bad either. A foreign national as a national security risk is a useful categorization in some contexts. But if you're just hanging out with people and talking to your Indian friend, it'd be unnecessary to classify him as such. Similarly, racial categories are arguably useful in some contexts. If I were a doctor, I might be concerned about high blood pressure in an African American patient. The context matter for categorizing people in the first place which categories should be used.
Because if people should be treated as people, then why should anyone be denied entry into the country? What is the point of a border but to keep people on the other side out? What is the basis for exclusion if people are just people?
Here is a partial list ( there were alot of dems that voted no and I got lazy) of racists democrats that voted against the civil rights act of 1964 and when they stopped being reps/senators. If the parties switched these guys wouldn't be representing the racists democrats into the 90's.
George William Andrews 1972
Robert Emmett Jones 1972
Armistead Selden 1968
Wilbur Mills 1976
James Trimble 1966
Robert Sikes 1978
Charles Edward Bennett 1992
Dante Fascell 1992
Paul Rogers 1978
Don Fuqua 1986
Sam Gibbons 1996
George Hagan 1972
Phillip Landrum 1976
Robert Stephens 1976
William Natcher 1994
Joseph Waggonner 1978
Otto Passman 1976
Gillis Long 1986
Jamie Whitten 1994
Lawrence Fountain 1982
David Newton Henderson 1976
Roy Taylor 1976
Joseph Evins 1976
John Patman 1976
Herbert Roberts 1980
Olin Teague 1978
William Poage 1978
James Claude Wright 1989
The article wintermute_oregon linked mentions that the switch took place over, well, that it didn't happen immediately. The article I linked said it took place over time:
Since Ronald Reagan's election in 1980, another 13 Democrats in the South -- one in the Senate and a dozen in the House -- also bolted to the GOP. Most of those came since the Republicans won control of Congress in 1994.