Originally Posted by poet
Moron. You have not. Cite where you have. The "truth" cannot be exposed as a lie. Find a present day KKK'er who claims to be a Democrat. I'll wait. Idiot.
Posted by Damn Yankee:
No, the Democrat Party simply switched tactics. The GOP kicked their butts at all-out war, so they tried terrorism. The GOP jailed the bastards, so the Democrats institutionalized racism. The GOP enacted Civil Rights legislation and Affirmative Action, so the Democrat Party changed tactics again.
It's human nature to support someone who gives you free stuff. It's also human nature to slack off when your basic needs are provided for. The Democrat Party has exploited these human traits and focused them on blacks; this strategy has been much more successful than their past initiatives (slavery, segregation, terrorism) at destroying black families.
The Democrat Party's strategy works with any special interest group, be it gays, illegals, blacks, unions, corporations, etc. Give a group special privileges and individuals in that group will overwhelmingly support you.
http://www.justplainpolitics.com/sho...91#post1227791
I had to get off my tablet and go to my desktop to address this crap. Your opinion is not certifiable "truth". Where is your documented evidence supporting your position (which, when you post it (if you post it) I will "tear apart")?
Here:
http://www.policymic.com/articles/1...erican-vote-and-their-civil-rights-reputation
"...During the Reconstruction period, African Americans voted solidly Republican, while Southern whites voted Democrat, because the Democrats had overwhelmingly supported the Confederacy while the Republicans had been supporting the Union.
Hiram Revels and Jeannette Rankin, the first African American man and the first woman to be elected to Congress, were both Republicans. In fact, African Americans were not even allowed to attend Democratic conventions until 1924. African Americans and women continued their pattern of voting Republican for decades, all the way up until the 1930s, when President Franklin Roosevelt began to make inroads with the New Deal Coalition, despite the fact that nearly all segregationists in the South were Democrats.
In 1936, Roosevelt was able to get 71% of the black vote, a devastating blow to Republicans. The GOP was able to make some gains back during the 1950s under President Eisenhower, but the next decade would see the final nail in the coffin.
In 1964, Republican Senator and presidential candidate Barry Goldwater voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Act. This was the first piece of civil rights legislation in 12 years that he had voted against, and his doing so proved devastating to his chances to beat incumbent Lyndon Johnson. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that had been written by Republicans in Congress. Goldwater claimed that he voted against the bill because he believed parts of it to be unconstitutional. Still, the bill flew through the Senate, with the GOP providing a majority of the 60 votes needed.
Although LBJ had fought against and later castrated the 1957 Civil Rights Act as a senator during the Eisenhower administration, he will always be remembered for signing a somewhat weaker and more critically challenged act seven years later.
Actions speak louder than words. Despite the fact that Republicans had led the fight for civil rights for a century, a Democrat was in office when everyone was paying attention, and he took the credit for himself and his party. Perhaps more people would not be so willing to laud the accolades onto President Johnson if they heard some of his more colorful thoughts.....Later on, no matter what hand the GOP had in things, their image remained tarnished, fairly or not. In the 1990s, a new Republican Congress led by then-Speaker Newt Gingrich ushered in the wildly successful welfare reform. Signed into law by Bill Clinton (Democrat, again) these reforms help to lift millions out of poverty and led to a roaring economy and a budget surplus.
Clinton got the credit, despite the fact that he initially didn't want to sign the bill into law.
One could say that up until the mid-sixties, the GOP had been on the right side of history for a solid century."
Today, it's clear they are on the wrong side of history on almost every issue. And even no less than Colin Powell and Lawrence Wilkerson have stated that the Republican Party is "full of racists". - poet