Minister of Truth
Practically Perfect
Dixie, Truman desegregated all federal departments including the DOD.
But your argument is that civil rights was just something that caught fire in the 60s. That is not the case
Dixie, Truman desegregated all federal departments including the DOD.
I asked you to show me his domestic platform on Civil Rights, why are you still arguing that he desegregated the military? Federal Departments? What? He told federal workers they had to live in the same neighborhoods and attend the same schools? Ohhhh.... He cut the number of restroom facilities and water fountains in federal buildings by half, saving millions of dollars!! Got it! Well, let's just put a statue of Truman up there with Abe Lincoln and MLK Jr.!
This debate is not about what TRUMAN did in 1950-something... it is about the 90 years previous to that, when America accepted and condoned a complete system of racial segregation.
Throughout history, there have not been people in political power, advocating change in our segregationist policy, prior to 1963! It doesn't exist, because black people were shut out of the political process, and it was not an issue, it was presumed and assumed you supported and condoned segregationist policy, because that was how things were in America. No one stood up and said it was bad! Everyone accepted it, and continued to condone it! Again, you want to try and pretend this was some long-standing moral fight, and it really wasn't a fight. Whether politicians and lawmakers openly spoke of support for segregationist policy or not, they did indeed condone and support the status quot for a century. We certainly DID live in a segregate society, and our governmental leadership was duplicitous in fostering and maintaining it.
Dixie, you claimed no one prior to 1963 opposed segregation and that it was assumed everyone supported. That is not true, as I have shown.
There were people advocating an end to segregation as soon as it began. You might weasel out and say they had no political power. But Truman obviously did and that was well before 63.
There were people advocating an end to segregation as soon as it began. You might weasel out and say they had no political power.
That completely destroys my argument that we lived in a segregate society from the time of the Civil War until the mid 60s, because Truman took measures to desegregate the military in 1948, which is well before the 1960s, so my point has been totally refuted! I stand corrected and beg your forgiveness for my error!
Yes, Dixie, Truman was the first Dem to be supportive on blacks in any way, shape, or form. I doubt anyone will argue that point.
I do take issue with your might makes right approach to everything. You only respect power, and not all of those good people that RS alluded to, who opposed segregation for all of those years.
Obvious strawman. Your argument was not that segregation existed until the 60s and I was not attacking that. Your point was that it was wrong to blame Thurmond because nobody opposed segregation prior to the 60s.
No one DID oppose it! You think because you have an obscure instance of Truman lifting segregation for the mlitary, it means there was unanimous American political support for desegregation, and that is just NOT the case! You are trying to prop up a lie and a myth! Truman may have initiated policies which didn't discriminate by race, he may have been a personal advocate of desegregation, but he didn't propose or suggest the Civil Rights Act, that came some years later under another president.
I do think it's wrong to "blame" Thurmond for supporting something the vast majority of Americans supported and the Supreme Court had upheld. It would have been a radical position to have supported anything else at the time. Thurmond supported the status quot, and what had been the status quot for 83 years before.
No one is arguing that there was unanimous opposition to segregation, dumbass. Your claim, that no one opposed it, is wrong.
Thurmond chose to be a champion for segregation. He sought to inspire others to action against the coming changes. It was not just a few years in the 60's, but for much of his career. He definitely deserves blame for that. It's a shame he never accepted it.
The point I have made, the one you now "doubt anyone will argue", is that no one in political power supported or condoned desegregation prior to the end of WWII. That is the only point I've been trying to make, that it was an accepted practice, not whether it was "right" that it was accepted, just that it WAS accepted!
Self PWN
The end of WWII was 1945, not "the 60s."
Dixie you have been owned over and over again, and yes, your argument keeps shifting.
Uh, okay, I never said "noone", I merely said noone in power, oopps, I mean, before the 1960, ooops I mean desegregation not equality, ooops, I mean before WWII, ugh make that Truman!
Go back and read from the first post, you will find I have been consistent in my point. The challenge still stands... Show me any political leader who was openly advocating public desegregation prior to 1964! Just one example? So far, the closest example you can present is Harry Truman's desegregation of the military in 1948... before that, NOTHING!
I think I adequately explained why you find nothing, it is because American social consciousness regarding segregation didn't start happening until black veterans returned home from WWII.
Perhaps the reason you think my position is shifting and changing, is because I have to continuously correct the misconceptions of my position, so it does appear to "shift" from what pinheads argue I have said, and what I have actually said. Maybe if dishonest fuck like yourself, would stop trying to change my words around and make me say something I never said, it wouldn't seem like my position has changed. I assure you, I have the exact same position as I did when I posted this, and my argument and basis for it, stands unchallenged at this point.
Oh but you ARE changing what you said to twist out of admitting you were wrong.
Here is a quote FROM YOU in the very first post in this thread:
"For a century, every president, every Congress, and every Judge they appointed, upheld and maintained a system of complete and total segregation in America!"
"Complete and total" = including the military.
Truman's desegregation of the military in 1948 proves that segregation wasn't COMPLETE AND TOTAL as you stated in post number one.
Now, by all means twist out of your latest verbal snafu.
You can read what you want to into my comments, you haven't given us any examples of public legislation to desegregate anything yet. No presidents or Congressional leaders advocating it, nothing... save for an instance of Truman desegregating the military in 1948, you have nothing. There is no verbal snafu, just as there is no record of Congress supporting desegregation for nearly a century. You can try to hide from that or live in denial of it if you like, I can't change the mind of a bigot, and I won't try.