They called No Kings 'the hate America rally"...

You forgot to add that they succeeded despite Democrat opposition.

Civil rights activists were frequently attacked by police in cities dominated by Democrat political machines during the mid-20th century.

Major urban centers like Chicago, Detroit, and New York were controlled by Democrat mayors and city councils, often tied to entrenched party networks that resisted federal civil rights enforcement.

These and other attacks were part of a broader pattern of Democrat-sanctioned violence against nonviolent protesters demanding an end to segregation and racial discrimination.Key examples include:
  • Birmingham, Alabama (1963): Under Democrat Mayor Albert Boutwell (elected after Democrat Bull Connor's ouster but in a Democrat-led state), police under Public Safety Commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor unleashed dogs, fire hoses, and batons on child marchers during the Birmingham Campaign. This city was part of the Democrat "Solid South," and the violence drew national outrage, accelerating the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
  • Selma, Alabama (1965): Democrat Governor George Wallace and local Democrat officials authorized state troopers to beat marchers on Bloody Sunday, fracturing skulls and hospitalizing dozens. Selma's local government was Democrat-controlled.
  • Chicago, Illinois (1966): Democrat Mayor Richard J. Daley deployed over 12,000 police officers against Martin Luther King Jr.'s open-housing marches, using tear gas, clubs, and mass arrests. Reports documented over 50 hospitalizations from police beatings.
  • Detroit, Michigan (1967): During riots sparked by a police raid, Democrat Mayor Jerome Cavanagh's administration called in the National Guard and federal troops, resulting in 43 deaths and widespread police shootings.
And spare me the bullshit about party switches and "the southern strategy".
Look at the text I enlarged in your post. Learn it, know it and know that I know it. This is the classic magtard gaslight attempt. The southern Democrats of the 1960's are NOT the Democrats of today.

What you're doing is called projection. These are posts below are actual posts from some of your republican leaders TODAY Don't get the two confused!

1760987841550.png

Finally, if I find out you're a sock for @Lionfish you won't have to worry anymore about my "bullshit" because you'll never see it again - at least not by this sock.

Grow the fuck up!
 
  • Like
Reactions: QP!
Then we're in the same boat. This is what I mean by the leftist bullshit you've swallowed you think because I'm a conservative/ Republican I must watch Fox News. Thats intellectually lazy at best.

And you think the shit you read, listen to and watch doesn't stink? See this is just another assumption you swallow as the truth and I'm supposed to take you seriously. Its one of the things I find most unseemly about you people, the assumption your right and the absolute refusal to question your own beliefs. That's the laziest fucking thing in the world.


Do you believe he's hasn't see edited Fox News clips on whatever shithole lefty media sites he slithers to?

I see them every day on X, and I don't even have a TV.
 
Look at the text I enlarged in your post. Learn it, know it and know that I know it. This is the classic magtard gaslight attempt. The southern Democrats of the 1960's are NOT the Democrats of today.

What you're doing is called projection. These are posts below are actual posts from some of your republican leaders TODAY Don't get the two confused!

View attachment 62769

Finally, if I find out you're a sock for @Lionfish you won't have to worry anymore about my "bullshit" because you'll never see it again - at least not by this sock.

Grow the fuck up!




12 guys in a chat vs hundreds of racist Democrats inflicting pain on civil rights advocates is quite a false equivalency.

Ike won three southern states in 1952 and five in 1956, when he won the popular vote in the region. And he did it while supporting civil rights.

In 1960, Richard Nixon more or less held the gains in the region, after the Republican Party had supported civil rights legislation.

How was this possible?

1964 wasn’t a point of radical departure. Republicans steadily gained strength as the old DEMOCRAT-dominated south — poorly educated, heavily rural, fearful of outside industry — figuratively and literally died off.

Jimmy Carter still nearly swept the South in 1976.

Bill Clinton was very competitive in the region, and won four Southern states in 1992.

Republicans didn’t take a majority of Southern congressional seats until 1994, and for the most part, didn’t make major inroads in southern state legislatures until the 1980s and 1990s.

Not until 2010 did they even gain unified control of the Alabama state Legislature.


 
The only ones trashing America were the ones who were singing and dancing with their creepy creepster signs on Saturday ... They are now
realizing the error of their ways...that won't happen again... The vast majority of America was enjoying a beautiful Saturday with their friends an family watching some football or visiting a pumpkin patch... Eat some lunch... You'll be able to think more clearly...
Trump has a constant string of tirades saying how much he hates America and thinks nothing was good about the country before he took office. THat pretty much everything that came prior was bad or sucked.

It is harder to find what Trump and magats like about America than what they hate, which is almost everything.

If you want to go quote from every single past Dem Potus combined any hateful statements towards America and i will only quote Trump and we will see who can post more. You up for that?
 
12 guys in a chat vs hundreds of racist Democrats inflicting pain on civil rights advocates is quite a false equivalency.
12 REPUBLICAN LEADERS! The false-equivalency is yours.

Even back in 1964 - look at who voted for the Civil rights act. It was mostly Republicans:

1760988577114.png
Ike won three southern states in 1952 and five in 1956, when he won the popular vote in the region. And he did it while supporting civil rights.
No he didn't. The Civil Rights act was passed in the 1960's
In 1960, Richard Nixon more or less held the gains in the region, after the Republican Party had supported civil rights legislation.

How was this possible?

1964 wasn’t a point of radical departure. Republicans steadily gained strength as the old DEMOCRAT-dominated south — poorly educated, heavily rural, fearful of outside industry — figuratively and literally died off.

Jimmy Carter still nearly swept the South in 1976.

Bill Clinton was very competitive in the region, and won four Southern states in 1992.

Republicans didn’t take a majority of Southern congressional seats until 1994, and for the most part, didn’t make major inroads in southern state legislatures until the 1980s and 1990s.

Not until 2010 did they even gain unified control of the Alabama state Legislature.


 
Trump has a constant string of tirades saying how much he hates America and thinks nothing was good about the country before he took office. THat pretty much everything that came prior was bad or sucked.

It is harder to find what Trump and magats like about America than what they hate, which is almost everything.

If you want to go quote from every single past Dem Potus combined any hateful statements towards America and i will only quote Trump and we will see who can post more. You up for that?
We all love FB_IMG_1760835335716.jpgAmerica...you should try that...
 
The winner of the election is not entitled to do many of the things he is doing.
Trump is fully authorized to enforce the law, Pretender.
It is not acceptable (even if you won an election) to use the justice department to prosecute your enemy list.
They broke the law.
It is not acceptable to allow masked unidentified people to grab people off American streets and disappear them without any due process or information to their families.
They broke the law. Trump is fully authorized to enforce the law. Yes...that includes deporting illegal aliens.
It is not acceptable to send Troops to American Cities because there are some protests.
Yes it is. Rioting, looting, arson, violence, organized crime, insurrection, and harboring illegal aliens is NOT protesting. It is ILLEGAL.
These things, and many more, are not acceptable under our Constitution even if you were elected. He was elected to a Constitutionally limited office, not to be a king.
Yes they are. DON'T TRY TO HIDE BEHIND THE CONSTITUTION YOU DESPISE!
 
12 REPUBLICAN LEADERS! The false-equivalency is yours.

Even back in 1964 - look at who voted for the Civil rights act. It was mostly Republicans:

View attachment 62770

No he didn't. The Civil Rights act was passed in the 1960's
AI Overview


Yes, some Southern states voted for Dwight D. Eisenhower in both the 1952 and 1956 presidential elections, contributing to the cracking of the "Solid South," a long-time Democratic stronghold
.
1952 election
In 1952, Eisenhower broke the Democratic lock on the South by winning the following states:
  • Florida
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia
1956 election
His success in the South expanded in his 1956 re-election campaign. He won all the same states as in 1952 and added one more from the Deep South:
  • Florida
  • Louisiana: This was the first time Louisiana had voted Republican since 1876.
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia
Context of the shift
Eisenhower's inroads into the South were significant because the region had reliably voted Democratic since the end of Reconstruction. Several factors led to this shift:
  • Changing demographics: The South was undergoing social and political changes, with growing middle-class and suburban populations becoming more receptive to the Republican message.
  • Democratic Party split: The Democratic Party was fracturing over civil rights, with southern conservative Democrats opposing the national party's position.
  • Personal appeal: Eisenhower's status as a popular war hero was a powerful asset that transcended traditional party lines.
 
Look at the text I enlarged in your post. Learn it, know it and know that I know it. This is the classic magtard gaslight attempt. The southern Democrats of the 1960's are NOT the Democrats of today.

What you're doing is called projection. These are posts below are actual posts from some of your republican leaders TODAY Don't get the two confused!

View attachment 62769

Finally, if I find out you're a sock for @Lionfish you won't have to worry anymore about my "bullshit" because you'll never see it again - at least not by this sock.

Grow the fuck up!


1760989237147.png

You and Mr. Tiny Penis are paranoid.
 
12 REPUBLICAN LEADERS! The false-equivalency is yours.

Leaders? Name them.

Even back in 1964 - look at who voted for the Civil rights act. It was mostly Republicans:

I know. Republicans freed the slaves, too, didn't they?

No he didn't.

Yes, he did. Eisenhower completed the desegregation of the U.S. military. By 1953, he ensured that nearly all military facilities and units were integrated, a significant step toward racial equality in federal institutions.

He also desegregated public facilities in Washington, D.C., and pushed for integration in federal workplaces, such as the Navy Yards, emphasizing equal employment opportunities.

Eisenhower appointed federal judges, including Earl Warren, to the Supreme Court, who played key roles in advancing civil rights. The Warren Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, which declared school segregation unconstitutional, aligned with Eisenhower’s broader commitment to legal equality.

Eisenhower proposed and signed the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the first federal civil rights legislation since Reconstruction. It aimed to protect voting rights by establishing a Civil Rights Division in the Justice Department and a Commission on Civil Rights to investigate violations. Though watered down by Democrats in Congress, it was a foundational step.

He also signed the Civil Rights Act of 1960, which further strengthened voting rights protections, though it was similarly limited in scope due to congressional resistance, again from Democrats.

When Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus (Democrat) defied federal orders to desegregate Little Rock Central High School, Eisenhower intervened decisively. He deployed the 101st Airborne Division to enforce integration and protect the nine Black students (the Little Rock Nine), demonstrating his commitment to upholding federal law and court rulings.

The Civil Rights act was passed in the 1960's

In the 1960s, three major Civil Rights Acts were passed and signed into law in the United States. Eisenhower signed the first one, in addition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.

Any questions?
 
We all love America...you should try that...
Trump should try it.

Again seeing him saying anything positive about America over the last 100 years is not easy. Statements on how terrible and what a disaster he thinks America has been are abundant.

No one hates America like Trump and Magats
 
Back
Top