Some Things You Might Not Know About Black History
At least not if you were educated in the American public school system or relied solely on MSM for your history.
Deroy Murdock has the goods:
And yes, that was the same Robert Byrd the MSM insists on calling "the conscience of the Senate."
It's a pretty sad thing that the Democratic Party successfully engaged in electoral sharecropping from the Johnson Administration on, and that people who very well knew better in the press maintained the fiction that the Left in this country was interested in doing anything more than exploit the legitimate racial grievances of an oppressed minority for the ongoing electoral power of their oppressors.
Abraham Lincoln and the men of the party he championed may not have a spotless record, but at least it's not the dark, evil litany Robert Byrd and his fellow Democrats boast of when the cameras aren't rolling.
Deroy Murdock has the goods:
January 26, 1922: The U.S. House adopted Rep. Leonidas Dyer's (R., Mo.) bill making lynching a federal crime. Filibustering Senate Democrats killed the measure.
May 17, 1954: As chief justice, former three-term governor Earl Warren (R., Calif.) led the U.S. Supreme Court's desegregation of government schools via the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision. GOP President Dwight Eisenhower's Justice Department argued for Topeka, Kansas's black school children. Democrat John W. Davis, who lost a presidential bid to incumbent Republican Calvin Coolidge in 1924, defended "separate but equal" classrooms.
September 24, 1957: Eisenhower deployed the 82nd Airborne Division to desegregate Little Rock's government schools over the strenuous resistance of Governor Orval Faubus (D., Ark.).
May 6, 1960: Eisenhower signs the GOP's 1960 Civil Rights Act after it survived a five-day, five-hour filibuster by 18 Senate Democrats.
July 2, 1964: Democratic President Johnson signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act after former Klansman Robert Byrd's 14-hour filibuster and the votes of 22 other Senate Democrats (including Tennessee's Al Gore, Sr.) failed to scuttle the measure. Illinois Republican Everett Dirksen rallied 26 GOP senators and 44 Democrats to invoke cloture and allow the bill's passage. According to John Fonte in the January 9, 2003, National Review, 82 percent of Republicans so voted, versus only 66 percent of Democrats.
True, Senator Barry Goldwater (R., Ariz.) opposed this bill the very year he became the GOP's presidential standard-bearer. However, Goldwater supported the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts and called for integrating Arizona's National Guard two years before Truman desegregated the military. Goldwater feared the 1964 Act would limit freedom of association in the private sector, a controversial but principled libertarian objection rooted in the First Amendment rather than racial hatred.
And yes, that was the same Robert Byrd the MSM insists on calling "the conscience of the Senate."
It's a pretty sad thing that the Democratic Party successfully engaged in electoral sharecropping from the Johnson Administration on, and that people who very well knew better in the press maintained the fiction that the Left in this country was interested in doing anything more than exploit the legitimate racial grievances of an oppressed minority for the ongoing electoral power of their oppressors.
Abraham Lincoln and the men of the party he championed may not have a spotless record, but at least it's not the dark, evil litany Robert Byrd and his fellow Democrats boast of when the cameras aren't rolling.

1 Comments:
Democrats were the party of white supremacy. Republicans were northern progressives equivalent to today's Massachusetts liberals. Check the electoral map. That has switched. Murdock and NRO are trying to rewrite history.
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