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re: Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.): White nationalists can't be part of GOP base

Posted on 8/13/17 at 12:52 pm to
Posted by Lsupimp
Ersatz Amerika-97.6% phony & fake
Member since Nov 2003
79137 posts
Posted on 8/13/17 at 12:52 pm to
The "Southern Strategy" is a Marxist deconstruction of American politics that seeks to alleviate the Democratic Party of it's historical responsibility for slavery, Jim Crow etc-and transfer it onto the Republican Party who opposed slavery and Jim Crow. It only works in Prog circle jerks. Educate yourself.
Posted by silverdude
Member since Mar 2017
216 posts
Posted on 8/13/17 at 1:02 pm to
quote:

The "Southern Strategy" is a Marxist deconstruction of American politics that seeks to alleviate the Democratic Party of it's historical responsibility for slavery, Jim Crow etc-and transfer it onto the Republican Party who opposed slavery and Jim Crow. It only works in Prog circle jerks. Educate yourself.


how did you come up with that mental gymnastics.

Republican party members have admitted to using it.


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LINK /
It has become, for liberals and leftists enraged by the way Republicans never suffer the consequences for turning electoral politics into a cesspool, a kind of smoking gun. The late, legendarily brutal campaign consultant Lee Atwater explains how Republicans can win the vote of racists without sounding racist themselves:

You start out in 1954 by saying, “N----, n-----, ****.” By 1968 you can’t say “n-----”—that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like, uh, forced busing, states’ rights, and all that stuff, and you’re getting so abstract. Now, you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is, blacks get hurt worse than whites.… “We want to cut this,” is much more abstract than even the busing thing, uh, and a hell of a lot more abstract than “N-----, n------.”


The back-story goes like this. In 1981, Atwater, after a decade as South Carolina's most effective Republican operative, was working in Ronald Reagan's White House when he was interviewed by Alexander Lamis, a political scientist at Case Western Reserve University. Lamis published the interview without using Atwater's name in his 1984 book The Two-Party South. Fifteen years later—and eight years after Atwater passed away from cancer—Lamis republished the interview in another book using Atwater’s name. For seven years no one paid much attention. Then the New York Times' Bob Herbert, a bit of an Atwater obsessive, quoted it in an October 6, 2005 column—then five more times over the next four years.

Which one particular Republican spinmeister, when he wasn't preening before political scientists, knew fully well—which was why, seven years after that interview, in his stated goal to “rip the bark off the little bastard [Michael Dukakis]” on behalf of his candidate George H.W. Bush, Atwater ran the infamous ad blaming Dukakis for an escaped Massachusetts convict, Willie Horton, “repeatedly raping” an apparently white girl. Indeed, Atwater pledged to make "Willie Horton his running mate." The commercial was sponsored by a dummy outfit called the National Security Political Action Committee—which it is true, was a whole lot more abstract than saying "n-----, n------, n-----."

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Following Bush's re-election, Ken Mehlman, Bush's campaign manager and Chairman of the RNC, held several large meetings in 2005 with African-American business, community, and religious leaders. In his speeches, he apologized for his party's use of the Southern Strategy in the past. When
asked about the strategy of using race as an issue to build GOP dominance in the once-Democratic South, Mehlman replied,

Republican candidates often have prospered by ignoring black voters and even by exploiting racial tensions ... by the '70s and into the '80s and '90s, the Democratic Party solidified its gains in the African-American community, and we Republicans did not effectively reach out. Some Republicans gave up on winning the African-American vote, looking the other way or trying to benefit politically from racial polarization. I am here today as the Republican chairman to tell you we were wrong


----------------

Former RNC head Michael Steele:

Why should an African-American vote Republican?

“You really don’t have a reason to, to be honest — we haven’t done a very good job of really giving you one. True? True,”

“…We have lost sight of the historic, integral link between the party and African-Americans,” Steele said. “This party was co-founded by blacks, among them Frederick Douglass. The Republican Party had a hand in forming the NAACP, and yet we have mistreated that relationship. People don’t walk away from parties, Their parties walk away from them.

“For the last 40-plus years we had a ‘Southern Strategy’ that alienated many minority voters by focusing on the white male vote in the South. Well, guess what happened in 1992, folks, ‘Bubba’ went back home to the Democratic Party and voted for Bill Clinton.”


This post was edited on 8/13/17 at 1:03 pm
Posted by chalmetteowl
Chalmette
Member since Jan 2008
47947 posts
Posted on 8/13/17 at 3:36 pm to
quote:

The "Southern Strategy" is a Marxist deconstruction of American politics that seeks to alleviate the Democratic Party of it's historical responsibility for slavery, Jim Crow etc-and transfer it onto the Republican Party who opposed slavery and Jim Crow. It only works in Prog circle jerks. Educate yourself.
the Southern Strategy is the result of millions of voters making their own decisions... It doesn't absolve them bc those that have passed have to answer for their sins as to why they shared a lack of concern for their countrymen.

Oppression is bad. If you further it through your vote, you will eventually have to answer for it.

Parties can't control how people feel when they vote, or what's on their mind
This post was edited on 8/13/17 at 3:51 pm
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