The Weaponization of "Racism"

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  • dogtag
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 14985

    #1

    The Weaponization of "Racism"

    And the weapon can be deadly. To be branded a Racist
    is like being gagged - it shuts you up, which is exactly
    it's intent. It can be a career killer to anyone seeking office
    if the wrong word is said to the wrong person at the wrong
    time. Blacks have used it to gain power and many US Cities
    now have a Black Governor, Mayor, DA and Police Chief. And
    all of these Cities have one thing in common - they are a
    total shambles with criminals running wild, flagrant drug use
    and an out of control homeless problem. Blacks it seems are
    not very good at running things. There, I suppose that makes
    me a racist, but the truth hurts. Consider Cecil Rhode's
    Rhodesia, at one time the most successfully economic State
    in Africa - until the natives took it over, re-named it Zimbabwe
    and made it the poorest. So, there it is; if these Black Politicians
    don't get their act together, these Cities will deteriorate further,
    but if we use Lightfoot as an example, I don't see much hope.
  • blackhawknj
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2011
    • 3754

    #2
    George Wallace said of Alabama politics in his day that the winner was whoever shouted the N-word the loudest and after one electoral defeat he vowed "I'll never be out N-worded again!"
    Now it's the Other Side that has adopted that tactic.

    Comment

    • Allen
      Moderator
      • Sep 2009
      • 10580

      #3
      We'll never hear the end of the slavery issue either as if no other race has ever been enslaved or that those living today were responsible for it or a part of it.

      Comment

      • rayg
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 7444

        #4
        Originally posted by Allen
        We'll never hear the end of the slavery issue either as if no other race has ever been enslaved or that those living today were responsible for it or a part of it.
        How true!

        Comment

        • Vern Humphrey
          Administrator - OFC
          • Aug 2009
          • 15875

          #5
          My approach is when one of these holier-than-thou hemorrhoids starts talking about slavery, I say, "How could you let that happen? Why didn't you stop it?"

          And when they finish stuttering, I say, "Do you mean you aren't responsible for what happened before you were born?"

          Comment

          • Allen
            Moderator
            • Sep 2009
            • 10580

            #6
            We could also remind them of the attitude the democrats use for anything deemed important.

            "Some people did something"

            Comment

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