Yeah well you're bug ugly
Dude, that's just my avatar.
Yeah well you're bug ugly
Troll said:What the hell are you going to say if W.VA or politicians honor Byrd one day? That they support the freaking Klan?
Troll said:
What the hell are you going to say if W.VA or politicians honor Byrd one day? That they support the freaking Klan?
Suddenly said:
(snip)
I'm sure that the Republican Hate Machine will try to distort things to make any celebration of Byrd to seem like a Klan rally, by taking things out of context and repeating them over and over knowing that most people won't take the time to find out what really happened, then apply that distortion to some mythical monolithic entity called "the left."
Or, if the Klan issue goes unremarked upon, that will be spun into some kind of "they have something to hide" story.
Quite predictable and tiresome, actually.
Troll said:People had to dig into Lott's meaning to find something to whine about.
specious_reasons said:
IIRC, I heard the audio from that ceremony. The tackiness of what Lott said was apparent. There were gasps in the audience immediately after he said it. The (probably unintended) implication of Lott's message was clear.
UnrepentantSinner said:
I'm going to excise your hyperbole down to this one sentence.
Please tell me that you can see the difference between a stupidly insensative joke and seriously (I can only assume so since it was offered as part of an honoring speech) asserted suggestion that the nation would be a better place if a Segregationist party candidate were elected president in 1948.
Whether Sen. Lott's statements were simply ill conceived can't you comprehend the difference between someone making a stupid ill concieved ethnic joke and someone suggesting that the United States would have been a better place if we'd elected a segregationist president in 1948? Hell, if anything it should shake you to your core because Jeb Bush would not only be convicted of miscengination for marrying a darkie... there's no way in hell he could have been elected governor of Florida.
I can't comprehend why supposedly skeptical reactionaries continue to defend the illogical panderings of talk radio...
Suddenly said:
Only if we consider his Klan past something to celebrate, which it isn't. If someone stands up and says something on the order that Bob Byrd is a great man because he is the last living former member of the Klan in the federal government, then that person will be political mud, and people will rightly loudly decry that assertion.
American said:
Because she is the epitome of militant political correctness and would be the first to scream like the shrill screaming b!tch that she is if a conservative had made such a joke.
Troll said:
did Lott state anything about Thurmond's segregationist past? Seriously, I think there's a double standard being presented here.
Suddenly said:
We wouldn't have all these problems if Strom won in 1948?
What was Strom's major policy position in that campaign?
Hint: He ran as a "Dixiecrat."
Now guess what state Lott comes from, and how many rednecks there are there to pander to...
Not to mention that Strom's presidential bid is largely a footnote seeing he spent the next 50 years in the senate. It isn't like the guy didn't do anything else in his life, and Lott was just being polite about his 15 minutes of fame.
Strom's central shame is his presidential campaign, while Byrd's is his KKK connections. Someone wistful of Strom's campaign is 1) saying they like racist policies, 2) too stupid to be allowed anyhere near a position of power or 3) some combination of 1) and 2).
Whereas Hillary mentioned an Indian in connection with a gas station. Odd that a conservative would consider an implication that someone works hard for a living as a "slur", but go figure.
It seems mathmatically valid to state that those that earn less money have to work more to make a living. Plus, I missed the stereotype about Indian gas station attendants. The one I hear out here in the boonies is about the Indians owning and operating convienience stores (sometimes connected to gas stations, but not always). Owning and operating a convienience store is hard work, full of both financial and physical risks.Troll said:
haha, nice try there at the end. Are you saying all gas station attendants work hard for a living, or are you just assuming that the lower the money you make the harder you obviously work? Or maybe, you're one of the few that hasn't heard all the stereotypes?
Perhaps the lack of enthusiasm has to do with the fact what she said isn't all that much of a slur. This is my point.
Either way don't quote me then turn around and imply that I felt she wrongfully used a slur. If she had been standing up and screaming about the Indians running the gas stations and mini-marts and the Arabs running the liquor stores so they can afford the hispanic cleaning lady and buy their kids drugs off the black kid on the corner, then I'd say she was using a slur. But as it is, I've not gone off about her saying it, just the lack of enthusiasm some have towards her comments whilst foaming at the mouth over Lott's. If you want I can include the lack of fomentation done when Byrd has made some pretty dumbassed remarks as well.
It seems to me that the attackers got there first, judging from the initial post in this thread.
Like I said, her comments don't bug me at all. It's the immediate rush to defend her that does bug me.
I thought NPR stood for National Public Radio. Thanks for the clarification.UnrepentantSinner said:
Oh forchistsakes. I heard this BS comparison on KneeJerk Hive Think radio yesterday morning.
mjh36 said:I thought NPR stood for National Public Radio. Thanks for the clarification.
UnrepentantSinner said:
Sorry Newbie... Jedi mind tricks don't work in this forum.
"I want to say this about my state: When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We're proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years, either,"
"All the laws of Washington and all the bayonets of the Army cannot force the Negro into our homes, our schools, our churches."
(referencing Gandhi)"He ran a gas station down in St. Louis."