LadyKate wrote:
Why does disagreeing with the President and his politics always seem to come back to an issue of race?
Who said that it does?
No one is saying that every disagreement with the president is racism, except fake news outlets and commentators that want to try and avoid responsibility for their *actual* racism. However, there is clearly a racist element in a lot of the criticism of the president, especially the most vitrioloic and intense criticism. I've seen it first hand, I've witnessed it at Tea Party rallies (the last one I meandered through I counted the N word used by angry white people no less than 14 times. The number of overtly and subvertly racist signs was kind of alarming, as well).
The election of a black president has really brought the racists up out of the shadows. That doesn't mean that any criticism is racism. *This* attack - the conspiracy theories that drive the so-called Birther movement, however, are driven at least in part by his race, IMO.
Quote:
I notice this stuff in regular life too...in certain circles you have to be careful who you disagree with because it will be misconstrued as racism. Consequently, in some arenas, you dare not disagree at all for fear of being labeled a rascist by default....just because you have a different opinion than a black person does not make you racist!!!
I deal with this in the South every. single. day. It's incredibly annoying.
And I encountered actual racism in the south with alarming frequency (and outside the south, for that matter). That hasn't changed since the time I was a kid living in TN with my father. It's still something I encounter in Texas (anti black and anti hispanic being the most common thing to hear).
As for those who believe that hate groups are not on the rise, that radicalism is not increasing, etc, please feel free to go to
http://www.splcenter.org/index.jsp and see for yourself.
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It feels like all the people who want limited government really just want government limited to Republicans.
---The Daily Show