Saturday, September 4, 2010

Racists are Democrats. Egalitarians are Republican. End of Debate.

The most important book I can suggest to anyone who supports American freedom, equality, justice, and national security.  Back to Basics for the Republican Party is a must read.

There is absolutely no denying, none whatsoever, that Democrats are exclusively guilty of  slavery, segregation, white supremacy, voter intimidation and lynching, eugenics, sexism, racism, elitism and any other atrocious political maneuvers. They are just as guilty of the same type of atrocities today as always and always will be. Those of you who doubt me on this are challenged to a debate. Predictably, all I will get from you liberals out there is your usual bigotry, and you'll try to assert that the debate is over because you think you have proven something by typing the usual "helooo" or "duhhh" qualifiers. The debate won't be over. I'm not calling all Democrats bigots. I'm stating a fact that all bigots are Democrats.
 Bigotry will always try to assert itself through politics while asserting that we should not make things so"political".
 Excuse me, but Politics is the logic of  policy, and if you take your attention away from policy, you will find yourself being exploited by someone whose "policy" is to rob you, murder you, malign you, enslave you or deceive you because they think they are superior to you and therefore you don't have all the rights God gives you. That's a Democrat. I know that there are republicans who disagree with me as well as democrats. I'm entirely right no matter how many of you think otherwise. I can prove it time and time again and again until eternity. I will not use platitudes or stereotypes like liberals do. It is so true that I can predict it before it happens. History always confirms it. That's why democrats have three versions of history and the Founding Documents: the subversion; the diversion; and the perversion.
 Not even the accepted historical examples of Democratic "equality" or Republican "racism" are correct. Each one is an oxymoron.
 John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were not Civil Rights leaders. They were far from it.
Strom Thurmond was never a segregationist Republican. He was always a segregationist Democrat until he integrated. Then he became the first southern senator to hire black men to his cabinet, only as a Republican.
Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are definitely not Civil Rights leaders. They are racist extremists and political demagogues.
The Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Jr. was not a liberal. He was a very conservative registered republican. He had a Phd. in theology. He was so smart, he skipped two grades in high school and got his doctorate by the age of twenty six.
The Civil Rights movement did not begin in 1960. It began when Dwight Eisenhower and Everitt Dirksen drafted and proposed the Civil Rights Act of 1957. Democrat's favorite Klansman Senator, Robert Byrd, conducted the longest filibuster in history trying to kill the bill. As I understand, John Kennedy was a senator from Massachusetts, and he voted "NO".
 So to all you liberal racist sexist bigots out there who think your condescending academic attitude is not  recognized as pure socialist bigotry. In your face! Bring it on!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Scalawags: Southern Republicans Who Supported the Union

I often like to refer to myself as a scalawag. Pejorative as it sounds, a scalawag is a southerner who formed an alliance with the freedmen and the carpetbaggers during the reconstruction period after the Civil War. A scalawag was seen as a traitor to the confederacy I suppose. They helped build the churches, newspapers and schools for the freedmen. A scalawag was a southern republican. Democrats, the KKK, threatened the scalawags and the carpetbaggers with the same punishment they had threatened the freedmen with. This is all repetitive if you read my last post.
My point is always this. Those who wish to exploit, or alienate the rights of someone, must circumvent the Constitution, particularly the Bill of Rights. The first ten amendments to the Constitution are the ten articles from the Bill of Rights. The Bill Of Rights is what constitutes a Republic. The abolitionists, carpetbaggers, scalawags and all other republicans are called republicans because they...we...support the Bill of Rights. The Radical Republicans passed the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth amendments in Congress. The Democrats opposed the thirteenth amendment by more than seventy five percent. They opposed the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments by one hundred percent.
 Forget the notion that Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery. He had been dead for about eight months before the amendments began to pass. He did not have the authority as president to do so, otherwise he would have been a dictator, not a president. It takes a Congress to pass law, not a president. Presidents must execute the law, not decide what law is. Lincoln emancipated four hundred thousand slaves under the confiscation act as his authority as president did allow during a time of war. Oh, don't forget, Lincoln was a hillbilly from Kentucky, a southern state. Lincoln was a scalawag too.
 But in order to circumvent the republic, and exploit the helpless minority, one must rely on a form of government known as democracy, a show of hands, all in favor say aye! When something can be decided simply by a show of hands, then the law, right and wrong, can be ignored. That's why they are called "democrat". Yes, democrat is pejorative too. Democrats reject the rule of law because it stands in the way of their agenda. A bigot who wants to deny rights to those he feels superior to cannot tolerate the Constitution. Bigots cannot tolerate republicans.
A scalawag governor from North Carolina was impeached by the democrats because he had fought the Klan. His name was William Woods Holden. I'll tell his story next post.
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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Carpetbaggers targeted by the Klan.

A cartoon threatening that the KKK would lynch...Image via Wikipedia
After the Civil War, many Union Army veterans, officers, and northerners in general decided to build churches, newspapers and schools in the southern states to help the freedmen assimilate to society. These veterans and others were primarily Republicans. There were Democrats on the Union side from the North, but their reason for supporting the Union was their opposition to secession, not support for abolition.
The republicans that came to the south were resented by the ex confederates. They referred to the migrants as "carpetbaggers" because they generally carried what they had in luggage made from materials that resembled carpet. Southerners accused them of being opportunists who were only interested in personal gain at the expense of an already impoverished white population. The Ku Klux Klan threatened the carpetbaggers with lynching as well as the freedmen.
Some of the schools, churches and newspapers that were built by the carpetbaggers and freedmen with the help of scalawags were burned down by Klansmen and other white supremacy terrorist groups such as the "Knights of the White Camelia" and the "Red Shirts".
 One incident was the Insurrection at Wilmington, North Carolina in 1898. About five hundred white supremacist democrats led by Alfred Wadell forced hundreds of black citizens to flee, destroyed the newspaper press, the Daily Record, and forced Republican members of the cities government to resign.
 Recently, a democrat politician said that if "Republicans were elected, black schools and churches would burn". That wasn't just a warning, it was a threat!
 Things are no different today than they were between republicans and democrats.
 



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Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War


Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War from the History Channel hints around at my point of this blog. That point is that bigotry, whether it's racial, sexist, academic, elitist or any other form, is incompatible with republicanism and the Republican Party. Let the Democrats say what they will, there is no way a bigot can exploit anyone, minority or majority, when the rules of the "republic for which it stands" are kept sacred. Democrats have a knack for calling Republicans everything they are themselves. It's not to say that all Democrats are bigots, but all bigots are Democrats. The Ku Klux Klan was the terrorist wing of the Democratic Party whose sole mission was to make sure they were not outvoted by the black republicans in the southern states. They certainly were outnumbered by the registration of black voters before the election of 1866 in all the southern states, not even a full year after the Republicans passed the thirteenth amendment in Congress. The Northern democrats couldn't even support the amendment with twenty five percent. The southern democrats were not there. All but one had left the Union to join the Confederate States. Even our first Republican President Abraham Lincoln was murdered by a Democrat. John Wilkes Boothe was an actor from a family of actors who were all Democrats except for one brother who disowned him for killing Lincoln. Things are so much the same today. Actors tend to be elitists I suppose. Most who hated Pres.George W. Bush behaved the same way they did during the Reconstruction Period.

More on the Carpetbaggers, Scalawags, Copperheads and Freedmen later.
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Sunday, August 1, 2010

What Can I Do? After the Tea Party

Protests and rallies are not enough. A book is offered which guides those who fear an erosion of freedom. After the Tea Party, the question remains, "What Can I Do?" Take steps now to make Congress listen to You! Answer the question, "What Can I Do?"
Click Here!

Johnny Cash tells a story about the American Flag

Republic vs Democracy

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Senator Sumner

Charles Sumner. Library of Congress descriptio...Image via Wikipedia
Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner (January 6, 1811- March 11, 1874), a Radical Republican leader, He was beaten badly by Preston Brooks, a South Carolina Representative, in 1856. Sumner had mocked Stephen Douglas and Andrew Butler in a speech he made opposing slavery.
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The Reconstruction Era

Thaddeus Stevens. Library of Congress descript...Image via Wikipedia
House Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania (April 4,1792-August 11,1868), was a leader of the Radical Republicans who opposed President Abraham Lincoln's lenient treatment of ex-Confederates. Stevens was the most aggressive abolitionist. His funeral in Lancaster, Pennsylvania was attended by twenty thousand people, half of whom were freedmen. The epithet on his tombstone was his own writing. "I repose in this quiet and secluded spot, not from any natural preference for solitude,  but finding other cemeteries limited as to race, by charter rules, I have chosen this that I might illustrate in my death the principles which I advocated through a long life, equality of man before his Creator."

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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

We all took part in America's Revolutions

We don't get much from our history classes in schools like we should. I am fascinated by the history of black patriots. There were so many, yet we only learned about one in high school, Crispus Attucks, the first man to die in the struggle for our nations independence. A black man. But there were so many more than him. Immediately after the Civil War, former slaves began educating themselves. By 1875, there were almost two dozen black senators and representatives in Congress and hundreds at the state level in the southern states. The reason we have not heard of them, I believe, is because they were all republican. The KuKluxKlan's primary function was to prevent the black and white republican voters from electing black republicans to their state legislatures. Setting the Record Straight: American History in Black and White, by David Barton, is available in paperback and DVD. I urge you to get it and read or watch it several times. Black Americans have so much to be proud of and so many reasons to love this country.
Setting the Record Straight: American History in Black & White

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Remember the Republic?

Back to Basics for the Republican Party, Third Edition
A great book for anyone who wants to learn about the origin of our party. The party of free market capitalism is synonymous with the abolition movement. Back to Basics for the Republican Party by Michael Zak. I highly recommend this book.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

And God said "Let there be a Republic"

Democrats and Republicans believe that America is a democracy. Not true. America is more than that. America is a republic. When you stand up to say the pledge of allegiance to the flag, do you say "and to the democracy for which it stands"? No. Why is that? Because the framers of the constitution drafted a document that would permit democracy only with rules written into the articles and the first ten amendments (the Bill of Rights) that would 'constitute' a form of government known as a Republic.
The Bill of Rights, and the amendments that followed, are limitations on what the government has the authority to do.
The Republican Party of today was born in 1854 from the abolitionist movement. When the Democratic Party attempted to expand slavery into the new territories that were entering the United States, the outrage over 'The Kansas-Nebraska Act' sparked a grass roots movement devoted to republican values.
Shortly after the Civil War, the Republican Party in Congress passed the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution.
The fundamental values of republicanism today are the same as they were then, but they are sadly misunderstood by republicans themselves, and despised by many democrats who wish to push the limits beyond the rule of law. Democrats want the rule of the majority without regard for the law. This is naturally predictable because that's what the difference between a republic and a simple democracy is.
This blog is intended to clear up the myths and misinformation about the republic and the republican party. A true republican should understand the history of the party as it relates to the present, and understand that there is no shame in being republican. We have no history of racism, slavery, segregation or eugenics that our opponents on the other side of the aisle try to label us with simply because we have a majority in the south.
When fifty-one percent of the people exploits the other forty-nine percent by a simple majority vote, we call it democracy.
When rules forbid the exploitation and tyranny of democracy, we call it a republic.
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