The Charlie Kirk Shuffle: false idol

So you got nothing. Checkmate. (y)
:lolup: Brainless thread troll thinks he has something.
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Ahh, typical Maga/Alt-Right revisionism. For your education per Merriam-Webster:

Racist - 1. having, reflecting, or fostering the belief that race is a fundamental determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.

2. of, relating to, or characterized by the systemic oppression of a racial group to the social, economic, and political advantage of another

See post #7 here for examples.
so you got a quote of Kirk saying any of this?

no. you don't.

the only racism left is insititutions discriminating against whites.
 
I read a bio of Johnson and it sure seemed like 90% of Texans in those days were crude racist F****.

You'be never read a book, and coloring books from Che Lives ! don't count as real books, tard. Texas was no mare racist than the Northeast, Midwest, and CAlifornia. The Klan was far bigger in states like Colorado, California, Indiana and New York than it was in the South, but you don't actually read books and have no clue, you're just a parrot.
 
so you got a quote of Kirk saying any of this?

no. you don't.

the only racism left is insititutions discriminating against whites.

There is a difference between 'racism' and prejudice, but the nuances are beyond the ken of the left wing racists. Their Hero Karl Marx was a true racist.


Though Marx and Engels are perhaps most known for their ideas about class conflict and revolution, they both dabbled in theories—increasingly popular at the time—about race and racial hierarchies.



Not only that, but their private correspondence demonstrated an even larger degree of hostility to black-skinned people, as their writings were littered with racial slurs.



In an 1887 letter, Engels wrote that blacks were closer to “the animal kingdom” than the rest of humanity, in a reference to his mixed race son-in-law.



In a letter to Engels, Marx wrote of Ferdinand Lassalle, a contemporary socialist of his day:




It is now completely clear to me that he, as is proved by his cranial formation and his hair, descends from the Negroes who had joined Moses’ exodus from Egypt, assuming that his mother or grandmother on the paternal side had not interbred with a n—–. Now this union of Judaism and Germanism with a basic Negro substance must produce a peculiar product.

Marx had ugly things to say about various other races, too, and despite being ethnically Jewish, said that the “worldly religion” of Jews was “huckstering.”



Erik van Ree, a lecturer at the Institute for East European Studies of the University of Amsterdam, wrote of Marx and Engel’s racism in a paper for the Journal of Political Ideologies. He explained how racial classifications and explanations of economic development were a component of early Marxist thought:




In Marx and Engels’s understanding, racial disparities emerged under the influence of shared natural and social conditions hardening into heredity and of the mixing of blood. They racialized skin-color groups, ethnicities, nations, and social classes, while endowing them with innate superior and inferior character traits. They regarded race as part of humanity’s natural conditions, upon which the production system rested. ‘Races’ endowed with superior qualities would boost economic development and productivity, while the less endowed ones would hold humanity back.

Importantly, van Ree concluded that Marx and Engels’ statements on race went beyond “unthinkingly repeating the stereotypes and prejudices of the day.”


This attitude is endemic among the Democrats here and throughout the Party. They think blacks can't compete, and have to rely on DEI discrimination to get jobs. In the mean time, neither left or right wing LBJ haters can come up with a single verifiable racist utterance he made, and after a long career in public service and politics. In fact he was a lot less racist than the PArty's northeastern and mid-western blocs. Even George Wallace was less racist than the average Democrat; while he believed in segregation, he also beleived in the 'separate but equal' doctrine and upped the state welfare benefits and school funding for blacks and got a big chunk of the black vote, and even the occasional NAACP endorsement.
 
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