WizardofOz
New member
Yeah, saving an estimated million American and Japanese lives is just obscene. That is so evil it's hard to comprehend.
What is it that you think happened on August 15th, 1945?
Yeah, saving an estimated million American and Japanese lives is just obscene. That is so evil it's hard to comprehend.
I remember saying something about neoconservatism and how it seems to have only a future with only white people as conservatives. Neoconservatism is dying.
What is it that you think happened on August 15th, 1945?
That was VJ day, but VJ day was brought about by what happened on August the 6th and the 9th when the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I gave a very conservative estimate of the number of lives saved by those two events. I've seen estimates as high as 10 million lives saved by those two events, for the Japanese would have had to been almost wiped out as a people before they would have surrendered because of their concepts of honor. Think Okinawa on steroids. The two atomic bombs gave their politicians and emperor a reason to be able to surrender and save face. Otherwise a conventional invasion of Japan would have been a horrendously large cost in lives, both Japanese and American.
Slavery is an issue for Democrats, not conservatives. The Democratic party was the party of slavery in the mid 1800s. The Republican party was formed by members of a couple of different parties, but mostly of former Whigs, who were opposed to slavery. The main intention, and cause behind forming it, was fighting slavery. Solomon Chase, Charles Sumner--the guy that was beaten so badly by a Southern Democrat using a cane on the floor of the Senate while in session that it took him two years to recover enough to get back to the Senate--and Horace Greeley the abolutionist newspaper man, were influential in getting it started. Abraham Lincoln joined it within a very short time after it was started.
Stephen Douglass, mostly known today because of the Lincoln-Douglass debates which Lincoln made into a referendum on slavery, was a northern Democrat. The southern Democrats were all slaveowners and it was one of them who beat Charles Sumner almost to death on the floor of the Senate because of Sumner's stand on slavery. In fact, by the time the war started, as has been brought out by Dinesh D'Souza, there were no Republican slaveholders. Democrats owned all the slaves. This ought to be glaringly obvious as the Republican party was formed to fight slavery so what slaveowner would join it, but the disinformation trolls don't care a whole lot about their honesty on this subject.
As the Democrats, both before and after the Civil War, were completely dominant in the south they were the political party of the Jim Crow laws. Those laws were not federal laws. They were all state laws. They were all passed by Democratically controlled legislatures and signed into law by Democratic governors. And, the KKK was the creation of Democrats. It was basically the terrorist arm of the Democrat party. What's more someone couldn't get elected as a Democrat in the south for a long time without being a member of the KKK. That was reality until into the 1930s or so.
It was a Republican adminstration that desegregated the federal government shortly after the Civil War, and it was Woodrow Wilson, a southern Democrat, who re-segregated the federal government in the early 1900s. It was also the Democrats who fought the Civil Rights acts of the 1950s and 1960s. They filibustered it, led by Robert Byrd. Had it not been for overwhelming support by the Republicans in Congress those bills would have gone down to defeat.
These are the historical facts. The history of slavery and racism is dominated by the Democratic party, not the Republican party. So it is the left that has the long and shameful history with respect to slavery, not conservatives.
In my lifetime, we had the McCarty era, and an FBI director who used his power to covertly destroy anyone who annoyed him. A few good Americans were brave enough to confront them and ultimately prevailed.
McCarthy and Hoover were evil and good at it...
The Venona Intercepts proved that McCarthy was right.
You have read the Venona Intercepts haven't you?
Pretty evil huh?
Outside of the South both parties were actively involved in Civil Rights measures. The Democrats in the South were the principal opponent of it. And most of them abandoned that party over time and took up residence in the Republican party....It was also the Democrats who fought the Civil Rights acts of the 1950s and 1960s
The Venona Intercepts proved that McCarthy was right.
You have read the Venona Intercepts haven't you?
The fact that Russians were spying on us doesn't mean McCarthy was right in claiming that General Marshall was a communist or that that the US Army was riddled with communists.
Hoover?...
Regarding J Edgar Hoover:
He was the lone voice in the Roosevelt administration that spoke out against the internment (i.e the imprisonment and loss of all constitutional rights such as Due Process) of Americans of Japanese descent.
Pretty evil huh?
Curt Gentry`s impressive biography and Athan Theoharis` fascinating collection of Hoover`s secret memoranda make unlikely any future positive assessment of Hoover`s career. ?
And one of those family values was it was ok for us white folks to have those darkies workin' for us.
The "even though" makes it clear that he wasn't saying slavery was part of the greatness, but it's still pretty bad that he can overlook slavery and say that was the time we were last great. Whatever good we had doesn't wipe out the horrors of slavery.
Roy Moore in 2011: Getting rid of amendments after 10th would 'eliminate many problems' By Andrew Kaczynski, CNN (CNN)Alabama Republican Senate nominee Roy Moore appeared on a conspiracy-driven radio show twice in 2011, where he told the hosts in an interview that getting rid of constitutional amendments after the Tenth Amendment would 'eliminate many problems' in the way the US government is structured. Alabama's special election for Senate, in which Moore is facing Democrat Doug Jones, will be held Tuesday. Moore's controversial views on a variety of subjects -- including homosexuality, Islam, and evolution -- have come into sharper focus in the final days of the campaign, even as Moore has had to deal with multiple accusations from women who say that he sexually assaulted or pursued relationships with them as teenagers when he was in his 30s. Moore has denied all allegations. Moore also faced criticism for comments he made in September at a campaign rally. According to the Los Angeles Times, when asked by a black member of the audience when he thought the last time America was great, Moore answered, "I think it was great at the time when families were united — even though we had slavery — they cared for one another. Our families were strong, our country had a direction." Moore made his comments about constitutional amendments in a June 2011 appearance on the "Aroostook Watchmen" show, which is hosted by Maine residents Jack McCarthy and Steve Martin. The hosts have argued that the US government is illegitimate and who have said that the September 11, 2001, attacks, the mass shooting at Sandy Hook, the Boston bombing, and other mass shootings and terrorist attacks are false flag attacks committed by the government. (False flag attacks refer to acts that are designed by perpetrators to be made to look like they were carried out by other individuals or groups.) The hosts have also spread conspiracy theories about the raid that led to the death of Osama Bin Laden and have pushed the false claim that former President Barack Obama was not born in the US. CNN's KFile obtained audio from Moore's two appearances on the show. In the same June episode, Moore invoked Adolf Hitler in a discussion about Obama's birth certificate. In a May 2011 episode, Moore told the two radio hosts, who have repeatedly rejected the official explanation for the 9/11 attacks, that he would be open to hearings looking into "what really happened" on that day. In Moore's June appearance, one of the hosts says he would like to see an amendment that would void all the amendments after the Tenth. "That would eliminate many problems," Moore replied. "You know people don't understand how some of these amendments have completely tried to wreck the form of government that our forefathers intended." Moore cited the 17th Amendment, which calls for the direct election of senators by voters rather than state legislatures, as one he particularly found troublesome. The host agreed with Moore, before turning his attention to the 14th Amendment, which was passed during the Reconstruction period following the Civil War and guaranteed citizenship and equal rights and protection to former slaves and has been used in landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Obergefell v. Hodges. "People also don't understand, and being from the South I bet you get it, the 14th Amendment was only approved at the point of the gun," the host said. "Yeah, it had very serious problems with its approval by the states," Moore replied. "The danger in the 14th Amendment, which was to restrict, it has been a restriction on the states using the first Ten Amendments by and through the 14th Amendment. To restrict the states from doing something that the federal government was restricted from doing and allowing the federal government to do something which the first Ten Amendments prevented them from doing. If you understand the incorporation doctrine used by the courts and what it meant. You'd understand what I'm talking about." Moore explained further that the first ten amendments restricted the federal government in certain areas. "For example, the right to keep and bear arms, the First Amendment, freedom of press liberty. Those various freedoms and restrictions have been imposed on the states through the 14th Amendment. And yet the federal government is violating just about every one of them saying that -- they don't they don't -- are not restrained by them." Besides the 14th and 17th Amendments, amendments adopted after the Bill of Rights include the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, the 15th Amendment which prohibited the federal and state governments from denying citizens the right to vote based on that person's "race, color, or previous condition of servitude," and the 19th Amendment, which extended the right to vote to women. Moore's campaign spokesman told CNN's KFile that Moore does not believe all amendments after the Tenth should be eliminated. "Once again, the media is taking a discussion about the overall framework for the separation of powers as laid out in the constitution to twist Roy Moore's position on specific issues," Doster said in an emailed statement. "Roy Moore does not now nor has he ever favored limiting an individual's right to vote, and as a judge, he was noted for his fairness and for being a champion of civil rights. "Judge Moore has expressed concern, as many other conservatives have, that the historical trend since the ratification of the Bill of Rights has been for federal empowerment over state empowerment." In the same June episode, Moore invoked Adolf Hitler in a discussion about Obama's birth certificate. Moore has in the past repeatedly questioned Obama's citizenship. "Now let me ask you a question. You think that Barry Soetoro -- oh I'm sorry, Barack Obama -- you think you could get the security clearance that you got," a host asked. "Well, I don't know about that. I don't know. I haven't, I haven't explored that. But my personal opinion. My personal opinion --," Moore responded. "I think his dog could get a security clearance easier, the dog's got papers," the host interjected. "I know what you mean Jack," Moore said. The host then said that when he was in the military, Obama's documentation would not suffice to get him on a submarine. Moore responded, "Well that's, that's a problem. You know Hitler once said, 'you tell a big enough lie long enough, people to believe it.' And that's that's the problem. We've got to look at simple facts of the case, and we need to recognize we need a new administration in Washington. And it just doesn't, based upon party, we need like people that uphold the Constitution not undermine it." |
You do realize that many black Americans also had "darkies" working for them, right?
I see that the same person who posts bold faced lies about Judge Roy Moore
We're talking about depriving American citizens of their constitutional rights without Due Process of the law.
Lying, character smearing, racist, left wing tyrants do know what "Due Process of the law" means don't they?
Yep. Hoover's greatest failure...
And that justifies it, because...?
Speaking as a black person living in America, I don't think black people agree with you.And you are missing the point. Saying America was great then doesn't mean slavery was not bad.
Consider this:
What made America great then would greatly improve the lives of black Americans today if the nation had the same values it did back then. Black Americans have suffered the most under the rot of what used to be a virtuous nation.
That's what is meant by Moore. That part of what made us Americans has largely been lost and those times were far greater than today solely on that basis. I dare say that Americans would not have had the moral capacity to finally recognize the horrors of slavery and it's injustice had it not been the great moral nation it was at that time.