How is Trump claiming Gonzales is Mexican, when he is Mexican, supposed to be racist???????????????
Because he didn't just claim that the judge was Mexican. He said that the judge couldn't treat him fairly because he's Mexican.
How is Trump claiming Gonzales is Mexican, when he is Mexican, supposed to be racist???????????????
Which is trueBecause he didn't just claim that the judge was Mexican. He said that the judge couldn't treat him fairly because he's Mexican.
Which is true
Now, no one here has defended Maher. Folks just brought him up as if somehow a guy on the putative left can balance out Trump's misdeeds, and just expected that people would defend him, and that would somehow make it a wash. It doesn't. Two wrongs don't make a right, and Bill Maher is a guy with a TV show. Donald Trump wields real political power, and has the support of a real political coalition.
Yes. There are young boys playing on the floor behind you with sensitive ears.I thought he was spot on with this part.
(It's Bill Maher, so watch at your own risk)
He didn't say that.Because he didn't just claim that the judge was Mexican. He said that the judge couldn't treat him fairly because he's Mexican.
Because he didn't just claim that the judge was Mexican. He said that the judge couldn't treat him fairly because he's Mexican.
In the sense that not all colleges are equals in terms of curriculum or faculty, sure.To a great extent, a person's attitude toward the war of 1861-65 depends upon when and where he or she went to college if they did go to college.
Intelligent people have, sadly, taken the racist side of the coin at various times in history. Being smart doesn't necessarily free someone from bigotry. Woodrow Wilson had by every account an impressive intellect. He was also a racist and when he spoke on race he might as well have been a blithering idiot for all the good his intellect did him. I suspect because he focused it outwardly. Socrates was right about the unexamined life and what it leads to often enough is less profound than profane.1979 was becoming late for a history professor to take the "racist" side in the 1861-1865 war because by 1979 political correctness was going on in the universities, including at the University of Texas in Austin.
Or, if he favored the racist coin, you might stop trying to cobble conspiratorial excuses and realize that he failed himself, as Wilson before him and many others had.You might say Professor Ellis was just being honest and was following the facts of history.
Rather, while racism was rampant in every part of the country and firmly seated in more men than not, the evil of slavery and the desire of the South to expand it to the territories to keep pace with or exceed the political power of the free states was the division that led to the war. That war was a last gasp effort by those in the South who profited by the institution and realized the death knell of that way of life was sounding absent withdraw from a Union that would become more and more opposed to it. Lincoln and others were determined to restrict the borders of the slave states.There is another factor in the cause of the 1861-1865 war, and real or imagined racism, and that is the role of a dictator who became president in 1861. There was at that time what history called the Radical Republicans, and there was the ongoing conflict between the New England former Puritan elite against the Southern Planter Elite which was actually racist.
That's one debatable way to look at it. Another is that the South withdrew, fired upon a federal installation and reaped the whirlwind of its evil.Lincoln turned out to be a dictator, but a deceptive one.
Complete nonsense. You can't divide any more thoroughly than the states did in attempting to withdraw from the Union. Lincoln preserved that Union and eventually ended a vile institution at its core, a mark on the soul of our nation, north and south.He claimed he was saving the Union, but in the process was dividing the nation even more along its fault lines.
I've never heard anyone claim that the war was over emancipation. Mostly I hear people who want to subtly set the table for denying that slavery was the issue begin with that bell. There were all sorts of associative issues in the war, but the war itself was simply and directly as stated by most of the declarations of states attempting withdraw, slavery and the north's interference, failure to support, and movement toward its restriction.Though there was a movement to free the Black slaves in both North and South at the time of the 1861 election, this was not the primary cause of the 1861-65 war.
A lie the men who wrote state declarations attest to in their own words, not relying on revisionist historians and others. I've quoted them and linked to them often enough."The South did not secede primarily because of slavery.
Lincoln had declared his intent that the slave states would expand no farther, supra. The wealthy gentlemen of the South understood what that meant over time. So did Lincoln. And so the war.In Lincoln's First Inaugural Address he promised he had no intention to change slavery in the South. He argued it would be unconstitutional for him to do so. But he promised he would invade any state that failed to collect tariffs in order to enforce them. It was received from Baltimore to Charleston as a declaration of war on the South."
Rather, while racism was rampant in every part of the country and firmly seated in more men than not, the evil of slavery and the desire of the South to expand it to the territories to keep pace with or exceed the political power of the free states was the division that led to the war.
He called him a "Mexican" and impugned his ability to do his job objectively. Pat throws a lot of sand into the air, but it's still not smoke he's making and there's no fire at the heart of it.The Donald & The La Raza Judge By Patrick J. Buchanan June 7, 2016
Before the lynching of The Donald proceeds, what exactly was it he said about that Hispanic judge?
Of course Pat is being disingenuous, but to answer anyway, no. He could have claimed a bias on the judge's part due to certain observable leanings and without adding the "Mexican" comment. But the remarks he made as he made them are indefensible or should be to anyone without a bias problem of their own.Can there be any defense of a statement so horrific?
Lincoln had declared his intent that the slave states would expand no farther, supra. The wealthy gentlemen of the South understood what that meant over time. So did Lincoln. And so the war.
Not a jot, your powerful declaration notwithstanding.Make it up as you go boss.....
I'll continue to be rational and factual and you can keep throwing names at it.you wanna be naïve, go ahead....but your not going to do it here.
I don't care what was in the heart of the north, though Uncle Tom's Cabin had started a growing alteration of the popular sentiment in regard to slavery and the movement for its abolition continued to gain power. That the South left to champion slavery and the expansion of the slave state is sufficient for condemnation and reason enough to celebrate the Union victory.You neglected to tell why the north didn't want slavery in the new territories....it wasn't because slavery was an evil institution....
That's not an answer to anything that it purported to follow and most men were racist by our lights. Some of them matured and changed over time and some did remarkable things in spite of their prejudice.Because LINCOLN was a bonafide thru and thru racist....just as much as the southern plantation owners...
I don't care what was in the heart of the north,
I'm fine with an examination of a heart that doesn't support an attempt to ennoble the ignoble and is willing to take a hard and saddened look at the root of my own ancestry. But while I have deep feeling on the point, it originates in reason and is singularly defensible using that faculty.Of course you don't...cause that opens up your heart in the matter.
Is this your non response to my rebuttal on Buchanan or a continuation of your factually deficient, largely subjective bit on the larger issue of the Civil War? Given neither are factually supported it's hard to tell.Yeah, let' have our only white preserve
Prior to the 60s essentially true in much of the nation, the nation Pat romanticized in the quote I noted.....blacks are not welcome...
Again, I've presented fact. I've set out the preserved words and reasons of the South for its attempt to withdraw and I've noted the reality of what was preserved and how that changed the landscape of a nation stained and corrupted by an institutionalized evil. In response to your printing of Buchanan's attempt to defend the indefensible I noted the root of his response and the similar problem he appears to share with the president. That's not spin, which is why you can't address it, only attempt to mislabel it...you can spin it anyway you want...
Lincoln and company wanted an all white preserve so to speak. Couple that with telling the north and the south you can have your slaves....he had no intention of freeing them.
I wrote more than brumley's misleading use of, "I don't care what was in the heart of the north" (which is debatable and differed among men) and dr, being destitute in his cause, offered that truncation and this poverty:
I'm fine with an examination of a heart that doesn't support an attempt to ennoble the ignoble and is willing to take a hard and saddened look at the root of my own ancestry. But while I have deep feeling on the point, it originates in reason and is singularly defensible using that faculty.
Is this your non response to my rebuttal on Buchanan or a continuation of your factually deficient, largely subjective bit on the larger issue of the Civil War? Given neither are factually supported it's hard to tell.
Prior to the 60s essentially true in much of the nation, the nation Pat romanticized in the quote I noted.
Again, I've presented fact. I've set out the preserved words and reasons of the South for its attempt to withdraw and I've noted the reality of what was preserved and how that changed the landscape of a nation stained and corrupted by an institutionalized evil. In response to your printing of Buchanan's attempt to defend the indefensible I noted the root of his response and the similar problem he appears to share with the president. That's not spin, which is why you can't address it, only attempt to mislabel it.
Bumper sticker declarations are what people in your position have to live on...and with.And the washing machine keeps a spinnin'
No, history set up the strong association in the minds of rational people between the Confederacy and slavery. Racism was prima facie established and continued as a political and social force for generations after the war, giving rise to the Civil Rights Movement.Political Correctness tries to set up a strong association in the minds of many people between the Old South, the Confederacy, Black Slavery and Racism.
You're just spitting out catch phrases. Again,the actual documents, letters, editorials, and declarations by the states separating from the Union (well, attempting it) are rather plain about the reason: slavery.The simplified view of the War of 1861-1865, Abraham Lincoln and the issues in that war which is presented by Political Correctness - a method of attitude and belief change used by Transformational Marxism - ignores a number of factors in order to carry out the manipulation of public perception...
You should use simpler sentences. You could have stopped after the dates and had a decent thesis to defend.And common morality gets pushed aside by political correctness in ignoring the details of the War of 1861-1865 which are not made outstanding in perception.
I'm fairly sure war crimes were committed by both sides and with alarming frequency. You need a better understanding of history taught on the university level. It's not lacking depth on any particular. I can't speak to what's taught at the high school level, but I'd imagine the stuff of war crimes would be considered a bit mature for them.It is not just opinion that in the invasion of the South the federal armies were guilty of carrying out a huge number of war crimes.