Over my seventy-one years of life I’ve seen the total transformation of black society. All of the destructive changes have been engineered by Democrats. During Reconstruction Republicans flooded Washington D. C. with black workers, a situation that continues today, while simultaneously Democrats in both North and South began work to install Jim Crow laws.
The most openly racist U. S. President was Woodrow Wilson, a socialist, who worked energetically to reduce the numbers of black workers in D. C. It could be argued successfully that Lyndon Johnson was the next most openly racist President, and it was indeed his so-called Great Society that destroyed the families of poor whites and blacks together. John F. Kennedy, hero to so many blacks, had to be dragged to the support of Civil Rights for blacks, and never would have done so without Republican pressure.
I remember many towns in the south where blacks and whites lived separately in separate communities, frequented segregated stores and restaurants, and yet endorsed the same values of freedom, liberty, opportunity, and patriotism. A few years ago, long after Johnson’s policies had destroyed black families, I frequented a small restaurant operated by a black and white couple in my beloved Texas. If you had your back to a group of men in the next booth and listened to their conversation, you could not tell from their conversation whether they were black or white–unless their ages were under fifty. White and black men of age fifty and up talked of the same concerns and with equal insight and humor, sharing traditional American values with one another. The conversation of younger white men was no different from that of the older men. But younger black men were filled with anger, mistrust, lacked the values of their elders, and often boasted of how many illegitimate children they had sired from different mothers.
Someone might argue that the older men had accustomed themselves to disappointment, but I would argue back that what united them with their white cohort was a commonality of values. What distinguished the young blacks from their elders was the absence of those values.
Job One for the democrat socialists is divide and conquer.





