dan_c00000
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2006
- Posts
- 5,907
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Put simply I fell for racist Scotty Walker!
You're also getting owned by reality.
I'm a racist who can't read.
Do you actually believe there is a group more racist than the one mentioned on these sites? https://search.yahoo.com/search?ei=utf-8&fr=aaplw&p=new+black+panther+party+kill+white+people
Probably not. But you could make a case that the Republicans under Trump are equally racist. Besides, to the best of my knowledge, no member of the New Black Panther party has been elected to anything anywhere. The Republicans control two and a half of the three branches of the federal government? Which is the more dangerous, regardless of which is actually more racist?
As for Scott Walker, I see at least he's keeping his name in the news in retirement by spreading disinformation to children about how tax brackets work. I wonder, though, does he really not know either, or is he being deliberately dishonest? My money's on the latter; to win three times in a state that leans against one's party, you might be evil but you're probably not stupid.
No. I'm saying some of its supporters are. Trump has had plenty of opportunities to distance himself and his party from those who are, but instead we get soundbites about "very fine people on both sides".Are you actually saying the GOP is advocating genocide the way the people I cited are?
Cite, please, on that last line of yours. The link you provided shows nothing of the sort, and they are a separate party to boot. (Also, if you're thinking of former members of the original Black Panther Party, they do tend to support Democrats - but they have nothing to do with the NBPP and I think you'll find they don't approve of its coopting of their name.I don't know of any office holders who are members of the NBPP either. There may be some city council members or something like that, but probably nothing more than that. They are a small group, probably slightly larger than the KKK, without much outside support. However, that does not stop them from being virulently racist. Generally speaking, they favor Democrats.
No, it was not "a simplistic answer", it was a factually wrong answer. The only fundamental difference between children and accounting students is that the latter would be more likely to know Walker was wrong.As for what he said to a group of children it was just a simplistic answer to some fifth graders. Had he been speaking to accounting students and said the same thing, that would have been another matter entirely.
No. I'm saying some of its supporters are. Trump has had plenty of opportunities to distance himself and his party from those who are, but instead we get soundbites about "very fine people on both sides".
Cite, please, on that last line of yours. The link you provided shows nothing of the sort, and they are a separate party to boot. (Also, if you're thinking of former members of the original Black Panther Party, they do tend to support Democrats - but they have nothing to do with the NBPP and I think you'll find they don't approve of its coopting of their name.
Your argument here is also contradictory to your very longstanding habit of accusing Democrats of being racist against blacks, too.
No, it was not "a simplistic answer", it was a factually wrong answer. The only fundamental difference between children and accounting students is that the latter would be more likely to know Walker was wrong.
It was not an answer. To have been an answer would require a question, and none was asked.
Also, Box, you still haven't offered up a shred of evidence for your claim that NBPP members "generally speaking...favor Democrats".
First of all, consider the source. The Western Journal is a right-wing rag founded by Floyd Brown, who is best known for the Willie Horton ad in 1988.
Secondly, here's some context that you won't get in that article: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/black-panthers-georgia-pictures/
Third, even your own source notes that Abrams did not endorse or support the NBPP in any way. What it does not say - but a five minute Google search would have revealed - is that even the part members in that march expressed tepid support at best for Abrams, because she supported gun control and they didn't. If you looked up what they actually had to say for themselves, it was essentially that they were supporting her on a lesser-of-two-evils basis against a Republican who was running an openly racist campaign.
Ha Capitalism!
Sorry dawn but you're getting owned by the shitty deal. Just because the plant is still happening....
Oh, dan_c00000, every time I see this, I think of you.
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/cc/0a/6f/cc0a6fb6b8e4222fd10e92b96679be4c.jpg
Are you saying you want to murder me?
No, dear, but...
Thank you for proving my point.
Brian Hagedorn is a state appeals court judge who was appointed by then-governor Scott Walker. Last month it was revealed he had kept a blog during his law school years in which he “twice wrote that a landmark gay rights ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court striking down a Texas anti-sodomy law could lead to the legalization of bestiality, sex with animals, in America,” The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported.
“‘The idea that homosexual behavior is different than bestiality as a constitutional matter is unjustifiable,” Hagedorn falsely wrote in October 2005. “There is no right in our Constitution to have sex with whoever or whatever you want in the privacy of your own home (or barn).”
Now Hagedorn is under fire after it was revealed that one year after he became a judge on the state Appeals Court, he founded a Christian prep school that bans same-sex relationships.
Remember how everyone on the left predicted Foxconn would never seriously invest in Wisconsin?
K. Meyerhofer, Foxconn looking at office space on Capitol Square, Wisconsin State Journal (Mar. 6, 2019).