Quote:
I don't understand, unless you are exquisitely fine-cutting your words. Brown vs Board of Education was 1954, just as an example |
Integration was the law, but it was not fully integrated into society. We still had "colored" entrances and water fountains and such.
This was before all the rest of the civil rights acts, and activities. Johnson was not a president I really admired, but in the area of civil rights legislation, he was an amazing champion - he left the Northern liberals with their mouths catching fly's, on this. All the more amazing, was that he was from a former Confederate state (Texas). |
Groan...
|
To Monster and Foot Foot Foot, who replied to my question of why IOD would even post this picture, and to all of you contributors-- Wow! I understand why now! What an excellent lot of thought-provoking conversation was stimulated by this image! What a great amount of history was recalled by it! I hope school kids will go on this site and read what all of you have to say! It sure points out the importance of knowing history and understanding it! I am impressed with all of the thoughtful, intelligent comments made by a group I am pleased to be a part of!
|
(stage whisper) I think tombstone is effing with someone (stage whisper)
|
Quote:
I mean, seriously, you had the tone *almost* perfect, but I would have given you a couple of extra points if you'd properly classified KKK New Guy and Adak as engaging in creative, not historical, writing. |
Holy shit, I think that is the first post I've seen of yours with words, John.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
You think the KKK was violent ONLY to blacks? Guess again. If you doubt what i said about the Southern Poverty Law Center, winning big in legal suits against the KKK, it's a matter of public record. They won *big*, including substantial real estate. If you think for one minute that segregation was broken right after the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling was made, you're way off. Why did president Eisenhower send in the 101st Airborne into Little Rock, Arkansas, to enforce it? Why was the Governor of Alabama making speeches about "segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever"? If you didn't live in the South during those times, you probably have no idea what it was like back in the days before desegregation. America was a *very* different place, back then. |
Yeah, they were violent to white people who dared to sympathize with black people!
Overwhelmingly they were/are violent to black people. Any white people who were targeted were targeted for sympathizing or helping the civil right cause. Don't try to pretend that everything they do is not about racial hate. It is. |
It was not only the violence and intimidation of Blacks.
The KKK were/are politically active against Catholics and Jews, and essentially anyone else that was not white and Protestant. Oregon has a significant legal and social history with the KKK. Essentially, the basis for private schools in the US was established by the US Supreme Court in ruling in 1925 against the KKK and in favor of St Mary's Academy here in Portland, OR. |
Quote:
|
MTP, yes, point taken.
Oregon just didn't have enough Blacks to keep the KKK's busy. The original State Constitution prohibited Blacks from owning real estate anywhere in the State. It wasn't until after WWII that significant numbers of Blacks settled in the PDX area. Southern Oregon had KKK activity against the Native Americans, based on land and water rights, and the Chinese laborers who worked in mines and on the railroads. A history that still has lingering effects. KKK...Oregon's "equal-opportunity" hate group. |
Quote:
|
And black Jews.
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:19 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.