Pensacola Discussion Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

This is a forum based out of Pensacola Florida.


You are not connected. Please login or register

Finally some truth and honesty among the GOP Dixiecrats.....no need for dog whistles now...thank you Donald

+2
Floridatexan
2seaoat
6 posters

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

2seaoat



http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ex-kkk-leader-david-duke-registers-to-run-for-us-senate/ar-BBuFkXy?li=BBnb7Kz

2seaoat



Hey Bob.....tell me about Seabigot and how much has changed with the elevator boyz.........you did fall off the turnip truck. drunken

2seaoat



The jewish media.....I am overjoyed with Donald Trump.......the time is now......for the real people........Bob, Mr. Markle and vector man are celebrating.....no more dog whistles.

2seaoat



http://www.jewishdefenseorganization.info/duke.htm

Oh oh Bob......old seabigot noticed that the JDL thinks there are photos from prison showing David Duke committing same sex acts in prison........surprise surprise.....a person using the Q word and putting down same sex relationships...white power.....likes Donald Trump......you, Mr. Markle, and Vector Man have to be celebrating his senate run......I am sure he will keep R...heads out too........but I am a bigot.

Floridatexan

Floridatexan


Is David Duke an albino? Because he sure looks like one. I have blonde hair and blue eyes and probably look like the perfect Aryan, but there's something about this guy...he's scary.

Telstar

Telstar

Floridatexan wrote:
Is David Duke an albino?  Because he sure looks like one.  I have blonde hair and blue eyes and probably look like the perfect Aryan, but there's something about this guy...he's scary.


A Doktor Mengele creation.

2seaoat



David Duke is just the rule rather than the exception of SEC politics......he says what others think, but look at the politics and show me some daylight between his positions and the Dixiecrats positions.......

Vikingwoman



He tried to go to other countries to start up his hate campaigns but was kicked out. He stole campaign funds and renovated his house and gambled the rest away but people will vote for him anyway.

2seaoat



His views sadly still find a home in the South, and the historical Dixiecrat take over of the Republican Party. David Duke is the profile of what the dog whistle is not saying or trying to mask.......well with Donald Trump......why blow dog whistles anymore and just admit the Republican Party wants to make white great again.

2seaoat



If you had arrived in hell......David Duke would be there.

Hospital Bob

Hospital Bob

2seaoat wrote:Hey Bob.....tell me about Seabigot and how much has changed with the elevator boyz.........you did fall off the turnip truck. drunken

You nailed it, seabigot. Me and the elevator boyz are huuuuuge fans of David Duke. lol

2seaoat



A white nationalist.....yes you are.

dumpcare



http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/24/opinion/sunday/is-donald-trump-a-racist.html?_r=0

HAS the party of Lincoln just nominated a racist to be president? We shouldn’t toss around such accusations lightly, so I’ve looked back over more than 40 years of Donald Trump’s career to see what the record says.

One early red flag arose in 1973, when President Richard Nixon’s Justice Department — not exactly the radicals of the day — sued Trump and his father, Fred Trump, for systematically discriminating against blacks in housing rentals.

I’ve waded through 1,021 pages of documents from that legal battle, and they are devastating. Donald Trump was then president of the family real estate firm, and the government amassed overwhelming evidence that the company had a policy of discriminating against blacks, including those serving in the military.

To prove the discrimination, blacks were repeatedly dispatched as testers to Trump apartment buildings to inquire about vacancies, and white testers were sent soon after. Repeatedly, the black person was told that nothing was available, while the white tester was shown apartments for immediate rental.

A former building superintendent working for the Trumps explained that he was told to code any application by a black person with the letter C, for colored, apparently so the office would know to reject it. A Trump rental agent said the Trumps wanted to rent only to “Jews and executives,” and discouraged renting to blacks.

Donald Trump furiously fought the civil rights suit in the courts and the media, but the Trumps eventually settled on terms that were widely regarded as a victory for the government. Three years later, the government sued the Trumps again, for continuing to discriminate.

In fairness, those suits date from long ago, and the discriminatory policies were probably put in place not by Donald Trump but by his father. Fred Trump appears to have been arrested at a Ku Klux Klan rally in 1927; Woody Guthrie, who lived in a Trump property in the 1950s, lambasted Fred Trump in recently discovered papers for stirring racial hatred.

Yet even if Donald Trump inherited his firm’s discriminatory policies, he allied himself decisively in the 1970s housing battle against the civil rights movement.

Another revealing moment came in 1989, when New York City was convulsed by the “Central Park jogger” case, a rape and beating of a young white woman. Five black and Latino teenagers were arrested.

Trump stepped in, denounced Mayor Ed Koch’s call for peace and bought full-page newspaper ads calling for the death penalty. The five teenagers spent years in prison before being exonerated. In retrospect, they suffered a modern version of a lynching, and Trump played a part in whipping up the crowds.

As Trump moved into casinos, discrimination followed. In the 1980s, according to a former Trump casino worker, Kip Brown, who was quoted by The New Yorker: “When Donald and Ivana came to the casino, the bosses would order all the black people off the floor. … They put us all in the back.”

In 1991, a book by John O’Donnell, who had been president of the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, quoted Trump as criticizing a black accountant and saying: “Black guys counting my money! I hate it. The only kind of people I want counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day. … I think that the guy is lazy. And it’s probably not his fault, because laziness is a trait in blacks. It really is, I believe that. It’s not anything they can control.” O’Donnell wrote that for months afterward, Trump pressed him to fire the black accountant, until the man resigned of his own accord.

Trump eventually denied making those comments. But in 1997 in a Playboy interview, he conceded “the stuff O’Donnell wrote about me is probably true.”

The recent record may be more familiar: Trump’s suggestions that President Obama was born in Kenya; his insinuations that Obama was admitted to Ivy League schools only because of affirmative action; his denunciations of Mexican immigrants as, “in many cases, criminals, drug dealers, rapists”; his calls for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States; his dismissal of an American-born judge of Mexican ancestry as a Mexican who cannot fairly hear his case; his reluctance to distance himself from the Ku Klux Klan in a television interview; his retweet of a graphic suggesting that 81 percent of white murder victims are killed by blacks (the actual figure is about 15 percent); and so on.

Trump has also retweeted messages from white supremacists or Nazi sympathizers, including two from an account called @WhiteGenocideTM with a photo of the American Nazi Party’s founder.

Trump repeatedly and vehemently denies any racism, and he has deleted some offensive tweets. The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi racist website that has endorsed Trump, sees that as going “full-wink-wink-wink.”

My view is that “racist” can be a loaded word, a conversation stopper more than a clarifier, and that we should be careful not to use it simply as an epithet. Moreover, Muslims and Latinos can be of any race, so some of those statements technically reflect not so much racism as bigotry. It’s also true that with any single statement, it is possible that Trump misspoke or was misconstrued.

And yet.

Here we have a man who for more than four decades has been repeatedly associated with racial discrimination or bigoted comments about minorities, some of them made on television for all to see. While any one episode may be ambiguous, what emerges over more than four decades is a narrative arc, a consistent pattern — and I don’t see what else to call it but racism.

2seaoat



He is a fascist and his following is white nationalist. The Neocons are having a chit fit, yet the evangelical folks think Jesus would emulate Trump.....probably not, but the southern baptist in my family believed that God made the black man inferior and that black people needed white men to guide them. My uncle one day on the golf course was telling me how upset he was with the inefficient modern automated cotton harvesters because so much cotton gets wasted, and that cotton should be picked by hand.......I mean I loved this man, but his message was clear, and he NEVER missed Church on a Sunday.

Donald Trump's dad was KKK, his policies toward blacks and his attitudes toward blacks are well known, yet people want to argue with me that America is post racial, and that the South has changed. It has not. When I am in hell it is mind numbing racial.........and those who argue that it has changed the most, are those who grew up in Jim Crow. Trump has a very good chance to win because if the church you attend every Sunday has a minister who is introducing Trump at a rally in Pensacola, that otherwise good person will rationalize that Trump is good. Good people need to take a moral stand independent of those who are suppose to speak for Jesus.....they do not.

dumpcare



But Oatie you keep saying the south Trump is a yankee and I am certain that the yankees on this board as I can it is just as racist up north to the east and west as the south. Aryan nation had or possibly still has a big training camp in southern Mi. There are large pockets all over the nation of racism so don't just keep putting the south down. You never mention Idaho, Montana, Arizona, etc.

2seaoat



There is a very distinct difference between heaven and hell. In many states you will find a democrat as senator, and a Republican. You will have open debate and discussion about issues. Yes, as a former poster on this forum pointed out, South Boston was the most hateful place he ever visited. It is not that hate is excluded in Heaven......it is debated and challenged. In the South there is lock step conformity and dog whistle reality which allows evil politics to be monolithic across the SEC. I will agree with you when Alabama elects a Democrat as senator, and a Republican. When Georgia does the same.....or Mississippi........but we all know exactly what my point is......where hate always existed in heaven.....it was never De Jure......and in hell it was.....the devil won.

Sponsored content



Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum