Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

5 Signs Scott Walker Is Using GOP’s Racist ‘Southern Strategy’ to Win in 2016
Global News ^ | March 3, 2015 | must have been a group effort

Posted on 03/03/2015 2:30:58 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

Walker demonizes unions, the poor and voters of color in order to appeal to whites.

Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s drive for an anti-labor “right to work” law covering private-sector workers is deeply rooted in the racism of the Deep South’s former slaveholding states.

They are yet more evidence that he is following a template known as the Republican Party’s “Southern strategy,” which plays to white voters’ racial resentment, even though his budding presidential campaign is based in snow-encrusted Wisconsin.

This emerging strategy is reminiscent of Richard Nixon’s original “Southern strategy” of 1968 and Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign kickoff event. Reagan started his campaign by championing state’s rights in Neshoba County in Mississippi, a site whose only national symbolic significance was serving as the site of the 1964 murders of three civil rights workers.

Many progressive commentators have asserted that major demographic shifts among Latinos and the young have utterly closed off the road to the White House for any GOP candidate. But Thomas B. Edsall cautioned that a different scenario could emerge.

“If the Republicans can downplay overt racial animus at an overt level while subliminally signifying their lack of sympathy for people of color, they can potentially build a durable coalition of whites,” he wrote. “The trick for Republicans in their quest to maintain white majoritarian hegemony is to allow this fusion of issues [racial fears and resentment, economic instability, social conservatism] to do its mobilizing work at a subliminal level, without triggering widespread resistance to explicit manifestations of bias and race prejudice.”

Walker’s emerging presidential campaign appears to be following this scenario. It is remarkably close to the approach Walker has long used in racially polarized Milwaukee, where he began his political career, and can increasingly be seen in his record as governor.

Here are five examples of the way Walker plays the race card.

1. Riding an anti-union law rooted deeply in racism.

This week, Wisconsin’s GOP-controlled legislature took up so-called “right to work” legislation, which would ban unions from requiring all employees to pay dues. While Walker is promoting the “right to work” in the name of “free choice,” this anti-union movement has explicitly racist roots in the Deep South, where the purpose of the original right-to-work laws was precisely to deny free choice to workers who want unions to help them escape misery-level wages and tyrannical control.

“Right-to-work” laws have a clear purpose: to divide workers and undermine and destroy unions. Right to work incentivizes management to hire anti-union employees, and discourages union membership or even payment of fees for the services unions provide to workers. The outcome in a state like Mississippi is that only 3.7 percent of workers are union members.

The legacy of “right to work” laws reaches back to the 1930s, when white supremacists like oil lobbyist Vance Muse initially pioneered the concept to divide and eliminate unions. Muse formed the Christian American Alliance to spread the combined gospel of racism and anti-unionism, pushing the “right-to-work” notion and developing alliances with like-minded groups including the Ku Klux Klan. Muse concluded that the only solution for maintaining segregation was to make union membership or any payment of union dues or fees voluntary. Without such laws, whites would be “forced” to mingle with blacks, although there had been many interracial unions over previous decades.

Crude as it was, Muse’s segregationist argument intersected perfectly with the mentality of corporate managers committed to holding down wages. They recognized that Muse’s “right-to-work” concept would serve to break up unified worker efforts to claim therights granted under the 1935 National Labor Relations Act. Some major corporations directly fused the segregationist and anti-union appeals. As late as 1944, wrote Diane McWhorter in her book Carry Me Home, “U.S. Steel set up a League to Maintain White Supremacy to spread ‘the white supremacy gospel of Simpson [Jim Simpson, an anti-New Deal politician in Alabama] among the grassroots (that is, its workforce)… to baldly promote racial strife.”

But over time, employers increasing dropped their overtly racist pitch and sold “right-to-work” in terms of individual rights and the phantom threat of “compulsory unionism” (no one can be forced to join, but can be expected to pay fees for the costs of union representation). The laws spread slowly from the Deep South over the past eight decades to encompass 24 states, with Wisconsin likely becoming the symbolically important 25th state. This milestone will be seen as a major accomplishment in the eyes of the Republican conservatives Walker is cultivating. It also adds to Walker’s credentials at this past weekend’s Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington.

2. “Right-to-work” also fits neatly with Walker’s racialized politics.

If the Wisconsin “right-to-work” bill passes the Assembly (after clearing the Senate Wednesday on a 17-15 vote), the primary victims will be low-paid black and Latino workers who have been unable to raise their low wages in fast-food and big-box stores like Walmart despite visible protests. These minority workers have shown a decisive interest in unionizing and have been long targeted by right-wingers.

Conservatives, including the Milwaukee-based Bradley Foundation—America’s largest right-wing foundation—have spent decades demonizing unions, public employees and government programs as unnecessary, and social welfare recipients as undeserving opportunists. Their rhetoric raises the specter of an ever-growing class of welfare dependents, who are often hinted to be mainly dark-skinned and draining the tax dollars of hard-working Americans.

Walker used this same line of attack and rhetoric as he has moved to eliminate almost all union bargaining rights through the passage of Act 10 in 2011 and now to weaken union membership further through “right-to-work” legislation. While Wisconsin was still reeling from the economic insecurity generated by the Great Recession during Walker’s tenure as governor, he has blamed supposedly over-paid public employees for the economic anxieties experienced by other Wisconsinites.

The Bradley Foundation has over $800 million in assets and is guided by racial attitudes similar to those of the John Birch Society members who started the foundation. It has funded “academic” research by figures like Charles Murray, who contended poverty was intractable because of welfare programs—with minorities widely perceived as the recipients—and the supposed dependence and moral flaws that were encouraged. Most notoriously, Bradley also spent about $1 million publishing and promoting the 1994 book The Bell Curve by Murray and John Hernnstein, which argued for the inherent intellectual inferiority of African Americans and Latinos. The book garnered a surprising amount of respectable media responses, despite its weak “scientific” basis and white supremacist implications.

Walker’s political activities have been closely interwoven with the foundation. Its president Michael Grebe, the former state GOP party chair, has served as his campaign chair. Its sizeable public-relations resources have also helped give Walker national attention, and Bradley-funded think tanks and advocacy groups actively push Walker’s agenda—and vice-versa. Undoubtedly, the foundation’s contacts have opened doors to conservative donors. But on policy, Walker’s tight relationship with the foundation has aligned him with powerful forces that continually seek to prove that government programs aiding the poor are hopeless.

3. Making black/brown majority Milwaukee his foil.

This disregard for the poor can be seen throughout Walker’s career, as state legislator, Milwaukee County executive and governor. Starting in Milwaukee, Walker consistently neglected the plight of the poor. While the city has a population that is about 40 percent black and 17 percent Latino, Walker has relentlessly fought to downsize public institutions poor residents depend on.

“As Milwaukee County executive for eight years, he presided over the decline of once-exemplary transit and park systems,” observed John Gurda, the author of numerous works on Milwaukee history. “As Wisconsin’s governor since 2010, Walker worked with the Republican Legislature to make the deepest cuts to public education in state history—cuts that Milwaukee, Wisconsin’s largest and poorest public school system, felt disproportionately.” Walker’s latest state budget proposals reflect the same mindset.

Many observers argue his policies have only exacerbated the city’s social misery and decline. He has portrayed Milwaukee’s poverty as the result of failed public safety-net institutions, rather than its abandonment by corporations that closed shop seeking higher profits in southern states or exporting jobs to lower-wage Mexico and China. During his gubernatorial recall election in 2012, he said, “We don’t want Wisconsin to become like Milwaukee.”

In reality, Milwaukee has experienced a rapid decline from a relatively prosperous middle-class city into the nation’s fourth poorest because of drastic deindustrialization and many corporations moving out-of-state or overseas. Milwaukee has lost over 80 percent of its industrial base since 1977. The destruction of family-sustaining job opportunities has driven down wages and created widespread unemployment that has devastated African-American workers.

Milwaukee was once dubbed the “Star of the Snowbelt” by the Wall Street Journal because of its initial success in retaining jobs and was long known as the “machine tool capital of the world” because of its uniquely skilled workforce. But it has been on a decades-long slide as wages have been dragged down by right-to-work states, as well as by Mexico and China. “In 1970, median African-American family income was 19 percent above the national black average; 30 years later, it was 23 percent lower,” Richard Longworth noted in Caught in the Middle.

It is telling that Walker’s lone initiative for injecting money into Milwaukee is a measure pushed by the city’s business elite: providing $220 million in state bonds for a new arena for the Bucks NBA basketball team, owned by three billionaires.

4. Replacing the poll tax with voter ID and redistricting.

Walker and his allies have strenuously worked to police and restrict voting, with measures that will make it much more difficult for African Americans and Latinos to vote and via partisan redistricting, which redraws district lines to intentionally dilute Democratic strongholds.

Walker’s bill restricting voter rights came almost immediately after the Occupy-style labor revolt against his push to crush public-sector unions. Frances Fox Piven, author of many books on voting rights and social movements, told me, “We saw labor protests of unprecedented size and intensity over limiting their voice as workers. And then [protesters] were greeted with a law to limit their power electorally, too.”

Walker sees his electoral chicanery as one of his significant accomplishments. At this winter’s Iowa Freedom Summit for prospective 2016 presidential candidates, Walker boasted to right-wingers that he had signed voter ID law in 2011—although it has been used just for one small-scale election and now hangs in legal limbo. The state’s Common Cause chapter called it “the most restrictive, blatantly partisan and ill-conceived voter identification legislation in the nation.”

The law would effectively disenfranchise large numbers of African American, Latino, poor elderly, and college students who lack the required state-issued voter IDs to get a ballot. One Wisconsin study showed that requiring a state-issued ID like a driver’s license would have a high impact on African Americans, Latinos and the elderly, saying, “Among black males between ages 18 and 24, 78 percent lacked a driver’s license.”

The law also requires longer residency requirements to be eligible to vote, and cuts back on early voting options in Milwaukee, which has been highly popular among black churches and organizations as a central means of encouraging voter turnout.

Walker’s Republican allies also diluted the voice of poor and working-class voters, especially minorities in the state’s industrial cities through a secretively crafted redistricting plan that put Democratic-leaning voters into smaller number of districts. In 2012, the Democrats won 174,000 more votes than the Republicans in Wisconsin legislative races, yet the electorate wound up with an overwhelming 60-39 Republican majority in the Assembly. The Republicans won 46 percent of the vote, but due to the newly drawn districts that translated into 61 percent of the seats.

5. Walker has a history of race-baiting.

In one revealing episode of the 2012 recall campaign, Walker put up a TV ad reminiscent of the Republican Party’s ugly race-baiting politics many believed had been consigned to the past. “Walker ran an ad charging [his opponent, Milwaukee Mayor Tom] Barrett with covering up violence in Milwaukee featuring an image of a brutalized toddler—a Willie Horton–style spot one rarely sees in other parts of the country anymore,” recalled historian John Gurda, referring to the TV spot George H.W. Bush’s 1988 presidential campaign used against Massachusetts’ Democratic Gov. and party nominee, Michael Dukakis.

Such race baiting is not new to Walker and his key supporters. Two influential right-wing radio talk-show hosts, Charlie Sykes and Mark Belling, have helped his climb in politics by putting him on the air often and applauding him. They are known for their frequent remarks about the purported moral deficiencies of blacks and Latinos, but have a vast following of suburban conservatives they can mobilize politically in a way no left-leaning media outlet has approached.

As former GOP legislator Scott Jensen remarked, “The listenership is just so much higher here [in the Milwaukee suburbs]. And the ability to get people to march in step when [the shows] are all hammering the same themes is extraordinary.”

Walker’s Extremist Right-Wing Base

Walker has also benefitted from relationships with other wealthy right-wingers, such as Wisconsin’s Diane Hendricks, Las Vegas gambling magnate Sheldon Adelson, and the Koch brothers. All have been central to Walker’s political success in Wisconsin and his emergence as a serious presidential contender for 2012 among Republican.

But Walker’s turn to “dog-whistle” politics, or the manipulation of whites’ racial resentments, is as noteworthy as it is notorious. It begins with an agenda that is hostile to government programs benefitting the poor and big government programs of any kind—except for those providing subsidies to corporations and the rich. However, there is a not-so-subtle subtext of pro-white racism.

There are many dots that connect this ugly picture: Walker’s war against labor and support for “right-to-work” laws despite their racist legacy and present-day impacts; his willingness to use Willie Horton-style ads which stoke white fears of blacks; his support for restricting the right of blacks and Latinos; his institutional ties to long-standing institution like the Bradley which are tacitly approving of white supremacy; his links to media personalities who thrive on feeding racism; and his policies punishing urban citizens, especially people of color.

Essentially, Walker embodies the lessons outlined by the late Lee Atwater, the ruthless Republican strategist. In a remarkably frank interview, Atwater once described the evolution of conservative politics and the “Southern strategy”: “You start out in 1954 by saying, ‘nigger, nigger, nigger.’ By 1968 you can’t say nigger—that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like, uh, forced busing, states’ rights and all that stuff, and you’re getting so abstract. Now, you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you’re talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is, blacks get hurt worse than whites… .’We want to cut this,’ is much more abstract than even the busing thing, uh, and a hell of a lot more abstract than ‘nigger, nigger.'”

Walker, in governing Wisconsin and running for president, is showing himself to be a consummate practitioner of the Southern strategy long advocated by Atwater and warned about by the liberal Thomas Edsall. The overt racism is scrapped on the surface, but the core of the ever-congenial Walker’s policies is profoundly hostile to people of color and to social justice.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: 2016; 2016election; demagogicparty; democraticparty; election2016; memebuilding; partisanmediashill; partisanmediashills; racism; scottwalker; union; wisconsin
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-70 next last
To: windsorknot; All
Watch Gov. Walker blow Milwaukee Mayor Burrett out of the water - and his claims that Walker is against minorities - Walker explains that his policies help the citizens of Milwaukee unlike Mayor Burrett's $100M toy train [it's a good hour of fun] Wisconsin Gubernatorial Final Recall Debate - 5/31/2012
21 posted on 03/03/2015 3:04:41 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

typical dem tactic. waiting for the women to claim he molested them next. then there will be some attack on Walker’s wife. Such boring tactics.


22 posted on 03/03/2015 3:06:01 AM PST by RginTN
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

Walker had better get used to these kinds of attacks, if he hopes to run for President, as a republican. The only thing they haven’t accused him off is crucifying Jesus Christ, but it’s a long way till election day. They just may make that accusation. Since Walker has defeated them in 3 elections, they are sharpening their knives, and they know, that the Lame Stream Media is going to be on their side, all the way.


23 posted on 03/03/2015 3:07:48 AM PST by gingerbread
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

24 posted on 03/03/2015 3:10:09 AM PST by Caipirabob (Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

Wheres the Barf Alert !


25 posted on 03/03/2015 3:10:15 AM PST by ATOMIC_PUNK (I'm not afraid to say what i mean nor should you be afraid of what you know to be true !)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

I got a idea a drinking game for watching the democratic convention. one drink every time a democratic politician brings up racism two drinks if they name a republican politician while mentioning racism. a drink every time a democratic politician accuses the republican party as hating the poor two drinks if the politician who says this has a net worth over 50 million. a drink every time a democrat mentions a pet project that will increase taxes. two drinks if that project is a obvious political pay back.

I suggest that each night of the convention only one one reason for taking the drink is used because there is a good chance you will get blind drunk watching network coverage of the convention.


26 posted on 03/03/2015 3:11:52 AM PST by PCPOET7
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

To liberals, you’re a “racist” if you disagree with them.

To the charge, I plead guilty.

I do disagree vehemently with them.


27 posted on 03/03/2015 3:16:09 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: just me

>>This idiot thinks “right to work” without a union is racist?

Liberal idiots think everything is racist.


28 posted on 03/03/2015 3:19:19 AM PST by Bryanw92 (Sic semper tyrannis)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

Hello radical progressive leftists....the “racism” stuff is so 2009, get with the times already!


29 posted on 03/03/2015 3:21:42 AM PST by jughandle (Big words anger me, keep talking.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

I am amused at Roger Bybee’s obvious distress. It behooves us to increase it.


30 posted on 03/03/2015 3:25:57 AM PST by cynwoody
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

omg....Racist...Racist...Racist....I am SO SICK of that word.


31 posted on 03/03/2015 3:29:42 AM PST by Ann Archy (ABORTION....... The HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife
They are yet more evidence that he is following a template known as the Republican Party’s “Southern strategy,” which plays to white voters’ racial resentment, even though his budding presidential campaign is based in snow-encrusted Wisconsin.

The MSM is throwing everything at Walker; they must be hysterical!

But the leftist playbook is long on name calling, character assassination, the blame game, the race card, etc. nothing with substance.

Look for more as the evil ones go into a full court press and magnify anything and everything they declare as "important" as the agents of Satan continue to struggle to report something with "traction."

32 posted on 03/03/2015 3:34:37 AM PST by olezip (Time obliterates the fictions of opinion and confirms the decisions of nature. ~ Cicero)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Ann Archy

Remember, according to racist leftist dogma, only whites can be racist.And whites can be “racist” by just existing without any conscious effort to be racist.

In fact, MLKs classic words about judging people by the content of their character and not by the color of their skin is now “racist” if blacks are judged negatively for any reason and not always positively by the color of their skin.

Orwell anyone?


33 posted on 03/03/2015 3:46:10 AM PST by Uncle Lonny
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife
First, it has to learn to speak to fears over income inequality without committing to a specific agenda and limiting its course of action once in office.

The supporting data are there; one need only condense it with sources. I suspect Dave Brat did exactly that, so it might only need minor tweaks to go national, if any.

34 posted on 03/03/2015 3:46:19 AM PST by Carry_Okie (Democrats: the Party of slavery to the immensely wealthy for over 200 years.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: gingerbread
Walker's been dealing with their attacks and recalls for years.

4 Month Union Siege on Wisconsin State Capitol and the aftermath

35 posted on 03/03/2015 4:01:46 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: cynwoody
I am amused at Roger Bybee’s obvious distress. It behooves us to increase it.

I heartily agree!

NOW we MUST educate our elected officials - Be FEARLESS! The Left isn't as big and powerful as they believe - have them see, that if Walker can do this in Wisconsin, THEY darn well can too! The American people are SICK TO DEATH of this!

36 posted on 03/03/2015 4:05:59 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife
“The trick for Republicans in their quest to maintain white majoritarian hegemony is to allow this fusion of issues [racial fears and resentment, economic instability, social conservatism] to do its mobilizing work at a subliminal level, without triggering widespread resistance to explicit manifestations of bias and race prejudice.”

Just read this one attempt at making a rambling string of words into a cogent thought that is almost a sentence.

What in the hell is a "majoritarian"?

37 posted on 03/03/2015 4:09:28 AM PST by USS Alaska (Exterminate the terrorist savages, everywhere.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: PCPOET7
: ) Most definitely "designated driver" territory.

Here's another good one - and "rich" and "wealthy" should be added.

U.S. Union Busting: Who’s Scarier, Scott Walker or ‘Jihadi John’? "When Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker compared labor unions to ISIS his audience cheered. At the end of the speech he got a standing ovation, reported FOX News in an article entitled “Walker draws standing ovation in CPAC address”. His wealthy audience hated labor unions that much.

In fact, the 1% despises unions much more than they hate ISIS. Islamic extremists in the Syrian desert pose no threat to anyone in the U.S., while labor unions pose a direct threat to the profits of the super rich.

Conversely, the average U.S. worker has much more to fear from Scott Walker than any knife-wielding Jihadist. For example, Scott Walker is subtly campaigning for president among the elite by bragging about his successful butchering of Wisconsin unions, a model that he and his supporters hope to spread nationally.

Walker is idolized by the super rich for having dismembered Wisconsin unions in a way that recalls Ronald Reagan’s smashing of the PATCO air traffic controllers strike in 1981. The rich view Walker as a Reagan-like messiah who will transform labor relations yet again, giving corporations still more power in relation to the U.S. workforce.".....................

38 posted on 03/03/2015 4:12:32 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: Cincinatus' Wife

“They are yet more evidence that he is following a template known as the Republican Party’s “Southern strategy,” which plays to white voters’ racial resentment”

The Myth of ‘the Southern Strategy’ 

“It’s an easy story to believe, but this year two political scientists called it into question. In their book “The End of Southern Exceptionalism,” Richard Johnston of the University of Pennsylvania and Byron Shafer of the University of Wisconsin argue that the shift in the South from Democratic to Republican was overwhelmingly a question not of race but of economic growth” 

-snip 

“To be sure, Shafer says, many whites in the South aggressively opposed liberal Democrats on race issues. “But when folks went to the polling booths,” he says, “they didn’t shoot off their own toes. They voted by their economic preferences, not racial preferences.”” 

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/10/magazine/10Section2b.t-4.html

The Neocons and Nixon’s Southern Strategy 

Between 1969 and 1974, Nixon – who believed that blacks had gotten a raw deal in America and wanted to extend a helping hand: 

* raised the civil rights enforcement budget 800 percent; 

* doubled the budget for black colleges; 

* appointed more blacks to federal posts and high positions 
than any president, including LBJ; 

* adopted the Philadelphia Plan mandating quotas for blacks 
in unions, and for black scholars in colleges and 
universities; 

* invented “Black Capitalism” (the Office of Minority Business 
Enterprise), raised U.S. purchases from black businesses 
from $9 million to $153 million, increased small business 
loans to minorities 1,000 percent, increased U.S. deposits 
in minority-owned banks 4,000 percent; 

* raised the share of Southern schools that were 
desegregated from 10 percent to 70 percent. Wrote the 
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in 1975, “It has only been 
since 1968 that substantial reduction of racial segregation 
has taken place in the South.” 

The charge that we built our Republican coalition on race is a lie. Nixon routed the left because it had shown itself incompetent to win or end a war into which it had plunged the United States and too befuddled or cowardly to denounce the rioters burning our cities or the brats rampaging on our campuses. 

http://buchanan.org/blog/pjb-the-neocons-and-nixons-southern-strategy-512


39 posted on 03/03/2015 4:13:02 AM PST by lowbridge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: USS Alaska

He’s a professor, what can I say?


40 posted on 03/03/2015 4:13:48 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-70 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson