“Civil rights” has reached the end of its road, and judgement on its fruits is long overdue.
A serious consideration of black nationalism is in order.
The Civil Rights Movement metastasized from a largely patriotic and constitutionally based (at least publically) request for redress of grievances to a largely anti-american racially based industrial complex. There is much expressed bewilderment and anguish as to how this came to be.
I would submit that much of the puzzlement comes from a wide spread failure to consider the leftist and outright marxist roots and influences; together withcultural marxism generally of the civil rights movement and their role in what we are witnessing today.
The foremost icon of the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King was surrounded by known communists and regularly took their counsel. He wrote of his affinity for marxist principles in his book Stride toward Freedom, and accepted the notion of Hegalian Dialectics, a prepratory stage to accepting communism. He was a strident critic of the profit motive and capitalism and the US role in the Vietnam war. Just prior to his death he was all in for ever more statist socialist government programs and racially specific reparative edicts. This mantle was taken up by many in the Civil Rights and Black Nationalist movements as they allied and amalgamated with each other. Part of what shielded them from proper scrutiny was the apotheosis of King and the utilization of political correctness to erect guards against legitimate critique.
The forces that are animating much of the chaos in Fergueson have been emboldened by the leech-like attachment of the radical anti-american deconstructionists of EVERY important institution in this nation, that seek to destroy and supplant them with their own twisted brand of unconstitutional tyranny.
We conservatives MUST NOT fear to tell the truth about the Gossamer myths that have improperly alloyed themselves to the genesis of the modern day civil rights movement.. We owe it to black people and the nation, even if the truth hurts.