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Whining While Black - (excellent analysis by James Atticus Bowden)
DEFENDING TRUTH.ORG ^ | MAY 4, 2005 | JAMES ATTICUS BOWDEN

Posted on 05/04/2005 1:49:04 PM PDT by CHARLITE

Thank goodness Confederate History Month is over! Maybe Civil Rights organizations, black politicians and journalists will stop whining for awhile. They must pay the Sons of Confederate Veterans on the side. Fat, middle-aged suburbanites waving Confederate flags create excuses for hysterical screaming. Ironically, the volume and shrillness of attacking Confederate heritage is inversely proportional to the actual racism and threat to personal safety. But, it’s profitable if you’re a race pimp. When your skin color is your day job, you need something to cry ‘wolf’ about.

The professionally-black Blacks, whose jobs are based on ‘African-American’ in their titles, are working a decades-old scam that is a shame to the Nation. The racial politics of these Judas goats keep millions of Blacks in poverty, jail, pain and suffering. Despite them, the majority of Blacks are only one generation from earning their piece of the American pie.

A significant minority of Blacks are succeeding equally and above other Americans. These are hard-working people who achieve color-blind success. Which is precisely the point: The way up has nothing to do with race. The way to succeed in America works for immigrants who don’t speak English, aren’t White, and don’t have a penny to their name when they arrive. But, it takes a generation. The parents sacrifice and provide for the children to have abundant opportunities. There are ‘7 Steps’ from whining to winning.

1. Get married before the baby arrives. 2. Stay married and raise your children. 3. Don’t use drugs or abuse alcohol. 4. Push educational achievement without excuses. 5. Master the English language. 6. Choose American, not a separate identity, like African-America. 7. Live a purpose-driven life from the Bible.

Whites who fail these seven steps will grow mullets, trash their lives and stay losers. Hispanics who fail have activists to make excuses and demand programs – meaning government jobs for the program workers – to spend tax dollars. Blacks who fail have a well-established special interest industry to serve themselves at poor Blacks’ expense. Coming out of ghetto poverty for the race industry would be like real tax reform to tax lawyers. Jesse Jackson would have to get a real job.

The seven steps to a better life in America don’t have the land mines in the path that Blacks leaped over in the past. When Booker T. Washington and his students built Tuskegee with their bare hands, they made the brick kiln five times before it worked properly. They didn’t whine. Blacks came up from slavery further and faster, with a dignity and class under real duress, that is unfathomable to the ‘hip hop gangsta’s’ culture. Blacks, still living today, overcame barriers that no Black child faces now. Yet, the rhetoric of race is elevated and pervasive. The underlying messages are perverse and destructive.

Racial integration is a morally superior and ascendant idea for America. Yet, racial quotas – by any disingenuous name, race-based programs, awards and organizations are anathema to integration. They promote Black, Hispanic, Asian, Indian, whatever racism. That is why good-hearted people would go nuts if any quota, program, award or organization had the qualifying adjective ‘White’ in its name. Look at the outrage on college campuses when Conservative students have a race-based cookie sale. The hypocrisy would be funny if the potential outcomes weren’t so sinister.

White racism is vanishing, especially in the South. (Send a memo to Liberals). Southern dynamism is increasingly Evangelical Christian over a regional identity-based nationalism. Human hearts were transformed to a higher standard than racial reconciliation – to loving-kindness. Meanwhile, the same Democrat Party that exploited race mongering with Whites plays race-based politics using Blacks – and reaches for other minorities. The hateful refrain of permanent victim hood and grievance creates problems. Black racism and Black-on-White hate crimes are increasing.

There is no excuse for defeat and decline among people whose ancestors and peers have accomplished so much since 1619 – every step of the American Experience.

New immigrants joining the Great Experiment give their children ‘American’ first names. The exceptions are Muslims who don’t intend to integrate and some Hispanics whose numbers are so great they don’t have to leave an insular sub-culture. Blacks who invent alien names keep it ‘real’ with the neighbors, but make it obvious they are separate. Separateness doesn’t produce victory in life.

Search any field of endeavor for greatness and see Black Americans. Like politics: Who is more articulate than Thomas Sowell, Alan Keyes, Walter Williams, Ward Connerly, J.C. Watts, Colin Powell and Condoleeza Rice? Are they whining while Black?

Comments: JATticus@aol.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: alankeyes; black; cary; colinpowell; condoleezarice; dixie; financial; ghetto; jcwatts; leaderships; mentality; mobility; politics; scv; slavery; social; successes; thomassowell; upward; walterwilliams; wardconnerly; whining
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To: CHARLITE
AL SHARPTON GOES BACK TO HIS ROOTS AL ANNOUNCES THAT TWANA BRAWLEY WILL BE HIS QUEEN
21 posted on 05/04/2005 4:42:25 PM PDT by Beth528
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To: Beth528
Hilarious photo, Beth!!

Thanks! Just the right time for a big laugh!

Char :)

22 posted on 05/04/2005 5:11:46 PM PDT by CHARLITE ("People are not old, until regrets take the place of their dreams." - John Barrymore)
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To: B4Ranch
I remember the smirky little tour guide at that beautiful plantation along the James in Williamsburg when I visited... Carter?....he took us to the slave cabins and most shook their heads at the uncomfortable provision.

Except that I saw my own family's cabins left on family land, family who were subsistence farmers in Appalachia barely two generations ago. They looked about the same as the slave cabins. My mother saw the first electricity. My grandmother still had outdoor privies when I was a child. Not comfortable--but not the ghastly horror that people seem to think it was.

The thing is--if you go back far enough in our history, you're going to see some rude poverty. And, in those times, that poverty may well have represented a standard of comfort unavailable to the truly poor. I just don't have any way to turn the struggles of my own ancestors into gold.

23 posted on 05/04/2005 5:42:41 PM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: Tax-chick

later


24 posted on 05/04/2005 5:45:53 PM PDT by Tax-chick (Mother of the next Ann Coulter (only with more clothes, and she eats.))
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To: Mamzelle

Many farmers built the barn, lived with the animals for a year until the next spring when they made the final decision if the land was worth farming.


25 posted on 05/04/2005 5:57:13 PM PDT by B4Ranch ( Report every illegal alien that you meet. Call 866-347-2423)
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To: B4Ranch
Your friends are of superb character--the best kind to have.
26 posted on 05/04/2005 5:57:36 PM PDT by bubbleb
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To: CHARLITE; Mulch; beyond the sea
I read a book in 6th or 7th grade about Booker T. Washington. That was about 1958 or 1959. We actually studied how the ex-slaves pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps earning respect on all fronts in the process. Just a little white kid in a small Christian school but I developed a great deal of respect for the real thing. That is probably why I simply loathe the race baiting idiots of any race or nathionality so deeply who constantly spout off nowadays. I really get a kick out of Walter Williams reference to the "Klan With a Tan". (Congressional Black Caucus)

Nam Vet

27 posted on 05/04/2005 6:31:44 PM PDT by Nam Vet (MSM reporters think the MOIST dream they had the night before is a "reliable source".)
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To: Nam Vet
" I really get a kick out of Walter Williams reference to the "Klan With a Tan".

Thanks for that contribution! I never heard Walter Williams say that. Too funny!

Char :)

28 posted on 05/04/2005 7:20:27 PM PDT by CHARLITE ("People are not old, until regrets take the place of their dreams." - John Barrymore)
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To: Mamzelle

Great observation. One point I had to edit out to keep my 750 word limit was about the big secret that Southern Whites worked their way out of poverty over 2 - 3 generations and some still are. Same rules applied, but they didn't have to overcome legal barriers. The point is NOBODY GAVE THEM ANYTHING.


29 posted on 05/04/2005 8:07:31 PM PDT by jatticus (James Atticus Bowden)
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To: Mamzelle
"The thing is--if you go back far enough in our history, you're going to see some rude poverty. And, in those times, that poverty may well have represented a standard of comfort unavailable to the truly poor."

Very Thoughtful post, Thanks. Folks seem to lose sight of the fact that each generation's standards have improved. Looking back at the standards of previous generations, we tend to be shocked at their living conditions.

Many people make the great mistake of applying today's standards to events that occurred decades ago. For instance, my parents used a privy right up to the time I was born, and after (1947). This was in a town with a population of about 30,000. Since they didn't know the difference they didn't feel inconvenienced in the least. Peoples standards change as modern conveniences become the accepted norm.

Some historians make the great mistake of applying the accepted standards of today to history. There are so many variables that it's almost impossible to truly understand why people thought a certain way, or why certain actions were taken. Hence, for todays students of history it's often difficult to understand why certain events occurred.

30 posted on 05/04/2005 9:58:44 PM PDT by Rabble (Just When is John F sKerry going to sign SF 180?.......... Will we live long enough?)
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To: Rabble
My own experience went well into the sixties--but mostly I remember the beautiful farm, the flower garden, the animals I could watch and play with. And biscuits cooked on an old wood stove--operating it was an art! Pine to burn hot, oak to heat slow. Hot to fry an egg, less so to bake a cake. She could bake an angel's food cake on that thing!

Corn bread cooked on a fireplace hearth in a covered skillet will scent the outdoor surroundings and call hungry people inside better than a dinner bell. Life wasn't so bad.

31 posted on 05/05/2005 5:32:18 AM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: jatticus

Excellent article, very persuasive.


32 posted on 05/05/2005 5:40:49 AM PDT by Tax-chick (Mother of the next Ann Coulter (only with more clothes on, and she eats.))
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To: Mulch
"I'd love to see what Booker T. Washington would have to say about Jesse Jackson types."

Well, you are in luck because Booker T. Washington DID have something to say about the Jessie Jackson types:

"There is a class of colored people who make a business of keeping the troubles, the wrongs, and the hardships of the Negro race before the public. Some of these people do not want the Negro to lose his grievances, because they do not want to lose their jobs. There is a certain class of race-problem solvers who don't want the patient to get well."
Booker T. Washington

33 posted on 05/05/2005 5:45:03 AM PDT by joebuck
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To: Tax-chick
During a Black History Month one year, my BLACK HS students were astounded to learn (I told them) that there had been many Blacks who themselves OWNED Black slaves.

IMO libs and Jesse Jackson today are Black slave owners in that they continue to hold them captive.

34 posted on 05/05/2005 6:09:05 AM PDT by Carolinamom
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To: Carolinamom

Good point.


35 posted on 05/05/2005 6:54:39 AM PDT by Tax-chick (Mother of the next Ann Coulter (only with more clothes on, and she eats.))
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To: CHARLITE
"...... earning their piece of the American pie". I thought that most blacks were given their piece of the American pie.
36 posted on 05/05/2005 7:00:40 AM PDT by sandydipper (Less government is best government!)
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To: joebuck
I think that quote is on the Rainbow/Push organization's letter head. <*/sarc>
37 posted on 05/05/2005 9:46:58 AM PDT by Mulch (tm)
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To: Mamzelle
Did your gramma have an old teakettle that she moved around the top of the stove to gauge the temperature of the different "eyes"? Did you get to put your wet chilly feet in the "warming oven" after playing outside?

There WERE compensations doing things the old fashioned way.

Nowadays a lot of folks pay for the privilege and call it "camping". < g >

38 posted on 05/05/2005 9:56:06 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: Mamzelle
Did your gramma have an old teakettle that she moved around the top of the stove to gauge the temperature of the different "eyes"? Did you get to put your wet chilly feet in the "warming oven" after playing outside?

There WERE compensations doing things the old fashioned way.

Nowadays a lot of folks pay for the privilege and call it "camping". < g >

39 posted on 05/05/2005 9:56:11 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: joebuck; Mulch; CHARLITE
It is a pity that the black mainstream decided to follow the W.E.B. DuBois model rather than the Booker T. Washington model. Commanding respect is better in the long run than demanding respect.

And of course DuBois wound up becoming a Communist, renouncing his American citizenship, and dying in Africa somewhere (Ghana, I think.)

40 posted on 05/05/2005 10:00:18 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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