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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 18:34:18 GMT -5
Did you know that most white christians put a stop to it? it was called WWII. Did you know millions of mainly white christian troops died to stop it too? Did you know that the practice of forcefully sterilizing unwanted types of women lasted decades longer in the US than it did in Germany? Thank plan parenthood for some of that....
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 18:40:53 GMT -5
Oooooh, another example of Jewish people (in this case) being abused, oppressed, and killed per order of White Christian leaders while other nice White Christians obeyed orders, looked on, or looked away. What would Jesus do with the hoards of valuables and real estate stolen from Jewish families? Did you know that the Nazis took inspiration from Jim Crow in the United States? Did you know that most white christians put a stop to it? it was called WWII. Did you know millions of mainly white troops died to stop it too.... The US was extremely slow to get into the war, and initially turned away boatloads of desperate Jewish refugees. The black WWII US soldiers who fought and came home alive, were still subjected to Jim Crow laws passed by White Christian dominated Legislatures, and were almost completely denied access to the housing and educational opportunities given to returning white soldiers through the GI Bill. Can you imagine what a financial impact home ownership and a free education had on the white veterans and their families who took advantage of the opportunities? There was no such opportunity for Black veterans. It isn't about slavery and slave ownership. It's (in part) about a recent generation of soldiers, some of whom are are still alive today and their direct descendants and a relatively recent and significant Government benefit that was available to white veterans but not to black veterans, including the famed Tuskegee Airmen. And speaking of Tuskegee, you may or not be familiar with the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, undertaken by the US Public Health Service from 1931 until 1972, when it was shut down for ethical violations that would have made Hitler proud. To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only people I can understand not getting the Covid-19 vaccine are people of color who have a long history of good reasons to not trust the US Government.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 18:48:01 GMT -5
Did you know that most white christians put a stop to it? it was called WWII. Did you know millions of mainly white troops died to stop it too.... The US was extremely slow to get into the war, and initially turned away boatloads of desperate Jewish refugees. The black WWII US soldiers who fought and came home alive, were still subjected to Jim Crow laws passed by White Christian dominated Legislatures, and were almost completely denied access to the housing and educational opportunities given to returning white soldiers through the GI Bill. Can you imagine what a financial impact home ownership and a free education had on the white veterans and their families who took advantage of the opportunities? There was no such opportunity for Black veterans. It isn't about slavery and slave ownership. It's (in part) about a recent generation of soldiers, some of whom are are still alive today and their direct descendants and a relatively recent and significant Government benefit that was available to white veterans but not to black veterans, including the famed Tuskegee Airmen. And speaking of Tuskegee, you may or not be familiar with the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, undertaken by the US Public Health Service from 1931 until 1972, when it was shut down for ethical violations that would have made Hitler proud. To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only people I can understand not getting the Covid-19 vaccine are people of color who have a long history of good reasons to not trust the US Government. thank a democrat...
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 18:57:15 GMT -5
The US was extremely slow to get into the war, and initially turned away boatloads of desperate Jewish refugees. The black WWII US soldiers who fought and came home alive, were still subjected to Jim Crow laws passed by White Christian dominated Legislatures, and were almost completely denied access to the housing and educational opportunities given to returning white soldiers through the GI Bill. Can you imagine what a financial impact home ownership and a free education had on the white veterans and their families who took advantage of the opportunities? There was no such opportunity for Black veterans. It isn't about slavery and slave ownership. It's (in part) about a recent generation of soldiers, some of whom are are still alive today and their direct descendants and a relatively recent and significant Government benefit that was available to white veterans but not to black veterans, including the famed Tuskegee Airmen. And speaking of Tuskegee, you may or not be familiar with the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, undertaken by the US Public Health Service from 1931 until 1972, when it was shut down for ethical violations that would have made Hitler proud. To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only people I can understand not getting the Covid-19 vaccine are people of color who have a long history of good reasons to not trust the US Government. thank a democrat... Thank racist White People, pretty much all of us have negative stereotypes about black people etched into our psyches. There's plenty to go around on both sides of the aisle. The hard-core White Supremacists, however, are on your side of the aisle in today's House and Senate.
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Post by dmmichgood on Jul 27, 2021 18:58:16 GMT -5
Did you know that the practice of forcefully sterilizing unwanted types of women lasted decades longer in the US than it did in Germany? Thank plan parenthood for some of that.... That is NOT true Wally!
Where is your "proof?"
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Post by dmmichgood on Jul 27, 2021 19:01:45 GMT -5
The US was extremely slow to get into the war, and initially turned away boatloads of desperate Jewish refugees. The black WWII US soldiers who fought and came home alive, were still subjected to Jim Crow laws passed by White Christian dominated Legislatures, and were almost completely denied access to the housing and educational opportunities given to returning white soldiers through the GI Bill. Can you imagine what a financial impact home ownership and a free education had on the white veterans and their families who took advantage of the opportunities? There was no such opportunity for Black veterans. It isn't about slavery and slave ownership. It's (in part) about a recent generation of soldiers, some of whom are are still alive today and their direct descendants and a relatively recent and significant Government benefit that was available to white veterans but not to black veterans, including the famed Tuskegee Airmen. And speaking of Tuskegee, you may or not be familiar with the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, undertaken by the US Public Health Service from 1931 until 1972, when it was shut down for ethical violations that would have made Hitler proud. To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only people I can understand not getting the Covid-19 vaccine are people of color who have a long history of good reasons to not trust the US Government. thank a democrat... NOT TRUE ONCE AGAIN, WALLY! I'm getting tired of your shots in the dark with no proof!
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 19:07:08 GMT -5
The US was extremely slow to get into the war, and initially turned away boatloads of desperate Jewish refugees. The black WWII US soldiers who fought and came home alive, were still subjected to Jim Crow laws passed by White Christian dominated Legislatures, and were almost completely denied access to the housing and educational opportunities given to returning white soldiers through the GI Bill. Can you imagine what a financial impact home ownership and a free education had on the white veterans and their families who took advantage of the opportunities? There was no such opportunity for Black veterans. It isn't about slavery and slave ownership. It's (in part) about a recent generation of soldiers, some of whom are are still alive today and their direct descendants and a relatively recent and significant Government benefit that was available to white veterans but not to black veterans, including the famed Tuskegee Airmen. And speaking of Tuskegee, you may or not be familiar with the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, undertaken by the US Public Health Service from 1931 until 1972, when it was shut down for ethical violations that would have made Hitler proud. To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only people I can understand not getting the Covid-19 vaccine are people of color who have a long history of good reasons to not trust the US Government. thank a democrat... You are dodging the central issue. Force yourself to think for at least one minute about the long-term financial impact on a white family whose father returns from the war and is able to get a college degree and purchase a home through the GI Bill. Now take another minute and contrast this to a black family whose father returns from the war to Jim Crow and is effectively shut out of taking advantage of these GI Bill home ownership and educational benefits.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 19:17:07 GMT -5
Thank plan parenthood for some of that.... That is NOT true Wally!
Where is your "proof?"
margret sanger backed Buck vs Bell(1927) that required the forced sterilization plan parenthood carried that out to at T. even plan parenthood has admitted to that under margret sanger...good try though
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 19:18:24 GMT -5
NOT TRUE ONCE AGAIN, WALLY! I'm getting tired of your shots in the dark with no proof! it wasn't republicans that made the jim crow laws it was democrats...i thought you said you knew history?
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 19:45:02 GMT -5
You are dodging the central issue. Force yourself to think for at least one minute about the long-term financial impact on a white family whose father returns from the war and is able to get a college degree and purchase a home through the GI Bill. Now take another minute and contrast this to a black family whose father returns from the war to Jim Crow and is effectively shut out of taking advantage of these GI Bill home ownership and educational benefits. College attendance for blacks almost tripled under the GI Bill from 1% to 3% by 1950. from 1950 they went from 35% home ownership to 42% ownership by 1970. today its around 46% for home ownership. by 2000 it was 26% attendance for college to now in 2020 40%...and one should note despite the efforts in the late forties by DEMOCRATS to adjust the GI Bill to hamper blacks from using it Blacks found away....
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 19:54:54 GMT -5
You are dodging the central issue. Force yourself to think for at least one minute about the long-term financial impact on a white family whose father returns from the war and is able to get a college degree and purchase a home through the GI Bill. Now take another minute and contrast this to a black family whose father returns from the war to Jim Crow and is effectively shut out of taking advantage of these GI Bill home ownership and educational benefits. College attendance for blacks almost tripled under the GI Bill from 1% to 3% by 1950. from 1950 they went from 35% home ownership to 42% ownership by 1970. today its around 46% for home ownership. by 2000 it was 26% attendance for college to now in 2021 40%...and one should note despite the efforts in the late forties by DEMOCRATS to adjust the GI Bill to hamper blacks from using it Blacks found away.... Source please.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:09:35 GMT -5
College attendance for blacks almost tripled under the GI Bill from 1% to 3% by 1950. from 1950 they went from 35% home ownership to 42% ownership by 1970. today its around 46% for home ownership. by 2000 it was 26% attendance for college to now in 2021 40%...and one should note despite the efforts in the late forties by DEMOCRATS to adjust the GI Bill to hamper blacks from using it Blacks found away.... Source please. nope not playing source games today....take that any way you like...
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:18:24 GMT -5
Then Wally don't ever chip me in future for not providing a source. What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 20:19:33 GMT -5
nope not playing source games today....take that any way you like... You don't understand statistics well enough to be trusted with them. My post about the GI Bill was with respect to World War 2, not the wars that followed.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:21:37 GMT -5
Then Wally don't ever chip me in future for not providing a source. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. you post copy and paste information without crediting the source that would be a copyright violation that is not what i am doing...good try though
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:23:11 GMT -5
nope not playing source games today....take that any way you like... You don't understand statistics well enough to be trusted with them. My post about the GI Bill was with respect to World War 2, not the wars that followed. you are entitled to your opinions but they wouldn't be facts...i said nothing about any wars after WWII...nice try though....
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 20:26:28 GMT -5
You don't understand statistics well enough to be trusted with them. My post about the GI Bill was with respect to World War 2, not the wars that followed. you are entitled to your opinions but they wouldn't be facts...i said nothing about any wars after WWII...nice try though.... You quoted statistics that included data from 2021.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:39:16 GMT -5
you are entitled to your opinions but they wouldn't be facts...i said nothing about any wars after WWII...nice try though.... You quoted statistics that included data from 2021. OOPS s/b 2020 will fix...
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 20:40:04 GMT -5
You quoted statistics that included data from 2021. OOPS s/b 2020 will fix... Doesn't inspire confidence. Another good reason to ask for the source. So you quoted statistics that included data from 2020.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:40:57 GMT -5
OOPS s/b 2020 will fix... Doesn't inspire confidence. Another good reason to ask for the source. right like you've never made a typO or mispelling? good try though....
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Post by matisse on Jul 27, 2021 20:42:04 GMT -5
Doesn't inspire confidence. Another good reason to ask for the source. right like you've never made a typO or mispelling? good try though.... "Bullheaded" it is.
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Post by dmmichgood on Jul 27, 2021 20:43:43 GMT -5
You are dodging the central issue. Force yourself to think for at least one minute about the long-term financial impact on a white family whose father returns from the war and is able to get a college degree and purchase a home through the GI Bill. Now take another minute and contrast this to a black family whose father returns from the war to Jim Crow and is effectively shut out of taking advantage of these GI Bill home ownership and educational benefits. College attendance for blacks almost tripled under the GI Bill from 1% to 3% by 1950. from 1950 they went from 35% home ownership to 42% ownership by 1970. today its around 46% for home ownership. by 2000 it was 26% attendance for college to now in 2021 40%...and one should note despite the efforts in the late forties by DEMOCRATS to adjust the GI Bill to hamper blacks from using it Blacks found away.... Must be one of your "false news" sites, again Wally because two Supreme Court decisions had not even happen by 1950!
1950 was the year I graduated from high school. I went into nurses training that year and they did not allow black women into our Blessing Hospital Nurses Training School!
That kind of college attendance for blacks simply did NOT happen in white colleges!
Brown v. Board of Education decision by the Supreme Court 1954 It wasn't even until 1954 that the Brown v. Board of Education decision by the Supreme Court rejected the "separate but equal" doctrine and held that racially segregated public schools deprive black children of equal protection guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education rejected the "separate but equal" doctrine and held that racially segregated public schools deprive black children of equal protection guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The Plessy decision, which had governed public education policy for more than a half-century, was overturned. Despite the landmark Supreme Court decision in Brown, most HBCUs remained segregated with poorer facilities and budgets compared with traditionally white institutions.
Lack of adequate libraries and scientific and research equipment and capabilities placed a serious handicap on many. Many of the public HBCUs closed or merged with traditionally white institutions.
However, most black college students continued to attend HBCUs years after the decision was rendered.
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964
Soon after the Brown decision, Congress passed Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to provide a mechanism for ensuring equal opportunity in federally assisted programs and activities.
In enacting Title VI, Congress also reflected its concern with the slow progress in desegregating educational institutions following the Supreme Court's Brown decision.
Title VI protects individuals from discrimination based on race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving federal financial assistance. Passage of the law led to the establishment of the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) in the former Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW). OCR placed its primary compliance emphasis in the 1960s and early 1970s on eliminating unconstitutional elementary and secondary school segregation in the southern and border states.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:44:43 GMT -5
right like you've never made a typO or mispelling? good try though.... "Bullheaded" it is. "Arrogant" on your part it is.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:45:10 GMT -5
Then Wally don't ever chip me in future for not providing a source. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. you post copy and paste information without crediting the source that would be a copyright violation that is not what i am doing...good try though Wrong again, good try though. Wally you really need to think about a change in attitude, the current one is not becoming of you.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 20:55:05 GMT -5
College attendance for blacks almost tripled under the GI Bill from 1% to 3% by 1950. from 1950 they went from 35% home ownership to 42% ownership by 1970. today its around 46% for home ownership. by 2000 it was 26% attendance for college to now in 2021 40%...and one should note despite the efforts in the late forties by DEMOCRATS to adjust the GI Bill to hamper blacks from using it Blacks found away.... Must be one of your "false news" sites, again Wally because two Supreme Court decisions had not even happen by 1950!
1950 was the year I graduated from high school. I went into nurses training that year and they did not allow black women into our Blessing Hospital Nurses Training School!
That kind of college attendance for blacks simply did NOT happen in white colleges!
Brown v. Board of Education decision by the Supreme Court 1954 It wasn't even until 1954 that the Brown v. Board of Education decision by the Supreme Court rejected the "separate but equal" doctrine and held that racially segregated public schools deprive black children of equal protection guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education rejected the "separate but equal" doctrine and held that racially segregated public schools deprive black children of equal protection guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The Plessy decision, which had governed public education policy for more than a half-century, was overturned. Despite the landmark Supreme Court decision in Brown, most HBCUs remained segregated with poorer facilities and budgets compared with traditionally white institutions.
Lack of adequate libraries and scientific and research equipment and capabilities placed a serious handicap on many. Many of the public HBCUs closed or merged with traditionally white institutions.
However, most black college students continued to attend HBCUs years after the decision was rendered.
CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964
Soon after the Brown decision, Congress passed Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to provide a mechanism for ensuring equal opportunity in federally assisted programs and activities.
In enacting Title VI, Congress also reflected its concern with the slow progress in desegregating educational institutions following the Supreme Court's Brown decision.
Title VI protects individuals from discrimination based on race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving federal financial assistance. Passage of the law led to the establishment of the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) in the former Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW). OCR placed its primary compliance emphasis in the 1960s and early 1970s on eliminating unconstitutional elementary and secondary school segregation in the southern and border states.sorry to burst your bubble but blacks were attending a few(HBCU's) colleges before the SCOTUS made any decision....
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Post by dmmichgood on Jul 27, 2021 20:55:35 GMT -5
nope not playing source games today....take that any way you like... Of course not. But it isn't a "game." -
It has happened to your OWN brothers and sisters in Christ, -yes, even the 2x2's' -in the past and no doubt still does and has affected their lives for the worse.
But of course that just doesn't bother you does it, because they are black!!
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 21:02:56 GMT -5
you post copy and paste information without crediting the source that would be a copyright violation that is not what i am doing...good try though Wrong again, good try though. Wally you really need to think about a change in attitude, the current one is not becoming of you. redback post: "Living in the moment, and seeing everything afresh without judgement and worry lets us experience life rather than simply get through it. Being present is the very essence of mindfulness. Learning to be more mindful is about focusing on the here and now not what has been or what will be." where is the source you copy and pasted this from and no credit to the originator? yep DR. Patrizia Collard may have a few choices words for you... good try though
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Post by Deleted on Jul 27, 2021 21:07:28 GMT -5
nope not playing source games today....take that any way you like... Of course not. But it isn't a "game." -
It has happened to your OWN brothers and sisters in Christ, -yes, even the 2x2's' -in the past and no doubt still does and has affected their lives for the worse.
But of course that just doesn't bother you does it, because they are black!!Despite your narrative i am not a racist. You however hate white folks with a passion. You might look in a mirror every once in awhile when you say or imply racism on another....good try though
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