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Yonivore
04-19-2012, 06:33 PM
...written by Ann Coulter.

NEGROES WITH GUNS (http://www.wnd.com/2012/04/negroes-with-guns/)


"...every black person in America should get a gun and join the National Rifle Association, America’s oldest and most august civil rights organization."

spursncowboys
04-19-2012, 07:04 PM
It's an interesting piece. But you won't get any honest dialogue. Just Chump and the regulars making crude remarks about you or coulter.

clambake
04-19-2012, 07:08 PM
It's an interesting piece. But you won't get any honest dialogue. Just Chump and the regulars making crude remarks about you or coulter.

:lol instantly calling out chump.

he must a takin you to the shed.

Th'Pusher
04-19-2012, 07:20 PM
For more than a hundred years, Republicans have aggressively supported arming blacks, so they could defend themselves against Democrats.

:-)

diego
04-19-2012, 08:08 PM
i looked up US gun law and i can see that 18 year olds once licensed can purchase rifles and shotguns, and at 21 handguns.
those poor minors being kept at a disadvantage by big brothers gun laws: armed neighborhood watchmen are only going after them because they are easy pickings, not because of their hoodies (or the real social problems that create stereotypes to begin with)

:lol at you implying people would dismiss it just because Coulter said it. Its a stupid analysis of the situation at hand just to get a jab in at team blue.

DMX7
04-19-2012, 08:24 PM
Was MLK an NRA member?

Yonivore
04-19-2012, 08:47 PM
Was MLK an NRA member?
Alabama Democrats wouldn't let him buy a gun. But, the NRA would have let him be a member.

DMX7
04-19-2012, 09:00 PM
Alabama Democrats wouldn't let him buy a gun. But, the NRA would have let him be a member.

Were those Alabama "Democrats" conservatives?

Yonivore
04-19-2012, 09:05 PM
Were those Alabama "Democrats" conservatives?
No, they were the Robert "Sheets" Byrd variety.

FuzzyLumpkins
04-19-2012, 10:29 PM
:-)

And then if you look at party leadership around TX, AL, MS, AR, and SC at the county/parish/district level in the 1950s and 1960s and then look again in the 1970s you will see the migration of folks from the Democratic party to the GOP.

Comparing politics of the Democrats in the 1870s to today is fun and all but all it is doing is preying on people's political ignorance. It should be insulting that she claims that


Apparently this has occurred to no one because our excellent public education system ensures that no American under the age of 60 has the slightest notion of this country’s history.

but you can hardly blame her. Most people do not know their ass from a hole in the ground.

Another little facet of the patronizing shit that the rich planters who controlled the democratic party back then would do with poor white farmers is llame everything on the black man and create a caste system where they could at least be a class above the black man. Now if you replace 'black man' with 'poor' you have most of the platform of the GOP.

If you are not either devout fundamentalist protestant or very wealthy then I think you are dumb as shit if you support the GOP especially in the South.

ChumpDumper
04-20-2012, 12:35 AM
Yeah, whenever conservatives try to pimp the pre-civil rights era Republican party like nothing changed...

ChumpDumper
04-20-2012, 12:36 AM
...it's always worth a chuckle.

Th'Pusher
04-20-2012, 11:32 AM
No, they were the Robert "Sheets" Byrd variety.

Who would they vote for today? Romney or Obama?

Winehole23
04-20-2012, 12:05 PM
And then if you look at party leadership around TX, AL, MS, AR, and SC at the county/parish/district level in the 1950s and 1960s and then look again in the 1970s you will see the migration of folks from the Democratic party to the GOP.didn't start happening in a significant way in Texas until Bill Clements and Ronald Reagan were elected in 1980.

coyotes_geek
04-20-2012, 12:08 PM
Who would they vote for today? Romney or Obama?

Write-in for the corpse of George Wallace.

Winehole23
04-20-2012, 12:15 PM
like Billy Lee Brammer said in The Gay Place (http://books.google.com/books?id=MOCnEiiJyEcC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_atb#v=onepage&q&f=false), even in the early sixties Texas was full of Democrats who were already Republican by heart. That it was neither completely socially respectable nor prudently expeditious to attach an (R) to your name until the mid eighties, was a peculiarity of history; it no longer is.