The Reverse Is Not True - Why Do Conservatives Tolerate Hate?

Founded in 1866, the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) extended into almost every southern state by 1870 and became a vehicle for white southern resistance to the Republican Party’s Reconstruction-era policies aimed at establishing political and economic equality for blacks. Its members waged an underground campaign of intimidation and violence directed at white and black Republican leaders.
PolitiFact | Debunking the claim that "The KKK was founded as the military arm of the Democratic Party."

And of course, there is the infamous Robert KKK Byrd.

You must think you’re the first person to try this stupid argument. It’s boring.

And what party did the Dixiecrats join after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed?

There is a reason the South has been overwhelmingly Republican since then.

And that is where the similarities end.

Rightist ideology can be just as oppressive as leftist ideology. Ask any black person who lived in the south during the Jim Crow era. It wasn’t leftists who were oppressing them.

Wasn’t the question was it?

No? You defend him as though he is.

You political ideology is always on the wrong side of history. It doesn’t matter what party you’re in. This is why you constantly try to usurp the republican party from the 19th century even though a majority of today’s right wingers would have fought for the confederacy.

Quite frankly, I agree with you. Boring as hell. It is also boring to broad brush the extremists on either side and assign blame to a particular party for their behavior.

How many Democrat US senators that voted against the 1964 CRA became Republican US senators afterwards? One?

((shrugs shoulders))

Plenty of people on the wrong side of history as history is re-written to support the winners.

Perhaps a majority of today’s right wingers would have fought for the confederacy. Neither you nor I can travel back in time to determine that.

No time travelling is required.

Well, you’ve got a theory and a belief system going for you.

Everyone knows what you are trying to imply.

What party today are white supremacists and Neo Nazis members of?

I’ll give you a hint:

“In at least five state and national races across the country, the Republican Party is dealing with an uncomfortable problem. Their party’s candidates are either a card-carrying Nazi, a Holocaust denier, a proud white supremacist, or all of the above.

In North Carolina, for example, GOP officials are stuck with Russell Walker, a white supremacist running for the state House of Representatives. According to his personal website (littered with the n-word), he believes that “the jews are NOT semitic they are satanic as they all descend from Satan.”

Republicans in the state have regrets. “This is a very Democratic district, one that we failed to keep our eye on,” Dallas Woodhouse, executive chair of the North Carolina GOP, told me in an email. “However, we can’t stop him from running.”

In Illinois, meanwhile, the Republican Party shrugged off Arthur Jones, a candidate for the state’s 3rd Congressional district who boasted of his membership in the American Nazi Party. But Jones won the GOP primary, and now party officials, including ones who called Jones “morally reprehensible” and “a complete nutcase,” are scrambling to launch a write-in campaign. Jones’s campaign website features a section called “Holocaust?” in which he argues that the “idea that six million Jews, were killed by the National Socialist government of Germany, in World War II, is the biggest, blackest lie in history.”

In Virginia, the chair of the state GOP resigned earlier this month, reportedly because of alt-right leaning, pro-Confederate candidate Corey Stewart’s win in the Republican primary. But even Stewart had to disavow Wisconsin’s Paul Nehlen, who is running to replace Speaker Paul Ryan. Nehlen’s too racist for Twitter and even for Gab, the preferred social media platform of the alt-right. Meanwhile, a California Republican running for Congress has been making appearances on neo-Nazi podcasts and argues on his campaign website that “diversity” is a Jewish plot. (The California GOP has disavowed him.)

Racial animus helped fuel the rise of Donald Trump. Since the end of the civil rights movement and under Republican strategist Lee Atwater’s “Southern strategy” that used racism as an unstated cudgel against Democrats, the Republican Party itself has played a welcoming host to racial tensions and fears. Simultaneously, it has depicted itself, as conservative columnist Jeff Jacoby put it in 2012, as “the party of color-blind equality and “a party that doesn’t think with its skin.”

But in a year when the left is energized in opposition to Trump, particularly by his policies toward minority groups and immigrants, and as the GOP tries to hang on to their majorities in Congress and state houses around the country, state party officials say they do not need racist fringe candidates running for office. None of these candidates is expected to win in the general election this fall, but they are going to give liberals on the hunt for examples of simmering neo-Nazi and neo-Confederate rhetoric at least five places to point.

An anti-Trump Nazi is running in Illinois
Arthur Jones, an independent insurance salesperson known as “Art,” regrets voting for Donald Trump. But he’s got a different reason than most who’ve thought twice about their vote. In a speech in April 2017, Jones said:

The Jewish lobby has Donald Trump locked up. I don’t think the man realizes how naive he appears to the rest of the world. He’s nothing but a puppet in their hands. And we were foolish enough to send this naive, Jew-loving fool into the White House. I’m embarrassed that I voted for him. I’m sorry I voted for him. If I could take the vote back, I would in a minute.

Art is a card-carrying Nazi. Jones reportedly once led the American Nazi Party, and he was a member of a later version of the ANP, the National Socialist White People’s Party.

His website says he’s “concerned about the future of our country,” which, for a normal politician, might sound like a generic call for more spending on their generic priorities. But it takes on a very different connotation when you click over to the section called “Holocaust?,” a page that features a variety of conspiracy theories and racist ideas shared by the Holocaust-denier world.”

It’s true. Democrats learned that there was a legal way to keep the black man down. As LBJ said… that way will keep em voting for you for the next 200 years.

Well some have broken free of Democrat oppression. And when they do you scream in unison like banshees. You go back to your old tried and proven methods of destroying black men who don’t kowtow to your narrative… accuse him of sexual promiscuity…like the Democrat senators did to Justice Thomas during his confirmation hearing.

I don’t give a rat about the white supremacists and Neo Nazis. They are an outlier. Just like Robert KKK Byrd.

I’ll give you a hint. They no more represent the Republican party than Robert KKK Byrd represents Democrats.

But it’s your party now that not only embraces these scum but they are also running for elected office as Republicans.

Major difference…Republicans repudiate these people while Democrats will forgive and forget while in their interests (Byrd) or say it isn’t racist if it is hatred against whites (see threads on Jeong).

BS. They are running as Republicans. They now represent a constiuency of your party.

Eh? Who the hell in their right mind embraces them? Just because they affiliate themselves with a party doesn’t mean you should broad brush the party! That’s like saying some guy who shoots up a mall and is a registered Democrat is embraced by “your” party.

That’s why they are on the ballot this year as Republicans.