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L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-09-2012, 11:13 PM
Since the days of Richard Nixon's "Southern strategy," the Republican Party has wooed angry whites with coded messages designed to play to racial prejudices - and that pattern has come back strong in Campaign 2012 as the GOP seeks to rid the White House of a black Democrat.

Usually, the dog whistle comes in appeals to "states' rights" and allusions to "welfare queens," but sometimes the implicit becomes explicit, as occurred when former Sen. Rick Santorum blurted out, "I don't want to make black people's lives better by giving them somebody else's money. I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money."

This comment was directed to white Republicans in Iowa, some of whom nodded knowingly, receiving the message that President Barack Obama wanted to take their hard-earned money and give it to shiftless blacks. It's a message as old as time in America and it apparently helped boost Santorum into a virtual tie with GOP front-runner Mitt Romney.

However, Santorum quickly came to regret his caught-on-video frankness, realizing that many Americans find such blatant appeals to racial prejudice offensive. So, he proceeded to lie about what he actually said, claiming absurdly that he never said "black people" - that he "started to say a word" and then "sort of mumbled it and changed my thought."

The word, in Santorum's revisionist tale, had come out something like "blah," not "black." Yet why the government would be so determined to give "other people's money" to "blah people" was not explained. Perhaps so the "blah people" could buy snazzier wardrobes or snappier cars to make them less "blah."

Thus, Santorum hoped he could have it both ways. The white racist voters in Iowa and in other states could hear that the ex-Pennsylvania senator wasn't going to use government programs "to make black people's lives better," while non-racists were supposed to believe that he simply stammered out a word that sounded like "black," but was really "blah."

Not to be outdone, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich went beyond his usual disparaging of "food stamps" by adding a reference to the NAACP, in case some slow-witted whites didn't get the racially tinged "food stamps" message. After all, many struggling whites also rely on food-assistance programs, indeed a much higher number than blacks.

Evil Guv-mint

These crude appeals to racial bigotry - often framed as a well-meaning desire to help blacks by ending their "dependency" on government help - fits, too, into the broader right-wing narrative, that the federal government and its do-gooder programs are what's holding America back.

If only Washington got out of the way - along with its regulations, its taxes on the rich and its social safety net - then the entrepreneurial spirit of America would be revived and prosperity would spread from sea to shining sea, the right-wing message goes.

This message resonates with many Americans, especially whites, because it panders to their rose-colored personal mythologies that they and their parents climbed the economic ladder solely due to their hard work and grit. It's always an easy sell for politicians to flatter people by saying "you made it on your own."

Yet, for the vast majority of Americans, the reality is quite different. Especially after the Great Depression of the 1930s, the federal government took the lead in creating the social and economic framework that undergirded the nation's later success.

Even right-wing icon Dick Cheney has acknowledged that the New Deal lifted his family from economic hardship into the middle-class - and contributed to his own renowned personal confidence, which he ironically has put to use dismantling the New Deal. [See Consortiumnews.com's "Dick Cheney: Son of the New Deal."]

Government activism also wasn't a deviation from the Founders' "originalist" intent, as the Right would have you believe. Decisive action by a strong central government to protect the nation's interests was precisely what the drafters of the Constitution had in mind.

The driving goal of the Constitutional Convention in 1787 was to create a vibrant federal system that could address national problems and make the new country competitive with - and invulnerable to - the then-stronger nation-states of Europe.

Contrary to Tea Party ideology, the Constitution was not about embracing states' rights. Instead, the Constitution eradicated states' sovereignty which had existed under the Articles of Confederation. The Constitution asserted the sovereignty of "we the people of the United States" and the national Republic, with the states relegated to a secondary status.

To understand what happened, all you have to do is examine the Articles of Confederation, which governed the new country from 1777 to 1787, in comparison with the Constitution, or read even popular histories of the Constitutional Convention like Miracle at Philadelphia by Catherine Drinker Bowen.

Gen. George Washington despised the notion of "state sovereignty," which the states had cited during the Revolutionary War and afterwards as an excuse not to contribute promised funds to the Continental Army. "Thirteen sovereignties," Washington wrote, "pulling against each other, and all tugging at the foederal head, will soon bring ruin to the whole."

It is true that some Revolutionary War leaders, such as Virginia's Patrick Henry, ardently opposed the Constitution, but they did so because they saw it as an infringement on states' rights. In other words, both proponents and opponents recognized what the Constitution's drafters were doing: creating a strong central government.

The Constitution, which was ratified by the 13 states in 1788, represented the most dramatic shift of power from the states to the national government in U.S. history.

Lost Battles

Still, ratification of the Constitution did not stop proponents of states' rights from resisting federal authority, especially in the slave-owning South.

But the battles over what the Constitution intended - including President Andrew Jackson's facing down the Nullificationists in the 1830s, President Abraham Lincoln's defense of the Union in the Civil War, and the desegregation of the South in the 1950s and 1960s - were ultimately settled in favor of national sovereignty. Federal law prevailed over states' rights.

Having lost those historic fights, the Right latched onto a new strategy: to confuse the American people by rewriting the nation's founding history. The Right's influential politicians and pundits began claiming that the drafters of the Constitution were opposed to a strong federal government and were big advocates of states' rights.

For instance, last year on the campaign trail, Gov. Rick Perry, R-Texas, declared, "Our Founding Fathers never meant for Washington, D.C. to be the fount of all wisdom. As a matter of fact they were very much afraid of that because they'd just had this experience with this far-away government that had centralized thought process and planning and what have you, and then it was actually the reason that we fought the revolution in the 16th century was to get away from that kind of onerous crown if you will."

Besides being 200 years off on when the Revolutionary War was fought, Perry had the larger point wrong, too. The Founders - at least those who drafted the Constitution - saw the gravest danger to the new country coming from disunity. They viewed a vibrant central government as a way to protect the young Republic from renewed encroachments from Europe's monarchies, which otherwise could turn one state or one region against another.

The Tea Party's revisionist history of the Founding also has required a gross exaggeration of the Tenth Amendment's significance. It states: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively or to the people."

While references to the Tenth Amendment draw cheers from today's Tea Party crowds, its wording must be compared to the Confederation's Article II, which says: "Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated."

In other words, the Constitution flipped the balance, stripping the states of their "sovereignty, freedom, and independence," while granting broad powers to the national government, including over interstate commerce. The Tenth Amendment was essentially a sop to the anti-federalists, added three years after the Constitution was ratified.

The New Deal

The Founders' "originalist" vision of a strong central government was vindicated in the 1930s when President Franklin Roosevelt led a national effort to recover from the Great Depression, which had been caused largely by lightly regulated "free-market economics."

Roosevelt's strategy, which involved large-scale development programs for modernizing the nation, such as the Tennessee Valley Authority providing electrification for much of the rural South, was carried forward by subsequent presidents, Republican as well as Democrat, through the post-World War II years.

President Dwight Eisenhower initiated the Interstate Highway project which improved the national transportation system; President John F. Kennedy launched the space program which achieved major technological breakthroughs; President Lyndon Johnson pushed medical programs and research that aided later pharmaceutical advances; and even the "failed" presidencies of the 1970s - Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter - focused the United States on environmental safeguards and energy self-sufficiency.

During this era - from the 1930s into the 1970s - millions of Americans were lifted into the middle-class and others grew rich from exploiting the innovations that government projects made possible.

All companies benefited from the U.S. transportation infrastructure; many piggybacked onto the technological breakthroughs in electronics; the drug industry exploited taxpayer-funded research in the development of new medicines. It turned out that government could create jobs, especially through alliances with the private sector.

Indeed, it is fair to say that the great American middle-class was largely the creation of the federal government – from the New Deal, which guaranteed labor rights and created Social Security, to the GI Bill which sent World War II veterans to college, to more recent developments such as the creation of the Internet and GPS devices.

It was not until Ronald Reagan's presidency in the 1980s that the political dynamic shifted. As Reagan declared that "government is the problem," the role of Washington in the lives of Americans was demonized. Many middle-class Americans forgot how much they and their families had benefited from actions of the federal government.

The myth of self-reliance proved seductive. The government was recast as an instrument for helping the lazy at the expense of the productive. Through subtle and not-so-subtle messaging, white Americans were told that the government was hurting them to help undeserving blacks and other minorities.

Government regulations were redefined as meaningless red tape that penalized important innovations, such as the exotic "financial instruments" that Wall Street was devising to "revolutionize" the banking industry. The thinking was that the government just had to get out of the way and let industry "self-regulate."

It followed, too, that Reagan's economic theories, such as "supply-side economics," would evolve into gospel on the Right. Since the beloved Reagan more than halved the top marginal tax rates on the rich - so they could invest in "supply-side" production and thus create more jobs - many conservatives embraced this notion with religious zeal.

Today, Gingrich boasts about his role in helping to formulate and enact "supply-side economics" - despite the fact that it has proved a crushing failure, as the American super-rich do little to create American jobs with their extra wealth. Indeed, U.S. corporations are sitting on trillions of dollars in capital because of a lack of consumer demand.

That lack of consumer demand has resulted from the decline in the American middle-class over the past few decades as Reaganomics has increasingly transformed U.S. society into one of extreme wealth and widespread want. In other words, the shrinking middle-class is proof that "supply-side" economics doesn't work, even as Republicans keep promoting it.

But the now-undeniable damage to the American middle-class - inflicted largely by right-wing ideology - creates a political problem for Republicans. Many voters may be hesitant to double-down on a bad bet.

So, it is perhaps not surprising that some of the current crop of GOP presidential candidates have turned again to more and more blatant appeals to racial prejudice. After all, racism is the primeval "wedge issue."

In this sour economic climate, more racist messaging - like Santorum's opposition to giving money to "blah people" and Gingrich's endless allusions to "food stamps" - can be expected as the Republican primary season rolls on.

- Robert Parry

cutthemdown
01-09-2012, 11:22 PM
I'm all for ending welfare for white people also. Take all that money and use it for your infrastructure projects you seem to want. Then at the state levels we need prison reform bigtime. It has to get cheaper, either by working the prisoners, or modernizing the prisons so you don't need guards. Seriously we should have one or two guards in a control room that can run the whole place. This is money we can't afford to keep spending IMO, escpecially here in CA.

Really though its stupid to call this racism. Like Dems courting blacks is any different. They say all the time evil white people are out to keep you down, vote dem. This yr obviously Obama will just attack all of COngress, trying to make them the scapegoat for the crappy legislation he rammed down their throats with questionable tactics.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-09-2012, 11:32 PM
Really though its stupid to call this racism.

Only a racist would say this.

Either a racist, or someone who is genuinely clueless about history, i.e., the GOP's southern strategy, as expounded in the OP.


Like Dems courting blacks is any different. They say all the time evil white people are out to keep you down, vote dem.

Give me one example of a Democrat who has said anything like this.

All you are doing here is making Parry's case for him.

pricejj
01-10-2012, 09:11 AM
...brought to you by LABF the Racist. What an offensive and despicable OP.

alkemical
01-10-2012, 09:37 AM
I'm all for ending welfare for white people also. Take all that money and use it for your infrastructure projects you seem to want. Then at the state levels we need prison reform bigtime. It has to get cheaper, either by working the prisoners, or modernizing the prisons so you don't need guards. Seriously we should have one or two guards in a control room that can run the whole place. This is money we can't afford to keep spending IMO, escpecially here in CA.

Really though its stupid to call this racism. Like Dems courting blacks is any different. They say all the time evil white people are out to keep you down, vote dem. This yr obviously Obama will just attack all of COngress, trying to make them the scapegoat for the crappy legislation he rammed down their throats with questionable tactics.


Prisons will never be scaled back to where you only have two people running the whole thing. It's unpossible.

You'd be better off...making less people criminals to reduce the burden.

Garcia Bronco
01-10-2012, 09:45 AM
Robert Parry does exactly what he claims others did...."re-write history" LOL

Garcia Bronco
01-10-2012, 09:47 AM
Really though its stupid to call this racism. Like Dems courting blacks is any different. They say all the time evil white people are out to keep you down, vote dem. This yr obviously Obama will just attack all of COngress, trying to make them the scapegoat for the crappy legislation he rammed down their throats with questionable tactics.

Ask Democrats if they know Jim Crow.









They did create him after all.

Pony Boy
01-10-2012, 10:48 AM
Even a minority can be racist

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L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-10-2012, 12:28 PM
...brought to you by LABF the Racist.

What an offensive and despicable OP.

Weakest "I am rubber - you are glue" comeback ever! ::)

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-10-2012, 12:31 PM
Even a minority can be racist


^

Deflection.

The GOP doesn't win elections by appealing to the racial prejudices of minorities.

:mullet2:

pricejj
01-10-2012, 02:25 PM
Weakest "I am rubber - you are glue" comeback ever! ::)

Pathetic racist. The color of a person's skin does not determine anything. Why do you continue to focus on it?

cutthemdown
01-10-2012, 05:26 PM
Prisons will never be scaled back to where you only have two people running the whole thing. It's unpossible.

You'd be better off...making less people criminals to reduce the burden.

Yes an exaggeration but we could go higher tech and reduce the amount of guards, and guard contact with prisoners. Give them the authority to kill and prisoner who is commiting an act of violence. Zero tolerance IMO should be the rule once in prison.

We need to segergate the prisons by level of offense. Putting murderes in with people doing 1-3 yrs for non violent offenses is stupid.

Then I agree with you, laws like 3 strikes in calif need to be abolsihed because they tie the hands of judges who could maybe find a better sentence for many offenders.

Then prison farm work camps seem like a good idea. You let inmates get way less time in exchange for working harvesting, doing the jobs free americans don't want. Once again you make escape attempts or acts of violence met with the harshest of punishments.

pricejj
01-10-2012, 10:40 PM
Socialists seek to divide and conquer. My friends are American, Canadian, Mexican, Guatamalan, Colombian, Brazilian, Polish, English, Scottish, Swiss, Chech, Russian, South Korean, Vietnamese, Chinese, Tibetan, Latino, Indian, Hopi, Cherokee, African-American, Nigerian, Camaroonian, Somalian, Turkish, Iranian, Saudi, and Australian.

Somehow I am accused of being racist because I believe in god, the U.S. Constitution, and fiscal conservatism?

U.N.I.T.E or D.I.E.

ant1999e
01-10-2012, 10:46 PM
LABF is just giving us a taste of the Bullshyt the dems are gonna pull during the elections.

epicSocialism4tw
01-10-2012, 10:55 PM
Socialists seek to divide and conquer. My friends are American, Canadian, Mexican, Guatamalan, Colombian, Brazilian, Polish, English, Scottish, Swiss, Chech, Russian, South Korean, Vietnamese, Chinese, Tibetan, Latino, Indian, Hopi, Cherokee, African-American, Nigerian, Camaroonian, Somalian, Turkish, Iranian, Saudi, and Australian. My wife is Sudanese and our kids are mixed.

Somehow I am accused of being racist because I believe in god, the U.S. Constitution, and fiscal conservatism?

U.N.I.T.E or D.I.E.

Sudanese women are gorgeous. The Dinka especially. In general, they look like fine sculptures. The really beautiful ones are just stunning.

epicSocialism4tw
01-10-2012, 10:57 PM
LABF is just giving us a taste of the Bullshyt the dems are gonna pull during the elections.

Its all they have.

Lord knows that Obama's record isn't good enough to run on.

So its "the white people are out to get you! Vote for me so we can get them first!".

Pathetic.

This is Obama strategy. I can't see how anyone would vote for this guy. He's the most intentionally divisive president of our lifetime by a large margin.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-11-2012, 02:06 AM
Pathetic racist.

Gotta chuckle at sociopathic pukes like you who try to flip the script on those who expose your party's appeals to racist voters.

According to the idiotic reasoning you're employing here, simply observing and mentioning the GOP's "southern strategy" makes the observer a "racist."


The color of a person's skin does not determine anything. Why do you continue to focus on it?

You really should direct this question to your party's presidential candidates who are using the same old, tried-and-true appeals to racism the GOP has employed for decades, as detailed in the OP.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-11-2012, 02:09 AM
Lord knows that Obama's record isn't good enough to run on.



You're probably right, but he doesn't have to run on his record - he can just sit back and watch your party's insane clown posse gift wrap the election for him.

Ha!

epicSocialism4tw
01-11-2012, 03:57 AM
You're probably right, but he doesn't have to run on his record - he can just sit back and watch your party's insane clown posse gift wrap the election for him.

Both Romney and Ron Paul are running favorably against failed Obama.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-11-2012, 06:53 AM
Both Romney and Ron Paul are running favorably against failed Obama.

::)

Whatever gets you through the night, Bubba.

mhgaffney
01-11-2012, 07:44 PM
This thread is as good as any place-- to comment (again) on the general impoverishment of ideas of the OM.

How can so many people be unaware that the US political process is terminally dys functional?

Both parties are owned lock stock and barrel by Wall Street banksters. Only this can explain the paucity of substance in the campaign.

It's a hoax -- a cruel joke.

The fact that the brainwashed masses have not yet noticed does not alter the fact by an iota that the corporate media spin machine rules the air waves.

The Irish writer James Joyce wrote that history s the nightmare from which I am trying to awaken.

But there will no awaking from the boob tube. The only answer starts with a first step: turn it off.

epicSocialism4tw
01-11-2012, 08:24 PM
Whatever gets you through the night, Bubba.

Yeah...here's a little reality for your eye:

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57355518-503544/poll-among-gop-hopefuls-romney-fares-best-against-obama/

Romney 47
obama 45

Paul 45
Obama 46

Atwater 27
01-11-2012, 08:34 PM
I saw the title of this thread and I though someone was quoting Reverend Wright. My bad.

pricejj
01-11-2012, 08:53 PM
Gotta chuckle at sociopathic pukes like you who try to flip the script on those who expose your party's appeals to racist voters.

According to the idiotic reasoning you're employing here, simply observing and mentioning the GOP's "southern strategy" makes the observer a "racist."



You really should direct this question to your party's presidential candidates who are using the same old, tried-and-true appeals to racism the GOP has employed for decades, as detailed in the OP.

I'm not a Republican. Keep up the insults and your offensive racist rants. I have no respect for you, and never will. Your unabashed party politics, and constant denigration towards anyone who promotes fiscal sustainability is a reflection of you and your party's oppressive assault on American citizens.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-11-2012, 11:16 PM
I'm not a Republican.

ROFL!

Right, I almost forgot - you're an "Independent" now.


Keep up the insults and your offensive racist rants.

You're confusing me with your boy Newt again.

All in all, I'd say you're one confused little man.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-11-2012, 11:17 PM
I saw the title of this thread and I though someone was quoting Reverend Wright. My bad.

Thanks for making the author's point for him.

Rev. Wright isn't fleecing you - your own party is handling that (see OP.)

Atwater 27
01-12-2012, 06:29 AM
The only thing worse than a looney liberal website is one that 'pretends' it is independent and 'middle of the road'. You can take your racebaiting drivel and inject it into your anal opening.

pricejj
01-12-2012, 09:24 AM
ROFL!

Right, I almost forgot - you're an "Independent" now.


I believe in god, and the U.S. constitution. I'm a fiscal conservative. You are a democrat party hack.


All in all, I'd say you're one confused little man.

I'm 5'10", 170 lbs. Champ is like 6'0, 200 lbs. So no, I'm not little...Champ is bigger than you think.

Spider
01-12-2012, 09:30 AM
I'm 5'10", 170 lbs. Champ is like 6'0, 200 lbs. So no, I'm not little...Champ is bigger than you think.

scrawny little shiat aint ya

pricejj
01-12-2012, 10:49 AM
scrawny little shiat aint ya

ethiopian bucktooth beaver was my nickname in junior high

Spider
01-12-2012, 10:57 AM
ethiopian bucktooth beaver was my nickname in junior high

LMAO ...... well mine was the opposite I was called Tank or dozer

El Minion
01-12-2012, 04:40 PM
The Food Stamp Fallacy (http://www.theroot.com/views/food-stamp-fallacy?page=0,2)

By: Edward Wyckoff Williams
Posted: January 10, 2012 at 12:53 AM

<!--paging_filter-->When will Republicans be honest about who really gets the most out of welfare programs?

<!--paging_filter-->The leaders of today's Republican Party are expert storytellers. When it comes to manipulating racial stereotypes for political gain, they are akin to animation artists of the 1920s: coloring the lines in black and white.

Last Thursday Newt Gingrich told a crowd of senior citizens in New Hampshire, "The African-American community should demand paychecks and not be satisfied with food stamps (http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/gingrich-wants-to-urge-black-people-at-naacp-convention-to-demand-paychecks-not-food-stamps/2012/01/05/gIQALLGZdP_story.html?tid=pm_politics_pop)." Rick Santorum was even more egregious, claiming he doesn't "want to make black people's lives better (http://www.theroot.com/views/santorums-sticky-views-entitlements) by giving them other people's money" (although he later claimed that he never intentionally said "black").

Gingrich's latest offense comes only weeks after he received widespread criticism for saying that poor children should work as janitors and clean toilets. He specifically made a point of addressing "inner city" youths -- which has become conservative code for black and brown people everywhere, from the South to the coasts, the suburbs to the metropolises, regardless of where they actually live.

For some odd reason, this is acceptable rhetoric among the conservative political class. It is especially troubling because every reliable statistic shows that white Americans are the overwhelming beneficiaries of welfare in this country and make up the largest number of those in poverty by a wide and substantial margin. The Republicans' well-rehearsed lies on the subject have been so effective that people of every hue have come to believe them, feeding widespread ignorance about the true face of poverty and the ever-growing gap between America's rich and poor.

Perhaps it's time for a lesson in mathematics and history.

The Myth of the Black Welfare Queen

Ronald Reagan, now lauded as the great Republican demigod, is largely responsible for the GOP's misguided obsession with framing African Americans as the predominant poor and welfare-dependent. In his 1976 race for the White House, Reagan repeated hyperbolic stories of a woman on the South Side of Chicago who was the quintessential "welfare queen."

Reagan claimed (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/07/opinion/blow-the-gops-black-people-platform.html), "She has 80 names, 30 addresses, 12 Social Security cards and is collecting veteran's benefits on four nonexisting deceased husbands. And she is collecting Social Security on her cards. She's got Medicaid, getting food stamps, and she is collecting welfare under each of her names. Her tax-free cash income is over $150,000."

Reagan never named the actual woman, but his statement, including the reference to the South Side of Chicago, said it all.

Though the story was later proven false, the concept became an American colloquialism, propagated by news media and Hollywood, and remains a disturbingly popular image of poor black women and families.

The truth? Of the 46 million people living in poverty in America in 2010, the U.S. census (http://www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/archives/income_wealth/cb11-157.html) revealed that 31 million were white. Ten million were black. Of the 49 million people without health insurance coverage, 37 million were white; 8 million were African American. Latinos of every race and Asian Americans represented the remaining largest ethnic groups.

The face of poverty in America is overwhelmingly white, but as sociologist and professor William O'Hare explains in a 2009 study on children in poverty (http://www.prb.org/Articles/2009/ruralchildpoverty.aspx), the white American poor, especially those in rural areas, are "forgotten."

So What Do the Numbers Tell Us About Poverty?

White Americans, poor and middle-class alike, receive the vast majority of tax-funded government assistance programs, from monthly assistance to Social Security to food stamps.

TANF (http://www.tanf.us/) (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families), the program that provides aid to single mothers, is the most well-known welfare program, but the truth is that Social Security and Medicare are also social welfare services, funded by tax dollars. To that end, nearly 70 percent (http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/ssi_asr/2010/index.html) of all benefits of these programs go to white people. In fact, since African Americans have lower life expectancy, many work and pay into the Social Security and Medicare programs through their tax dollars, only to have white Americans, who have a longer life expectancy, benefit from the income they've left behind.

O'Hare's research (http://www.prb.org/Articles/2009/ruralchildpoverty.aspx) in his 2009 report "The Forgotten Fifth: Child Poverty in Rural America," reveals that 57 percent of rural poor children were white and 44 percent of all urban poor children were white. But theirs is a story rarely told, their faces hardly seen. High poverty rates for poor and working-class whites have worsened since the 2008 economic crisis. Rural white poverty was already more systemic than urban poverty. Poor whites are more likely to lack basic education levels and remain in poverty for generations.

O'Hare found that white Americans living in rural areas benefited the least from the economic boom of the 1990s. The parents were often underemployed, and this translated into deeper poverty levels for their children.

The Food Stamp Fallacy and GOP Strategy

In December 2009, the New York Times published a series (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/29/us/29foodstamps.html) of related articles showing that poor whites across Appalachia and the Mississippi Delta and through the Midwest, Deep South and Texas borderlands were the highest percentage of Americans relying on the SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), or food stamp, program.

According to the New York Times, 36 million Americans relied on food stamps. More than 24 million of them were white, 8 million were African American and 6 million were Hispanic of any race.

Reagan and the GOP learned a powerful lesson from Barry Goldwater's devastating defeat in 1964 and the Southern strategy implemented by Nixon: that race was a powerful tool in securing the white vote, even if it meant convincing working-class whites to vote against their own economic interests.

It was Reagan who in 1980 described the Voting Rights Act as "humiliating to the South," a strategy that led to the phenomenon known as Reagan Democrats. By surreptitiously appealing to disgruntled working-class whites across the South and in states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, Reagan fed suspicions that Democrats were purveyors of welfare economics.

The "black welfare queen" image he touted only served to strengthen the resolve of white voters who considered themselves social conservatives. As Paul Krugman pointed out in his 2007 article "Republicans and Race (http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/19/opinion/19krugman.html)," Southern whites still voted for the GOP at a ratio of 2 to 1. But for poor whites voting Republican, it's a strategy that only serves to keep them in poverty.

Like everyone struggling to provide for their families amid the nation's economic challenges, poor whites are a demographic sorely in need of progressive answers to their socioeconomic ills. Yet many remain adherent to a racially polarizing Republican Party that has taught them to fear Obama as "alien" or "other."

From Reagan to Gingrich to Santorum, race-baiting has only profited the Republican leaders who have sold it. Those at the bottom, and poor whites in particular, are left to pay the price.

Edward Wyckoff Williams is an author, columnist, political analyst for MSNBC and a former investment banker. Follow him on Twitter (http://twitter.com/WyckoffWilliams) and on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/wyckoffwilliams).

Bronx33
01-12-2012, 05:05 PM
Only a racist would say this.

Either a racist, or someone who is genuinely clueless about history, i.e., the GOP's southern strategy, as expounded in the OP.



Give me one example of a Democrat who has said anything like this.

All you are doing here is making Parry's case for him.


You're an idiot

Atwater 27
01-12-2012, 05:06 PM
Good! Even more of a reason to go after welfare. Get them Whiteys!

As if we didn't know white people were the vast majority of recipients. Edward Whackoff Williams is making love to his (wait for it LARF) gigantic strawman.

Atwater 27
01-12-2012, 05:06 PM
You're an idiot

I second that motion

Bronx33
01-12-2012, 05:21 PM
LA has learned from the best just call em racist and pretend its true and half the tard reading will but into it just a disgrace from top to bottom and the show never changes.

Atwater 27
01-12-2012, 05:35 PM
LA has learned from the best just call em racist and pretend its true and half the tard reading will but into it just a disgrace from top to bottom and the show never changes.

Naaa. People and the voters are about done with the shrill 'cry wolf' antics of the DNC racebaiter army. You say that unfounded, dishonest and irresponsible **** so much nobody believes it. So keep it up lefties!:kiss:

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-12-2012, 10:00 PM
The only thing worse than a looney liberal website is one that 'pretends' it is independent and 'middle of the road'. You can take your racebaiting drivel and inject it into your anal opening.

Duly noted that neither you nor any of your fellow conservatards
on this thread have made any attempt to challenge or dispute any of the facts presented in the OP.

But willfully ignorant Fox News lemmings like you have no use for facts, do they?

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-12-2012, 10:02 PM
When will Republicans be honest about who really gets the most out of welfare programs?


Republicans? Honest?

Oxymoron.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-12-2012, 10:06 PM
http://www.bartcop.com/mmail-by.jpg

You're an idiot

OK, genius: Then maybe you can set the record straight by providing us with a defense of the GOP's Southern Strategy?

epicSocialism4tw
01-12-2012, 10:11 PM
http://www.bartcop.com/mmail-by.jpg



OK, genius: Then maybe you can set the record straight by providing us with a defense of the GOP's Southern Strategy?

Racist.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-12-2012, 10:14 PM
Racist.

Thank God you don't make your living as a prosecutor!

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-14-2012, 10:08 AM
Another repuke tossing red meat to the "angry whites."


https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQBOaETz_cy0hHwN&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.addictinginfo.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2012%2F01%2F120106_mike_oneal_ ap_328.jpg (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/14/kansas-republican-speaker-of-the-house-prays-for-obamas-children-to-be-fatherless-refuses-to-apologize/)Kansas Republican Speaker Of The House Prays For Obama’s Children To Be Fatherless, Refuses To Apologize (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/14/kansas-republican-speaker-of-the-house-prays-for-obamas-children-to-be-fatherless-refuses-to-apologize/)

Kansas Speaker of the House Mike O'Neal sent an email to his Republican colleagues containing a shocking personal message with Bible verse Psalm 109 that he uses as a prayer for the assassination of President Obama.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-17-2012, 11:13 AM
https://fbcdn-profile-a.akamaihd.net/hprofile-ak-snc4/261107_114270361928171_617210085_q.jpg (https://www.facebook.com/Republicansareidiots1)"Republicans Are Idiots And Arguing With Them Is A Waste Of Time!"
(https://www.facebook.com/Republicansareidiots1)
https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQBlf4qE1vMw5_MM&w=120&h=100&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.addictinginfo.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2012%2F01%2FScott-Walker-Frown-cropped-proto-custom_282.jpg (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/17/scott-walker-attends-mlk-jr-ceremony-and-refuses-to-clap-for-dr-kings-work/)

Scott Walker Attends MLK Jr Ceremony and Refuses To Clap for Dr. King’s Work (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/17/scott-walker-attends-mlk-jr-ceremony-and-refuses-to-clap-for-dr-kings-work/)
[/URL]
That Scott Walker was even pretending to honor Dr. King is way beyond hypocritical, it is downright insulting.
<form rel="async" class="commentable_item collapsed_comments autoexpand_mode" method="post" action="/ajax/stream/inline.php"></form>[URL="https://www.facebook.com/Republicansareidiots1"]https://fbcdn-profile-a.akamaihd.net/hprofile-ak-snc4/261107_114270361928171_617210085_q.jpg (http://www.addictinginfo.org/) I can't wait until this clown gets recalled, and he can see how much his constituents (and the rest of Americans) don't like him.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-17-2012, 11:16 AM
https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQAHEkAf6iOtcY29&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fi.huffpost.com%2Fgen%2F467477%2Ft humbs%2Fs-NEWT-GINGRICH-large.jpg (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/17/newt-gingrich-juan-williams_n_1209657.html)
Newt Gingrich Seeks South Carolina Boost From Racially Charged Exchange With Juan Williams (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/17/newt-gingrich-juan-williams_n_1209657.html)

MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. -- It was telling that as soon as the Republican presidential debate ended here Monday night, Newt Gingrich made a beeline to talk to reporters. Gingrich, the recently embattled, always controversial and irascible former speaker of the House from Georgia, had just watched a...

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-17-2012, 11:19 AM
Americans Against the Tea Party (https://www.facebook.com/NoTeaParty)


A total of 540,208 valid signatures are required to recall Scott Walker, the Republican governor, who was elected in 2010. The chairman of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin said Monday night that the recall drive would "hit or exceed 720,000 signatures." And there were media reports that the total number of submitted signatures may exceed 1 million.


https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQC3c4ZIi_o7JSVR&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thenation.com%2Fsites%2Fdefau lt%2Fmodules%2Fnation_features%2Fnation_core%2Fimg %2Ffb-share-image.gif (http://www.thenation.com/blog/165679/wisconsin-drive-far-exceeds-signature-requirement-scott-walkers-recall)Wisconsin Drive Far Exceeds Signature Requirement for Scott Walker's Recall (http://www.thenation.com/blog/165679/wisconsin-drive-far-exceeds-signature-requirement-scott-walkers-recall)

Wisconsinites will today jump-start the process of removing the nation's most notorious anti-labor governor when they submit petitions signed by more than enough eligible voters to force Scott Walker to face a new election.

TonyR
01-17-2012, 12:14 PM
"I sometimes wonder if the Republican Party has become the receding roar of white America as it pines for a way of life that will never return."--David Brooks
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/17/opinion/south-carolina-diarist.html?_r=1&hpw

El Minion
01-18-2012, 02:19 PM
Why do the Republicans nominate blue bloods? (http://www.salon.com/2012/01/17/why_do_the_republicans_nominate_blue_bloods/)

The potent combination of Jacksonian populism and old money oligarchy

http://media.salon.com/2012/01/jackson_romney-460x307.jpg

If Mitt Romney receives the Republican presidential nomination, he will be the third upper-class candidate in a row nominated for the presidency by a party that speaks in the accents of Jacksonian populism and pretends to be against “elites.”

America may not have titled aristocrats, but it has always had patrician families, defined by a combination of wealth, educational affiliations and public service. Today’s Republicans may sound like George Wallace in their denunciations of paper-pushing bureaucrats and pointy-headed intellectuals, but their presidential selection pool is a very selective country club.

Between 1980 and 2008, inclusive, there have been eight presidential elections. The Republicans have nominated five presidential candidates — Ronald Reagan, George Herbert Walker Bush, Bob Dole, George W. Bush and John McCain. During the same time, the Democrats have nominated seven presidential candidates — Jimmy Carter, Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry and Barack Obama.

The middle-class Republican candidates — Reagan and Dole — have been outnumbered by the candidates born into the social elite — the two Bushes and McCain. George Herbert Walker Bush’s father, and George W.’s grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a wealthy Connecticut senator, whose own father, Samuel Prescott Bush, was a rich steel and railroad company executive. John McCain’s father and grandfather were both four-star admirals.

Among Democratic presidential nominees in the same era, only Kerry — related to the wealthy Forbes, Winthrop and Dudley families of the Northeast — could claim anything like the pedigree of the Bushes. If it takes three generations to make a gentleman, or even two, Al Gore doesn’t qualify as upper class. His father, who preceded him as a senator from Tennessee, came from a modest background and received his law degree from the Nashville YMCA Night School of Law. The other Democratic nominees in the 1980-2008 period came from middle-class backgrounds, like Barack Obama, the son of two college professors. Bill Clinton was born into the lower middle class.

The plot thickens further, when Republican denunciations of government as tyranny are contrasted with the multi-generational commitment to public service on the part of Republican presidential candidates. Samuel Prescott Bush, who served in the government during World War I, founded a dynasty that has produced a Connecticut senator, Prescott Bush; a Texas congressman and president, George Herbert Walker Bush; a Texas governor and president, George W. Bush; and a Florida governor, Jeb Bush. John McCain, as we have seen, is the heir to a family tradition of military service. Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, is the son of George Romney, who was governor of Michigan.

So much for pork-rind populism.

The mystery deepens even further. In the 19th century, the Republican Party was founded by Abraham Lincoln and others, devoted to the Henry Clay’s idea of the “self-made man.” But in spite of conservative rhetoric about small business, today’s Republican economic orthodoxy does not promote the interests of entrepreneurs or industrial capitalism. Instead, it promotes the economic interests of rentiers — families with inherited wealth and Wall Street investors — the kind of people who make money in their sleep, in the words of the 19th-century classical liberal economist J.S. Mill, who despised them.

The GOP crusade to abolish the estate tax — the “death tax” — does nothing for American business in general, even as it chiefly benefits the trust fund babies of a few super-rich families. A lower tax rate for capital gains than for earned income means that the idle rich, and the hedge fund managers who manage their assets and are taxed at the capital gains rate, pay a much lower tax rate on their income than the majority of Americans who depend on wages or professional fees for a living. Self-made entrepreneurs? Hardly.

Nor does Republicanomics serve the interests of captains of industry. If the Republican economic plan were drafted by CEOs of American-based companies that actually make things, rather than rearrange money, it would not necessarily please liberals but it would bear little resemblance to the rentier-friendly plans pushed by the Wall Street right. The emphasis would be on a permanent R&D tax credit, lower corporate taxes, depreciation allowances, public infrastructure investment, policies to lower the costs of energy and other inputs, dollar devaluation and other policies to promote the inshoring of production in America. Genuine captains of industry would not assign priority to estate tax relief and low capital gains taxes for the benefit of the trust fund set like the Bushes and Romneys.

The conclusion is inescapable. The Republican Party is not really a pro-business party at all. It is a pro-hereditary wealth party. Its platform serves the interests of those few Americans who are born into wealth and seek to preserve their fortunes, not those who start new companies or invent new technologies. Naturally, therefore, the party’s presidential candidates are chosen nowadays from among the pedigreed, hereditary social elite who are the chief beneficiaries of its policies.

How is it, then, that the party of old money has succeeded in winning the vote of the white working class since Nixon and Reagan? To understand how this could occur, we need only look at American history.

In the 19th century the Jacksonian coalition, then identified with the Democrats beginning with Andrew Jackson, was, like the Republican Party today, based on an alliance of white Southerners and Southwesterners with working-class whites in the North. Like today’s neo-Jacksonian Republicans, the original Jacksonians posed as the champions of the common man, denouncing government tyranny and privilege.

But Jacksonian common-man rhetoric was a camouflage for the interests of the most parasitic rentier elite in American history: the Southern slaveowners, including Andrew Jackson himself. The rentiers of the plantation South were allied with Northern crony capitalists — businessmen and bankers who sought to loot the public domain by means of what today would be called “privatization.” That is why the Jackson administration destroyed the Bank of the United States, a quasi-public agency that was the largest corporation in the country, and distributed its financial assets to “pet banks” allied with Jackson and his cronies. The modern equivalent would be the privatization of Social Security and Medicare and the diversion of their vast revenues into private hands, which, of course, is the centerpiece of the Republican economic agenda for America.

Old or new, Jacksonianism has always combined the pretense of egalitarian rebellion against privilege with the reality of domination by upper-class rentiers and crony capitalists. In the 21st century as in the 19th, the Jacksonian oligarchs divert the attention of their yeoman followers from what is going on by means of military jingoism (Jackson bellowed at France, today’s Republicans threaten Iran). Central to the Jacksonian tradition is the exploitation of paranoid fears of federal tyranny, combined with dark undercurrents of racism (witness Ron Paul’s recent denunciation of the Civil Rights Act and the blacks-on-welfare trope cynically deployed by Gingrich and Santorum).

Can the Jacksonian trick of enlisting the white working class in the service of hereditary wealth and crony capitalism work again? Why not? It has worked before.


<dl class="author"><dt>
</dt><dd>Michael Lind’s new book, "Land of Promise: An Economic History of the United States" (http://www.amazon.com/Land-Promise-Economic-History-United/dp/0061834807/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1326233296&sr=1-1), will be published in April and can be pre-ordered at Amazon.com. More Michael Lind (http://www.salon.com/writer/michael_lind/)
</dd></dl>

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-20-2012, 12:52 AM
‎Newt Gingrich (https://www.facebook.com/newtgingrich) is doubling-down on his bogus, racist claims...
[/URL]

https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQB6OFdAC0KMUFlH&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.addictinginfo.org%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2012%2F01%2Fnewt-yodels.jpg (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/19/gingrich-continues-southern-strategy-doesnt-understand-why-calling-food-stamps-an-african-american-issue-is-wrong/)Gingrich Continues Southern Strategy, Doesn’t Understand Why Calling Food Stamps An African-American (http://www.addictinginfo.org/2012/01/19/gingrich-continues-southern-strategy-doesnt-understand-why-calling-food-stamps-an-african-american-issue-is-wrong/)
[URL="http://www.addictinginfo.org/"]
Apparently being on food stamps is part of the black experience, so put down your basketballs and turntables and listen to the crusty old white guy. Oh, and guess what? Newt isn't sorry and he feels his comments were taken out of context.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
01-23-2012, 08:14 PM
https://fbcdn-profile-a.akamaihd.net/hprofile-ak-snc4/261104_108038612554992_1060330178_q.jpg (https://www.facebook.com/NoTeaParty)Americans Against the Tea Party (https://www.facebook.com/NoTeaParty)

TEApublicans love trafficking in stereotypes. "This image of the lazy African-American woman who refuses to get a job and keeps having kids is pretty enduring. It's always been a good way to distract the public from any meaningful conversations about poverty and inequality. ''


https://s-external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQC3j7EQqhNnK9HE&w=90&h=90&url=http%3A%2F%2Fi2.cdn.turner.com%2Fcnn%2Fdam%2Fa ssets%2F120120045118-reagan-queen-video-tease.jpg (http://www.cnn.com/2012/01/23/politics/weflare-queen/index.html?hpt=hp_c1)Return of the 'Welfare Queen' - CNN.com (http://www.cnn.com/2012/01/23/politics/weflare-queen/index.html?hpt=hp_c1)

Reagan's Welfare Queen story is still shaping presidential politics, but was the infamous story true?

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2012, 11:12 PM
Bill Maher Exposes The Real Southern Conservatives.
They Would Rather Die Hungry (VIDEO)

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/-IX6EgYQAoU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

mhgaffney
03-13-2012, 11:27 PM
Romney a populist?

(puke)