"He Had a Dream and it turned into a nightmare"
On 28 August 1963 Martin Luther King, Jr. organized a now historic march to Washington to show the importance of solving the United States racial problems. About 250,000 people gathered and listened to his immortal words: "I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character".
Close to 5 decades sense that speech and where are we as a people and nation...
So, 50 years of getting back at the man, remember that… getting back at the man. WTF does that mean? (For most it was getting rid of the establishment, but for blacks it had a different meaning… getting over on whites or the white man for what a past bigoted and racist generation did). Where getting back at the man should of meant… fixing what was wrong, 50 years of whites made to feel guilty by the race-baiters about what a past generation did, (with an added propaganda of ‘white-privilege’ piled on from the multi-cultural liberal race-baiters of the world)… 50 years got you all where? Most whites today are doing better than most non-whites.
1) The black unemployment rate has consistently been twice as high as the white unemployment rate for 50 years: A recent report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) notes that this gap hasn't closed at all since 1963. Back then, the unemployment rate was 5 percent for whites and 10.9 percent for blacks. Today, it's 6.6 percent for whites and 12.6 percent for blacks.
2) For the past 50 years, black unemployment has been well above recession levels: From 1963 to 2012, the ... annual black unemployment rate averaged 11.6 percent. This was... higher than the average annual national unemployment rate during the recessions in this period — 6.7 percent
3) The gap in household income between blacks and whites hasn't narrowed in the last 50 years: Note that just about everyone's seen a decline in real household income since 1999.
4) In fact, the wealth disparity between whites and blacks grew even wider during the Great Recession.
5) The black poverty rate is no longer declining: Black poverty fell quickly between 1959 and 1969, from 55.1 percent to 32.2 percent. But after that, the drop was slower and more uneven. In 2011, 27.6 percent of black households were in poverty — nearly triple the poverty rate for whites.
6) Black children are far more likely than whites to live in areas of concentrated poverty: "Poor black neighborhoods also have environmental hazards that impact health. A very serious one is higher exposure to lead, which impedes learning, lowers earnings, and heightens crime rates. While rates of lead exposure have been declining for all races, Black children continue to have the highest exposure rate."
7) Our schools are more segregated today than in 1980
8) The marriage gap has widened over the past 50 years: "Marriage rates have fallen for all groups since the 1960s, but more sharply for blacks than for whites. In 1960, 74% of white adults were married, as were 61% of black adults... By 2011, the black marriage rate had fallen to 56% that of the white rate: 55% of whites were married, compared with 31% of blacks."
9) Blacks are still far more likely to be uninsured than whites. That's true for both adults and children: Affordable Care Act could shrink the gap: "The large majority of uninsured people of color have incomes that would qualify for the ACA Medicaid expansion or premium tax credits for exchange coverage." That said, a lot depends on how many states decide to expand Medicaid coverage under the new law. (but, will most likely bankrupt states and the country)
10) The racial disparity in incarceration rates is bigger than it was in the 1960s: "The incarceration rate of black men is more than six times higher than that of white men, slightly larger than the gap in 1960."
1 through 10 above is worst in democrat run districts and states… So, how’s that working out for you.
At least 51 percent of Americans voted for a man that was born to a white mother and a black father twice got elected. Where today the country is more divided than ever…. 10% of voters believe race relations in the United States are better since the election of Barack Obama in November 2008. 43% think race relations have gotten worse since Obama’s election.
Today 6 years after 71 percent of Hispanics, 73 percent of Asians, 55 percent of the overall female vote, 59 percent of the white vote, and let’s not leave out the 93 percent of the black vote (who all voted for skin color rather than over character for Barack Hussein Obama).
I have a dream that people see through themselves, to see themselves as Americans first and foremost. Where the race-baiters fade away into history, like that past generations of bigots and racist… and the only privilege is where one deserves and earns it… where character comes from the heart with meaning and not from the shallows of skin color, nor guilt. Where people will have an understanding that what they are doing isn't working. Allow me to quote a genius >>> ‘Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results’ >>> Albert Einstein.
I’m sorry to say, but there are too many insane people living and voting in America today.
If Americans, not illegals, not the dead, nor white, black, brown, yellow, red or blue… but Americans, living breathing Americans will honestly take a good look at where they are today and ask themselves am I and is the ‘country’ better off today than somewhere else in America’s history… because if your answer is no, I’m not better off, than something is wrong. America is about making the next generation better off than the previous one. Maybe it’s time to change you and your voting habits. (The 30 day habit-breaking plan has come under many guises over the years and has been backed by many different experts. But most people agree that the genesis of this theory dates back to a 1960 psychology book: Psycho-Cybernetics by Maxwell Maltz) <<< “more Like a 50 year habit” >>> This habit of voting for a R or D or I or whatever is in front of one’s name today is insane, read this and keep reading it until it sinks in… because it’s not about the color of one’s skin, but about one’s character. >>> "I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character".
1) The black unemployment rate has consistently been twice as high as the white unemployment rate for 50 years: A recent report from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) notes that this gap hasn't closed at all since 1963. Back then, the unemployment rate was 5 percent for whites and 10.9 percent for blacks. Today, it's 6.6 percent for whites and 12.6 percent for blacks.
2) For the past 50 years, black unemployment has been well above recession levels: From 1963 to 2012, the ... annual black unemployment rate averaged 11.6 percent. This was... higher than the average annual national unemployment rate during the recessions in this period — 6.7 percent
3) The gap in household income between blacks and whites hasn't narrowed in the last 50 years: Note that just about everyone's seen a decline in real household income since 1999.
4) In fact, the wealth disparity between whites and blacks grew even wider during the Great Recession.
5) The black poverty rate is no longer declining: Black poverty fell quickly between 1959 and 1969, from 55.1 percent to 32.2 percent. But after that, the drop was slower and more uneven. In 2011, 27.6 percent of black households were in poverty — nearly triple the poverty rate for whites.
6) Black children are far more likely than whites to live in areas of concentrated poverty: "Poor black neighborhoods also have environmental hazards that impact health. A very serious one is higher exposure to lead, which impedes learning, lowers earnings, and heightens crime rates. While rates of lead exposure have been declining for all races, Black children continue to have the highest exposure rate."
7) Our schools are more segregated today than in 1980
8) The marriage gap has widened over the past 50 years: "Marriage rates have fallen for all groups since the 1960s, but more sharply for blacks than for whites. In 1960, 74% of white adults were married, as were 61% of black adults... By 2011, the black marriage rate had fallen to 56% that of the white rate: 55% of whites were married, compared with 31% of blacks."
9) Blacks are still far more likely to be uninsured than whites. That's true for both adults and children: Affordable Care Act could shrink the gap: "The large majority of uninsured people of color have incomes that would qualify for the ACA Medicaid expansion or premium tax credits for exchange coverage." That said, a lot depends on how many states decide to expand Medicaid coverage under the new law. (but, will most likely bankrupt states and the country)
10) The racial disparity in incarceration rates is bigger than it was in the 1960s: "The incarceration rate of black men is more than six times higher than that of white men, slightly larger than the gap in 1960."
1 through 10 above is worst in democrat run districts and states… So, how’s that working out for you.
At least 51 percent of Americans voted for a man that was born to a white mother and a black father twice got elected. Where today the country is more divided than ever…. 10% of voters believe race relations in the United States are better since the election of Barack Obama in November 2008. 43% think race relations have gotten worse since Obama’s election.
Today 6 years after 71 percent of Hispanics, 73 percent of Asians, 55 percent of the overall female vote, 59 percent of the white vote, and let’s not leave out the 93 percent of the black vote (who all voted for skin color rather than over character for Barack Hussein Obama).
I have a dream that people see through themselves, to see themselves as Americans first and foremost. Where the race-baiters fade away into history, like that past generations of bigots and racist… and the only privilege is where one deserves and earns it… where character comes from the heart with meaning and not from the shallows of skin color, nor guilt. Where people will have an understanding that what they are doing isn't working. Allow me to quote a genius >>> ‘Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results’ >>> Albert Einstein.
I’m sorry to say, but there are too many insane people living and voting in America today.
If Americans, not illegals, not the dead, nor white, black, brown, yellow, red or blue… but Americans, living breathing Americans will honestly take a good look at where they are today and ask themselves am I and is the ‘country’ better off today than somewhere else in America’s history… because if your answer is no, I’m not better off, than something is wrong. America is about making the next generation better off than the previous one. Maybe it’s time to change you and your voting habits. (The 30 day habit-breaking plan has come under many guises over the years and has been backed by many different experts. But most people agree that the genesis of this theory dates back to a 1960 psychology book: Psycho-Cybernetics by Maxwell Maltz) <<< “more Like a 50 year habit” >>> This habit of voting for a R or D or I or whatever is in front of one’s name today is insane, read this and keep reading it until it sinks in… because it’s not about the color of one’s skin, but about one’s character. >>> "I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character".
Sorry to whoever maybe offended by this and takes
this to be racist in anyway… it’s not, it just spreading the truth around, I just
want to do my part in truth destitution. I’m too old and just smart enough to know, I
don’t have to be PC (political coward) to anyone.
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