This creed is the essence both of common sense and common decency, and in my view displays very conspicuously the MORAL and practical superiority, in all respects, of political conservatism, when practiced honestly (something which has not happened in a very long time).
And I would ask Google (read this: http://nypost.com/2015/03/28/google-controls-what-we-buy-the-news-we-read-and-obamas-policies/ ) what I would ask leftists the world over: what concrete goods do you do people?
The Civil Rights movement: oh so many goods were presumed to flow from that. Those were noble days, no? Blacks got the right to sit at all lunch counters. They got the right to vote. They got integrated schools.
And they are so much better off now, than they were then, right? Because to believe otherwise would be to question both the methods and the people involved in “battling racism”.
I do so question. I drive through ghettos and I see sad stories that would not have happened if people had been allowed to grow past bigotry gradually, organically, peacefully, one on one, and without a gun to their head on either side. But no, very rich, very entitled white people could not wait, the situation was too urgent.
Now, 50 years later, we are 50 years behind. We have not only not fixed anything, we have made things much, much worse, and the same tactics that got us here continue to dig the hole deeper. I wonder how many Google employees live in East Palo Alto or Hunter’s Point. I suspect the blacks of 1915 had more self respect than those of today, despite the on-going nastiness of Democrat racism (which, I will grant, has “evolved”). They at least had families, jobs, and the drive to make their own way, even if Wilson shut them out of his government, and refused to do anything about lynching. They understood the value of dignity, I suspect.
As I have said before, there is a reason Frederick Douglas–perhaps the greatest black civil rights author ever–has been largely ignored in the Leftist Canon.
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