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Democrats: The KKK party – hate without end

The Democrat party is, and will always be the party of KKK and racial hatred. It was Democrat president Lyndon Johnson who was famous for saying ‘we’ll have those niggers voting Democrat for the next 200 years.’ Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger was famous for saying that we needed Planned Parenthood to ‘exterminate the Negro population.’ It’s also no coincidence that KKK Grand Dragon was Senate Majority Leader for the Democrats during the ’70 sand ’80s.

Democrats: The KKK party - hate without end
Democrats: The KKK party – hate without end

We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population, and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.

So when last week’s Jewish Center shootings invovled a white supremacist Demcrat who yelled Heil Hitler after he killed three Christians, it’s no surprise that the media and progressive liberals tried to spin how this guy wasn’t a Democrat, when in fact he was. Donald Douglas of American Power blog has a great summart of Democrat hatred and the KKK:

The news that a former grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan is suspected of shooting and killing three people near Jewish community centers in Kansas seems at first glance like a disparaged past flaring briefly into the present. Americans like to imagine that the KKK belongs to a long-gone South and anti-Semitism to a distant 20th century. Sadly, this better reflects a naive faith in the nation’s history of religious tolerance than the realities experienced by many religious minorities. Although the KKK has evolved and its membership has dwindled, it remains part of an American [Democrat Party] legacy of religious intolerance.

A central tenet of U.S. nationalism rests on a notion of welcoming huddled masses, but the idea of American exceptionalism also runs deep. When Americans have imagined their country’s uniqueness as defined racially, religiously or culturally, those outside those parameters are immediately suspect. Sadly, religion has often served as the catalyst for prejudice….

The KKK has manifested this dynamic [of Democrat eliminitionist racist hatred] since it emerged in the South in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War. Targeting newly freed blacks in an effort to maintain white supremacy, the KKK terrorized the region. However, passage of the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 and, later, the institutionalized segregation of Jim Crow laws led to the Klan’s rapid fading popularity.

The 20th century saw the return of a KKK that may have drawn inspiration from its past in the Reconstruction South and now sought prominence as a modern national organization. Further agitating already inflated fears of East European immigration in the 1920s, its leadership around the country seeded branches called “klaverns” (part of an invented vocabulary exalting Klan secrecy and exclusivity). Although blacks suffered again at the hands of the revived Klan, immigrants became new targets.