I wonder if George Wallace will be seen as a tragic hero who was ahead of his time when all is said and done. Desegregation was as big a mistake as bringing them over in the first place was.
In some ways that may be the case. Segregation by law, though, was probably a mistake in that it inevitably provoked an overreaction, just like slavery. Hence forced integration. If people were left to their own devices, then self-segregation would have been the norm.
The answer is not to force one way or the other, but to allow association under any condition. I shouldn’t be forced to interact with someone who displays clear high risk behaviors, that is no different than the state killing me themselves.
Freedom of Association is such a fundamental and obvious right that the founders didn't even consider adding it to the Bill of Rights. It just "is" and all this postmodern forced race mixing is a crime against humanity.
If people were left to their own devices, then self-segregation would have been the norm.
I can't speak to every state, but the majority of my parish in Louisiana is self-segregated.
We haven't reached the level of having seperate corporations and businesses, so we have to intersect there (and its the fastest way to create a racist, make them deal with the niggers who work at McDonalds or Walmart), but our homes and schools are either seperate by miles or just two halves of the building.
And really no one complains about it either, other than whites wanting to increase it to escape the niggers working cash registers. We all agreed unspokenly between the two races that it was the best course of action and mostly maintain that seperation. And any black guy who leaves is usually a hardworking good man who is accepted by his character, and any white who goes to the ghetto is a druggie, criminal or both and fits in perfectly there.
I wonder if George Wallace will be seen as a tragic hero who was ahead of his time when all is said and done. Desegregation was as big a mistake as bringing them over in the first place was.
In some ways that may be the case. Segregation by law, though, was probably a mistake in that it inevitably provoked an overreaction, just like slavery. Hence forced integration. If people were left to their own devices, then self-segregation would have been the norm.
The answer is not to force one way or the other, but to allow association under any condition. I shouldn’t be forced to interact with someone who displays clear high risk behaviors, that is no different than the state killing me themselves.
Exactly. Freedom of association is a fundamental right that Whites are not allowed to have.
This kid was murdered for trying to maintain safe separation.
/access to Whites is not a human right
The civil rights act overrides the constitution. It never should have passed.
Freedom of Association is such a fundamental and obvious right that the founders didn't even consider adding it to the Bill of Rights. It just "is" and all this postmodern forced race mixing is a crime against humanity.
I can't speak to every state, but the majority of my parish in Louisiana is self-segregated.
We haven't reached the level of having seperate corporations and businesses, so we have to intersect there (and its the fastest way to create a racist, make them deal with the niggers who work at McDonalds or Walmart), but our homes and schools are either seperate by miles or just two halves of the building.
And really no one complains about it either, other than whites wanting to increase it to escape the niggers working cash registers. We all agreed unspokenly between the two races that it was the best course of action and mostly maintain that seperation. And any black guy who leaves is usually a hardworking good man who is accepted by his character, and any white who goes to the ghetto is a druggie, criminal or both and fits in perfectly there.