Tuesday, January 3, 2012

My Frame of Reasoning

My blogs as of now are designed to be of a very broad analysis of HOW certain American values were first deviously undermined, next propagandized to be obsolete and finally discarded. I have lived through and was politically active in the period of time I hope to expose. My personal opinions as to the American Negro were formulated by working as an investigator and outside bill collector in New Haven CT, my experiences enlisting in the regular army (RA) during the Korean conflict and serving with only the second tier of draftees in the US army following President Truman's order that the army be desegregated, as a police officer in North Haven Ct,  and by over 50 years of deep interest and study of the race.

I lived in the Newport News area of Virginia during southern segregation of negroes and was thoroughly convinced of the validity of segregation. Only then did I realize what misconceptions the North held as to the average negro man or woman and how morally unjust it would be to force desegregation upon that section of the nation. I worked with and associated with southern whites and came face to face with the disgraceful treatment by the North to its fellow southern citizens both before and during Reconstruction of the 1861 war between the states. That bloody, unnecessary conflict was not a "civil war". A civil war exists when there is contention for the government of the nation. The South never intended to occupy Washington DC. The South was seceding FROM the Union not attempting to take control of it. The South just desired to be free of the meddlesome, equalitarian, uncouth mishmash of socialist rabble that dominated the North then and dominates America now. Few other words can capture the tragic loss of Southern values and culture than the title of Margaret Mitchell's novel .... "Gone with the Wind". Years of Southern nobility scattered to the wind like dry dandelion seed.

This is all may be dusty history to some but its truths and principles are even more pertinent today  What the civil rights equalitarians have never understood or accepted is that social status, as anything of worth, must be earned. True, lasting equality of association has to be mutually agreed to. It cannot and never will be gained by arbitrary force or edict of law.

I hold no personal animosity toward the negro. No negro has ever harmed me in any way. One of kindest non-com I knew was a negro master sergeant. But just like with a child or loved one there are facts that any human with two eyes must see despite the relationship. Facts as to pure-blooded negroes like:

The honest (not contrived) number of  blacks who have contributed to great literature, engineering, medicine, philosophy, or abstract science. Athletic prowess or musical talent are not matters of  character or intelligence. To be frank, other than NBA basketball and hip-hop culture, in what areas do negroes on their own merit stand out?  I agree that equality of opportunity and equality before the law, if with honest intent, are necessary and should be enforced by the law as far as reasonably possible. But, to repeat, to desegregate presupposed an achieved status which the the average negro had not yet earned. The compelling of  desegregation has unleashed over 50 years of  smoldering opposition and outright negro cultural mayhem.

The equality concept or doctrine in general without a facade of propaganda is so pitifully untenable that it falls to pieces at the slightest serious, thoughtful examination.          

          
  

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