otherwise, he did a very good job documenting the way American society pushes black people to the margins and continues to blame them for their lack of upward mobility.
PushED, not pushes. Though he made an effort to pretend the past and present were the same thing, these are not current practices, the instances cited being generations old.
Present day problems include a "black community" that has forfeited all moral authority with its embrace of degenerate behavior simply due to the color of perpetrators' skin, and often, of their victims. When self-appointed, media-confirmed, leaders of the black community are gangsters like Louis Farrakan and swindlers and extortion artists like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, how is anyone supposed to accept any legitimacy to demands for reparation, to see it as anything other than an attempt by those slimeballs to once again line their pockets? The author cites the NAACP as endorsing reparations, but they also endorsed Donald Sterling, and were on the verge of giving him his second award when the recent scandal broke.
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*