plover said:
Leaving aside what the above might mean about the current time, taken as stated, it implies that in the US before the 1850's slavery could be ignored, and in the 20th century before the 60s Jim Crow could be ignored. In other words, civil rights is just a nuisance to be dealt with when enough people are agitated about it. I certainly hope that it was not your intention to make such a truly grotesque point.
Not quite. As the debate in the Constitutional convention showed, slavery was always an issue in the early days of the Republic: it
ceased to be an issue after emancipation. Women's suffrage
ceased to be an issue after it was granted, and though the issue isn't totally dead, civil rights became much less of an issue after the laws of the 1960s.
Tsunami said:
Well, that doesn't surprise me at all since you would also like to see grandma and grandpa have their social security and Medicare taken away from them.
Grandma and grandpa? They already got back more than they paid in! If social security were stopped today, that'd mean taking social security
away from myself. So don't give me any crap about my greed. True greed is mortgaging the future of your children so you can get free money (that only appears to be free). Since I am already pessimistic about social security, I would
gladly give up what I alread paid in if I could stop paying in (btw, I'm self-employed, so I pay near 16% of my income into SS).
Careful russ. Your true colors are showing - and they're blending together to form a truly grusome shade of mud.
Indeed - freedom is an ugly, ugly (and scary) thing to those who aren't responsible enough to handle it.
Civil rights should not be a priority today, huh? Good one, russ. (Try pulling your head OUT of the sand.)
Precisely how widespread are those specific issues? More widespread than dead Democrats who vote? But hey - I'll start caring about those if you start caring about government mandated racist hiring and contracting practices (affirmative action).
Just in case you care, russ, here is a link to one of MANY articles about CURRENT civil rights violations.
Ironic choice, Tsunami - did you post that without reading it or are you saying that you are
against investigating voter fraud? That article is a complaint about the
investigation of voter fraud allegedly comitted by a black, Democratic activist. Cute.
This may sound obvious, but things matter to the people they matter to. If ten million people are unemployed, then unemployment matters
a lot to ten million people. If a thousand people felt intimidated into changing their votes or not voting (what I think you were trying to say), then civil rights matters a lot to a thousand people. Unemployment matters more to more people than civil rights right now. Being
neither unemployed nor feeling like I was discriminated against (some iffy contracts notwithstanding), those issues don't matter much to me.