“We have caused a thorough search to be made by the most competent authority in Richmond; and while many indictments are found against black men for rape of white women, none exist, in the history of our jurisprudence, against white men for rape of black women. And this, not because there would have been any difficulty in making the indictment lie: but because, as the most experienced lawyers testify, the crime is unheard of on the part of white men amongst us.”
R.L. Dabney “Defense of Virginia and the South”
R.L. Dabney “Defense of Virginia and the South”
Here is the plain truth. The Hart Cellar Act was forced upon us, nobody voted for it. Nobody was for equality between the White and the Negro. The Civil Rights Movement was pushed by our Oligarchs much the same as BLM is today. They swore up and down that the Hart Cellar Act would not change the racial demographics of America, but as we can clearly see today. That was a bald faced lie.
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Look at what our High School Physical Education programs used to look like in 1960’s. This is what JFK was striving to build but sadly he was assassinated before it could catch on fully nationally.
This is 100% true, my boomer grandparents were able to buy a normal house for the equivalent for what would be 89,000 dollars TODAY. Also my Grandpaw worked construction. You can’t even find a doublewide trailer for less that 100,000 now I’ve even seen trailers sell for 200,000. How the fuck do they expect us to make 20,000-40,000 dollars a year and be able to afford a 300,000 dollar house?
All of us from Late Millennials to Zoomers were sold a false bill of goods, everything is collapsing around us or should have collapsed years ago but for some reason still endures. We were told we would experience the same prosperity as our parents and grandparents without realizing that today that is absolutely impossible.
• The federal minimum wage has stagnated at $7.25 an hour since 2009.
• For most people, working for minimum wage does not give them a living wage.
• Many states and cities have a higher minimum wage in place—in some cases, more than double—but workers still struggle to make ends meet.
• For most people, working for minimum wage does not give them a living wage.
• Many states and cities have a higher minimum wage in place—in some cases, more than double—but workers still struggle to make ends meet.
What kind of society believes this is living “the American dream”