Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Heck, you want to be crude --- when the South was governed by bigots and Klansmen, it was fervently Democratic. When that stopped, they became fervently Republican. -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Heck, you want to be crude --- when the South was governed by bigots and Klansmen, it was fervently Democratic. When that stopped, they became fervently Republican. -=Mike And then when LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act they lost the South.
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Heck, you want to be crude --- when the South was governed by bigots and Klansmen, it was fervently Democratic. When that stopped, they became fervently Republican. -=Mike And then when LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act they lost the South. And the South went to the side that supported the bill. Odd how that works. -=Mike ...Keep in mind, after LBJ, they had a tendency of running inept boobs from the North (Mondale, McGovern, Dukakis)...
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Heck, you want to be crude --- when the South was governed by bigots and Klansmen, it was fervently Democratic. When that stopped, they became fervently Republican. -=Mike And then when LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act they lost the South. And the South went to the side that supported the bill. Odd how that works. -=Mike ...Keep in mind, after LBJ, they had a tendency of running inept boobs from the North (Mondale, McGovern, Dukakis)... "The "Solid South" began to erode when Democratic President Harry S. Truman took steps toward supporting the civil rights movement. His policies, combined with the adoption of a civil rights plank in the 1948 Democratic platform, prompted many Southerners to walk out of the Democratic National Convention and form the Dixiecrat Party. This splinter party was significant only in the 1948 election; the Dixiecrat candidate, Strom Thurmond, carried Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. In the elections of 1952 and 1956, the popular Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower carried several southern states, although the South was still the bastion for his Democratic opponent, Adlai Stevenson. In the 1960 election, the Democratic nominee, John F. Kennedy, continued his party's tradition of selecting a Southerner as the Vice Presidential candidate (in this case, Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas). Kennedy, however, supported civil rights, partly at the strong urging of his brother Robert. In October 1960, when civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested at a peaceful sit-in in Atlanta, Georgia, Kennedy placed a sympathetic phone call to King's wife, Coretta Scott King, and Robert Kennedy telephoned the judge and helped secure King's release. King expressed his appreciation for these calls. Although King himself made no endorsement, his father, who had previously endorsed Republican Richard Nixon, switched his support to Kennedy. The Democrats, however, lost ground with pro-segregation whites. The 1960 election was the first one in which the Republican candidate, although losing nationally, received electoral votes in the South. Nixon carried Virginia, Tennessee and Florida. In addition, conservative Democratic Senator Harry Byrd received some electoral votes from unpledged electors in Mississippi and Alabama (as well as Oklahoma). The reversal of the parties' roles on the civil rights issue was complete by the 1964 election. The Democratic candidate, Johnson, having become President after Kennedy's assassination, had signed into law the Civil Rights Act of 1964. His Republican opponent, Senator Barry Goldwater, had voted against it. Johnson won a landslide victory. Goldwater carried his home state of Arizona, but the rest of his electoral votes all came from the South. In just eight years, from 1956 to 1964, the region that had seen almost the only victories by a Democratic challenger against a popular Republican incumbent had switched to providing almost the only victories for a Republican challenger against a popular Democratic incumbent." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_South
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Heck, you want to be crude --- when the South was governed by bigots and Klansmen, it was fervently Democratic. When that stopped, they became fervently Republican. -=Mike And then when LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act they lost the South. And the South went to the side that supported the bill. Odd how that works. -=Mike ...Keep in mind, after LBJ, they had a tendency of running inept boobs from the North (Mondale, McGovern, Dukakis)... "The "Solid South" began to erode when Democratic President Harry S. Truman took steps toward supporting the civil rights movement. His policies, combined with the adoption of a civil rights plank in the 1948 Democratic platform, prompted many Southerners to walk out of the Democratic National Convention and form the Dixiecrat Party. This splinter party was significant only in the 1948 election; the Dixiecrat candidate, Strom Thurmond, carried Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina. In the elections of 1952 and 1956, the popular Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower carried several southern states, although the South was still the bastion for his Democratic opponent, Adlai Stevenson. In the 1960 election, the Democratic nominee, John F. Kennedy, continued his party's tradition of selecting a Southerner as the Vice Presidential candidate (in this case, Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas). Kennedy, however, supported civil rights, partly at the strong urging of his brother Robert. In October 1960, when civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested at a peaceful sit-in in Atlanta, Georgia, Kennedy placed a sympathetic phone call to King's wife, Coretta Scott King, and Robert Kennedy telephoned the judge and helped secure King's release. King expressed his appreciation for these calls. Although King himself made no endorsement, his father, who had previously endorsed Republican Richard Nixon, switched his support to Kennedy. The Democrats, however, lost ground with pro-segregation whites. The 1960 election was the first one in which the Republican candidate, although losing nationally, received electoral votes in the South. Nixon carried Virginia, Tennessee and Florida. In addition, conservative Democratic Senator Harry Byrd received some electoral votes from unpledged electors in Mississippi and Alabama (as well as Oklahoma). The reversal of the parties' roles on the civil rights issue was complete by the 1964 election. The Democratic candidate, Johnson, having become President after Kennedy's assassination, had signed into law the Civil Rights Act of 1964. His Republican opponent, Senator Barry Goldwater, had voted against it. Johnson won a landslide victory. Goldwater carried his home state of Arizona, but the rest of his electoral votes all came from the South. In just eight years, from 1956 to 1964, the region that had seen almost the only victories by a Democratic challenger against a popular Republican incumbent had switched to providing almost the only victories for a Republican challenger against a popular Democratic incumbent." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_South Spin it how you wish. When the South was governed by racists and segregationists, we were solidly Democratic. When we were not, we became Republicans. -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 Okay. Lemme break it down for y'all. 1964--Civil Rights Act becomes law. LBJ--signed the Civil Rights Act. vs. Goldwater--voted against it. The South votes overwhelmingly for Goldwater. That's no spin, my man.
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 Okay. Lemme break it down for y'all. 1964--Civil Rights Act becomes law. LBJ--signed the Civil Rights Act. vs. Goldwater--voted against it. The South votes overwhelmingly for Goldwater. That's no spin, my man. GOP overwhelmingly supported the Act. And the Voting Rights Act, to boot. Blame the bigoted Southern Democrats for that problem. You know, the Fulbrights and Gores of the world. You're doing nothing but spinning at this point. -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 GOP overwhelmingly supported the Act. And the Voting Rights Act, to boot. Did I deny this? Blame the bigoted Southern Democrats for that problem. What problem? Nobody claimed that the Democratic Party wasn't chock-full-o-bigots during this period. The article argues that the positions of the parties on civil rights shifted post-Civil Rights Act. Explain to me why the South didn't break for a Republican presidential nominee until Goldwater ran against LBJ.
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 GOP overwhelmingly supported the Act. And the Voting Rights Act, to boot. Did I deny this? Blame the bigoted Southern Democrats for that problem. What problem? Nobody claimed that the Democratic Party wasn't chock-full-o-bigots during this period. The article argues that the positions of the parties on civil rights shifted post-Civil Rights Act. Explain to me why the South didn't break for a Republican presidential nominee until Goldwater ran against LBJ. If the South was so racist, why did they go for Carter? The Republicans didn't even exist in any degree in the South until Strom became a Republican here (for most of the early 20th Century, Republican primaries weren't even held in the South). 1964 was the first time the GOP had enough groundwork laid down to win the South. -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 If the South was so racist, why did they go for Carter? That was 3 elections later and Carter was a unique candidate. A very religious Georgian. I don't think, by the way, that the South is unabashedly racist anymore. I'm a southerner myself and I think we've come a long way. I was just arguing that civil rights was the issue that pushed the South away from the Dems in the 60s. The results of the '64 Presidential election are hard to ignore. 1964 was the first time the GOP had enough groundwork laid down to win the South. And I'm the spinster?
Guest Loss Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 This is the funniest thing I've seen in ages.
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 If the South was so racist, why did they go for Carter? That was 3 elections later and Carter was a unique candidate. A very religious Georgian. I don't think, by the way, that the South is unabashedly racist anymore. I'm a southerner myself and I think we've come a long way. I was just arguing that civil rights was the issue that pushed the South away from the Dems in the 60s. The results of the '64 Presidential election are hard to ignore. 1964 was the first time the GOP had enough groundwork laid down to win the South. And I'm the spinster? This is the 1960 electoral map. The South was already splintering at that point. -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 This is the funniest thing I've seen in ages. Hahaha! Surely one of the Bushites here will take the challenge?
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 This is the funniest thing I've seen in ages. Hahaha! Surely one of the Bushites here will take the challenge? We don't need to be violent when we don't get our way. -=Mike
Guest Loss Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 C'mon, fight him Mike. Are you going to let him talk to you like that?
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 C'mon, fight him Mike. Are you going to let him talk to you like that? Why would I care what a smelly, pot-addled hippie thinks? -=Mike
2GOLD Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 This is the funniest thing I've seen in ages. Hahaha! Surely one of the Bushites here will take the challenge? Actually, most of them will just shrug it off. Course, I would find it hilarious if a 6'6 guy that weighed 300 pounds that was all muscle and had his testicles removed so he could be a better fighter took him up on the offer. Ask for something stupid, get what you deserve I say.
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 Don't make me call you a chicken. Feel free. I, personally, find the depression of the left to be a source of endless amusement. In 2000, they had rage --- which I thought was the funniest thing I've ever seen (pissed-off libs = comic gold). Now, they're morose --- and that's even MORE enjoyable. -=Mike ...Halo 2 is good...
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 If the South was so racist, why did they go for Carter? That was 3 elections later and Carter was a unique candidate. A very religious Georgian. I don't think, by the way, that the South is unabashedly racist anymore. I'm a southerner myself and I think we've come a long way. I was just arguing that civil rights was the issue that pushed the South away from the Dems in the 60s. The results of the '64 Presidential election are hard to ignore. 1964 was the first time the GOP had enough groundwork laid down to win the South. And I'm the spinster? This is the 1960 electoral map. The South was already splintering at that point. -=Mike Still pretty solid Dem, with some sprinklings of support for the radical segregationalist Byrd. You're arguing that Goldwater's voting against the Civil Rights Act had nothing to do with his securing of the South in '64?
Guest MikeSC Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I'm suggesting the GOP was making inroads and 1964 was when they broke through. No, I do not think that opposition to the Civil Rights Act is what caused it (especially since they went to a party that was even MORE supportive of it). -=Mike
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 ...Halo 2 is good... My friend got it yesterday, we're gonna play it tonight *nuts himself*. How is it different from 1?
Big Ol' Smitty Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 I'm suggesting the GOP was making inroads and 1964 was when they broke through. No, I do not think that opposition to the Civil Rights Act is what caused it (especially since they went to a party that was even MORE supportive of it). -=Mike But Goldwater wasn't. And there were still a lot of Dem Congressman in the South after '64.
Dr. Tyler; Captain America Posted November 9, 2004 Report Posted November 9, 2004 http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=5652 How about some conservative hysteria while we're at it?
Guest MikeSC Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 ...Halo 2 is good... My friend got it yesterday, we're gonna play it tonight *nuts himself*. How is it different from 1? Well, I honestly loathed Halo 1. Didn't like it at all. This one is awesome multi-player and the enemies are quite clever. http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=5652 How about some conservative hysteria while we're at it? Yup, that dude is a total fucktard. QUOTE (A MikeSC @ Nov 9 2004, 04:48 PM) I'm suggesting the GOP was making inroads and 1964 was when they broke through. No, I do not think that opposition to the Civil Rights Act is what caused it (especially since they went to a party that was even MORE supportive of it). -=Mike But Goldwater wasn't. And there were still a lot of Dem Congressman in the South after '64. There WERE a lot of Dem Congressmen until the racists finally stepped down. The South is big on loyalty --- which explains how the utterly detestable Fritz Hollings stayed in office down here until this past election. -=Mike
Dr. Tyler; Captain America Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 I dunno, I don't think it's that much different than Halo 1... I mean, it's still fun to get a huge group of people playing, but I find it to be rather underwhelming considering the hype. Still fun, but disappointing.
Jobber of the Week Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 I've made my thoughts on the South clear in the past, but there's a very unsettling mindset among my liberal friends that all Southerners are inbred hicks who hate gays, women and blacks, a line I used to trumpet as well. But I'm Southern and I'm not like that, so I should have taken offense. Except look how they voted. Do not take the Republican's bullshit on that Southerners won't vote Democrat ever and say that it's a result of us "making fun of them." These people gave Bill Clinton the nickname "Bubba" for eight years and made fun of him being some kind of uncultured swine who was throwing parties in the White House. So I take their suggestions with a massive salt lick.
Guest UncleKimmyGibler Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 Bill Clinton is slick and sexy and smoooooooooooth talkin like this other guy I know Jesse Katsopolous Hola Tannerinos
Vern Gagne Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 C-Bacon and INXS have probably posted a picture. hippie.com
kkktookmybabyaway Posted November 10, 2004 Author Report Posted November 10, 2004 Wait...my state is in the United States of Canada... SON OF A BITCH! Me too, but I'm right next to Jesusland, so can drive across the "border" and buy fireworks.' How about some conservative hysteria while we're at it? Start your own thread, hippie...
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now