I have never heard of this narrative. Is it true?
Angry Jonathan Zaludek said:
I have never heard of this narrative. Is it true?
Ellis Wyatt said:
A video with no context? Have no idea and don't care. Not allowed here.
Angry Jonathan Zaludek said:
I have never heard of this narrative. Is it true?
Rapier108 said:
Plenty of cases which eventually because major Supreme Court decisions were basically setups by leftwing activists. Just off the top of my head, and not counting anything already mentioned.
Roe v. Wade
Lawrence v. Texas
Brown v. Board of Education
Loving v. Virginia
Griswold v. Connecticut
Several cases involving prayers in schools, later going so far as to ban students from praying or reading the Bible.
Now, I'm not going to debate the merits of each one; that's another discussion.
The right finally learned to play the game with the most prominent case being Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.
Angry Jonathan Zaludek said:
I have never heard of this narrative. Is it true?
Colonel Kurtz said:
The NAACP recruited Parks and set the whole thing up. It was originally supposed to be a different woman named Claudette Colvin.
CrackerJackAg said:
Yes, this isn't new information. Been bull**** always.
I'm not saying change wasn't necessary. But have real ****ing heroes. Not lies.
Booker T Washington for example
basically a Pepsi adSq 17 said:
She still took a risk getting arrested and becoming the face of the movement.
OldArmy71 said:
I don't understand the issue here.
I grew up in Louisiana in the 1950s.
I went to segregated schools. I remember sitting on the steps of my elementary school and watching black kids in a bus being transported to the black school across town.
I enjoyed the only public swimming pool in town, which was off-limits to blacks.
The pool was in the town park. The restrooms and drinking fountains were labelled WHITES and COLORED.
I went to the only movie in town nearly every Saturday. As I paid for my ticket, I noticed black kids my age paying for their tickets at a different window and climbing the stairs to the balcony.
Rosa Parks was chosen to receive the focus, but that doesn't change the reality that she was living the authentic life of a black woman in the Jim Crow south.
It was very heroic of her.