Black Lives Matter: The Ideological Heir to Black Power

 

It’s become customary to refer to the Black Lives Matter movement, without much challenge, as one of the civil rights movements of our time. In other instances, it’s suggested that it’s the progeny of the civil rights movement itself.

But to say or imply that Black Lives Matter is the offspring of the civil rights movement of the 1960s is to misunderstand the history and character of that great moral revolution. It is to also misunderstand, or outright ignore, the intentions of Black Lives Matter while disregarding or rationalizing its tactics, agenda, and its aims. Black Lives Matter is in no way a civil rights movement and it’s certainly not an heir to the civil rights movement. The conduct consistently displayed and condoned by far too many Black Lives Matter members, in combination with the agenda expressed by its leaders, disqualifies Black Lives Matter from any consideration of being an extension of the civil rights movement.

The civil rights movement, all things considered, had a moral authority that the Black Lives Matter movement demonstrably lacks. The civil rights movement was centered in, and had the backing of a considerable portion of, the black church. Despite the lack of religious unification and support by both black and white churches, the activists in the civil rights movement were determined to appeal to the moral conscience of the nation by showing the world the egregious reality of segregation by exposing the violent actions of its defenders. This was successfully accomplished through a program of nonviolence, redemptive suffering, and civil disobedience. These direct actions applied Christian principles on one hand, and the aspirations of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution on the other. Civil rights activists deliberately refused to respond in kind to the treatment they received by those who opposed their mission. This meant that taunting and aggressively confronting the police, characteristic of Black Lives Matter militants, weren’t permitted.

Civil rights activists deliberately rejected the reflex to fight back when attacked. Active resistance would have prevented people from the opportunity to appreciate just how immoral segregation actually was. By courageously enduring the verbal taunts and physical assaults through diligent and practiced restraint, turning the other cheek, the world witnessed what it meant to be a second-class citizen in a country that prided itself on being free. This dignified composure in the face of evil increasingly attracted supporters who adopted the same character and techniques to help in the struggle for equality. Likewise, more and more attention was given to the principled movement for freedom. Eventually, members of the civil rights movement did, in fact, overcome.

The Black Lives Matter movement stands in direct contrast to the ethos of the civil rights movement. Even on its best day, the movement isn’t worthy of being considered a rightful heir to the civil rights legacy. To claim so is morally offensive. It also undermines the character, sacrifices, risks, and accomplishments of what civil rights activists were able to achieve with fewer resources, certainly fewer rights, and in a much more racist society.

Black Lives Matter activists rarely engage in nonviolent peaceful protest. When they gather, they don’t pray and sing songs of spiritual uplift and reassurance. Rather, they chant or deface property with phrases such as “F*ck the police!”, “Pigs in a blanket, fry ‘em like bacon!”; and, “What do we want? Dead cops. When do we want them? Now!” Additionally, monologues given during protests reaffirm the idea that America remains systemically racist. Black Lives Matter extremists and proponents take to singing, dancing, and other forms of celebration when police officers are shot and or mortally wounded.

Unlike the civil rights movement, Black Lives Matter lacks a recognizable morality that justifies its demands, its mission, and corresponding behavior. It’s failed to morally persuade the consciences of those outside of its ideological and racialized bubble because it lacks both a principled message and tactics. It consistently seeks to antagonize, frustrate, and offend the very people they claim are in need of hearing their message.

Black Lives Matter encourages and rationalizes violence and chaos, and its activists are too slow in forcefully condemning it. It’s apparent that Black Live Matter is an organization of belligerents who take to rioting, pillaging, and burning down local businesses as they have done in many cities including Ferguson, Baltimore, Minneapolis, Santa Monica, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, and Memphis when these activists “march” for “justice’ (yes, some violence is the result of outside opportunists, but not all). This movement lacks the humility, patience, dignity, perseverance, and self-restraint of the civil rights activists in their successful movement toward equal rights.

Black Lives Matter demands increased socio-economic entitlement; mandatory government intervention and redistribution redefined as “justice.” This is ironic considering that American society has violated its own constitutional provisions and protections to give blacks innumerable opportunities, accompanied by innumerable social and economic resources, as compensation for past injustices– none of which these beneficiaries have ever experienced. Simply put, American blacks have equal rights, thanks to those who marched and peacefully demonstrated during the civil rights revolution. However, it can be argued that blacks haven’t taken full advantage of these hard-won civil rights or made the most of the overabundance of opportunities provided. The freer the country has become, the more “oppressed” black activists and other racial justicians claim to be. These aggrieved blacktivists seek to “dismantle the system.” This includes confronting the social construct and racial boogeyman of “white privilege” or “white supremacy”– i.e. white people– to then demand from the very people they denounce more dispensations. In other words, the racial agents of black oppression, white people, are also supposed to be the agents of black salvation. Whites are both racially evil and socially redemptive at the same time? How, exactly, does that work?

Black Lives Matter isn’t a civil rights offshoot… not even close. Instead, it is the ideological and theatrical offspring of the 1960s-era black power movement.

Black Lives Matter’s aggressive and contentious tactics demonstrate as much: the raised black fists and the regurgitated revolutionary chants, the denouncement of police officers; the celebration of black racial pride and solidarity, and their increasingly violent demands for more unearned resources defined as ‘justice’.

Observe what’s emerged over the last several years since the movement was created. None of the public confrontations: the yelling, the taunting and attacking of police officers; the repeated, lie-laden racial narratives used to support their cause; the riots, looting and vandalism; none of this is reminiscent or indicative of the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement didn’t use deception nor violence as tools to advance their cause.

However, the Black Lives Matter movement is entirely reminiscent of the racial histrionics that characterized the black power movement. The social disruptions of Black Lives Matter– masked as “protests”– are overtly hostile and violent demonstrations of racial identity politics steeped in grievance and entitlement. These disruptions are wrapped in the attention-seeking melodrama that descends directly from the black power movement.

The central focus of Black Lives Matter: the dishonest narrative of out-of-control, racist police officers that are deliberately and unjustly targeting and killing innocent blacks– might appear praiseworthy on its face. No one, regardless of color, openly defends obvious cases of police brutality.

But Black Lives Matter overstates these cases to include every altercation between white law enforcement officers and black citizens, irrespective of the facts relevant to each unique case. Consequently, the only black lives that these racial radicals are truly concerned with are the black lives killed by white cops, which the movement persistently and dutifully venerates. Its concern about the statistically small percentage of blacks shot or killed by police poorly disguises the reality that at its core, Black Lives Matter is a narcissistic, narrowly-focused movement just like its 60s-era predecessor.

Black Lives Matter expresses little-to-no concern regarding the innocent black victims of black criminality, black abortion, poor black children intentionally and routinely sentenced to substandard education, or the deterioration of the black family, which is why Black Lives Matter members and supporters change the subject when these issues are rightly raised. These black lives that suffer from these pervasive issues matter less to this movement and its virtue-signaling supporters than the lives of blacks involved in police altercations. Consequently, it calls into question the sincerity and morality of their selective indignation. It’s clear that black lives matter only when whitey can be blamed. Despite its declarations of anti-police brutality, and justice, Black Lives Matter creates division and disorder and it’s using the vehicle of black rage and white capitulation to achieve this aim.

Similar to the black power movement, Black Lives Matter is eager to emotionally manipulate black people for its benefit. Evidence is seen in the hyperemotional reactions of a growing segment of blacks to certain police-related events that have been racially exploited. The racial hyperbole of what’s been said recently in the wake of Ahmaud Arbery (killed by vigilantes Gregory and Travis McMichael) and George Floyd’s death at the hands Minneapolis cop Derek Chauvin is proof.

Repeatedly, when a black person is shot and or killed by a white cop, far too many blacks rush to construct their own conclusion, which reinforces the pre-existing bias of enduring systemic racism against blacks. Once that assumption is reached, there’s no need to wait for any additional evidence. It’s reminiscent of the scene in the Dark Knight Rises. The cops are convicted without trial and only the sentencing remains.

Predictably, the rush to judgment is a collective validation of systemic injustice. The protests are outlets that broadly reinforce the narrative of perpetual black victimization. Blacks, almost singularly on the Left, have thrown tantrum after public tantrum, an ongoing form of racial humiliation, attempting to convince an increasingly disinterested multiracial audience that blacks continue to be victims of white racial predators. Black Lives Matter is generating more racial resentment against the movement specifically, and black folks in general.

In my opinion, this racial anger emanating from these black activists is misdirected. It isn’t about blacks being victims of anti-black racism, regardless of what’s claimed. In truth, what we’re witnessing demonstrates the failure of a segment of blacks to fully integrate into American society while still embracing an oppositional, dysfunctional, victimized culture, an obvious consequence of racial solidarity and racial identity politics.

Thus, it’s not necessarily anger we’ve seen from blacks; many times, it’s not really about ‘justice’. It’s about black frustration with the lack of socio-economic success (apart from government intervention and white guilt), in the era of integration. Specifically, too much of black success continues to be dependent on special privileges and the soft bigotry of low expectations. Black accomplishment is persistently tainted because rules are bent, broken, and lowered to engineer black achievement at the expense of black development. So, it’s understandable that black achievement, dependent on different and lower standards, has created and nurtured a sense of racial inferiority.

At the same time, it’s why too many blacks posture themselves as if they don’t want equality in any real sense of the word. It’s why the standard of character-based excellence is patently derided and rejected by too large a portion of blacks. It’s why fragments of black society reject the idea of colorblindness or more specifically, race neutrality. Blacks instinctively know that prolonged periods of interventionism for black triumph has atrophied their ability to effectively compete with their racial counterparts. In other words, blacks are afraid of failure, which they think will reinforce perceptions of mediocrity and inability. However, blacks being able to compete and achieve success on their own terms would confirm equality.

I think this explains the psychological need for victim passion plays that strengthens the virtue of racial victimization. In the end– consciously or subconsciously– some blacks realize that the only time they’re recognized is during racial outbursts to exploit intentionally racialized situations, facts notwithstanding. Otherwise, issues facing blacks, and blacks themselves, are largely ignored– which is a depressing reality. This proves an all too painful truth: racial identity fortified in victimization seems to be the only cultural currency blacks currently have.

And while blacks are marching for “equality” or “justice,” they don’t realize they’re not marching anywhere; they’re simply walking in place. The black/white racial binary belongs to the 20th century. Unbeknownst to many blacktivists in the racial grievance industry, the country has moved on. Only a few are still listening. The rest are resenting blacks for not having taken full advantage of the opportunities gifted to them while still complaining and demanding more.

It bears repeating: Black Lives Matter isn’t a civil rights group. Civil rights have been achieved; the maximization of these opportunities hasn’t.

All good and decent people should not only reject the Black Lives Matter movement, they should also condemn it. The last thing blacks need is to support anything that endorses or reinforces the continuation of black disempowerment, victimization, and black dependency, while simultaneously increasing racial resentment and hostility. Black power failed in the 60s and early 70s, and it certainly will fail again here.

If people want to soberly address racial disparities or “racial justice” out of some reverence to the black civil rights movement, altruism in general, or for the well-being of black lives, it must be done separately and distinctly apart from the Black Lives Matter movement. The existence of racism isn’t the issue. The issue is to what extent racism exists and where. In the maturing age of integration, racism is no longer a credible excuse for all that troubles black communities. Contemporary continuation of the civil rights movement will not come from demanding that more be given to blacks without making any moral demands or other expectations of blacks in exchange. It’s at that point after blacks do what is within their power to do, that the country can clearly see where racism exists and then mitigate its effect.

Rather, it will be to encourage blacks to boldly embrace their obligation to take advantage of the rights and privileges gained during the civil rights movement. This means subordinating racial solidarity that sabotages black well-being, in favor of individual freedom and an American identity that can be augmented– if one chooses, by racial identity– but not dependent on it. Blacks are capable of so much more than people give them credit for. They’re real people, not objects for special consideration, and it is passed time we stopped treating them as such. Blacks deserve to be treated with the dignity that comes with being a person, seen as equal to their racial counterparts, and blacks have an obligation to prove they deserve it.

In other words, re-embracing the mentality of the civil rights era means rejecting victimization and embracing the idea that blacks can and do, if and when they choose, control their own destinies. Black lives will matter because blacks will take a more active and recognizable role in embracing moral redemption, restoring black families and emphasizing the dignity and importance of fatherhood; reducing black abortions, publicly disparaging and discouraging black criminality; reviving respect for authority, demanding better schools and educators for black children, supporting legislation that makes it easier to imprison criminals despite their color, to make black neighborhoods safer for those who lack the resources to move, and supporting economic freedom, access and mobility that leads to higher black income and wealth. All of this combined improves black communities and obviously, black lives. Whites aren’t primarily responsible for improving black lives, blacks are. That’s called black empowerment and that’s what it means to be treated equally.

Accepting the responsibilities that come with freedom will inarguably demonstrate to the outside world that indeed, black lives do matter. So will an honest consideration and confrontation of the totality of things that affects the quality of black lives. These tasks will provide clear and ample evidence that black lives matter first and foremost to blacks themselves.

Having continued to ignore the obvious, Black Lives Matter, their fellow black antagonists and morally-preening white enablers have failed spectacularly at convincing a justifiably skeptical public that black lives matter for this very reason.

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  1. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    Wow, Derryck, I hope you’re running for office somewhere.

    • #31
  2. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    EHerring (View Comment):

    I think the saddest most angering thing I have seen is whites kneeling before blacks, when asked, to apologize for being white.

    Zero-sum progressivism only promises — and delivers — subjugation, despite its touted aim of “equality.” The oppressor must become the victim, and like all good victims, his duty is to suffer and die.

    • #32
  3. DrewInWisconsin, Ham-Fisted Bu… Member
    DrewInWisconsin, Ham-Fisted Bu…
    @DrewInWisconsin

    Quintus Sertorius (View Comment):
    I wish David French et al would read and ask you onto their podcast.

    I don’t think Derryck should lower himself like that.

    • #33
  4. CACrabtree Coolidge
    CACrabtree
    @CACrabtree

    Bryan G. Stephens (View Comment):

    I refuse to apologize for being white.

    I refuse to apologize for the sins of others.

    We live in the least racist time in our history.

     

    Ah, you said the key word; history.

    When you have high schools and universities that simply won’t teach the subject or, worse yet, put in their own bastardized versions of history (Ex., Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of The United States; The 1619 Project) how do any of today’s students have a clue as to how great this country truly is?

    • #34
  5. Songwriter Inactive
    Songwriter
    @user_19450

    Wonderful post. Clear, illuminating, well-supported arguments. Thanks for writing.

    • #35
  6. CACrabtree Coolidge
    CACrabtree
    @CACrabtree

    EHerring (View Comment):

    Flicker (View Comment):
    To Balkanize their neighborhoods? To displace the police? To have little countries within their city? Maybe neighborhood courts?

    They are taking a play out of the Muslim playbook and trying to create “no go” zones. It won’t end well for them.

    An excellent observation.  The Muslims, in effect, created their own “sharia administered” zones (otherwise known as ghettos) in several European Cities (London and Paris among them) and compliant, oh-so-sophisticated government officials went along with it.  Absolutely no interest in defending Western Civilization.

    • #36
  7. Songwriter Inactive
    Songwriter
    @user_19450

    Ontheleftcoast (View Comment):

    When you’re talking about politics and bureaucracies, it pays to look at historian Robert Conquest’s Three Laws of politics:

    1. Everyone is conservative about what he knows best.

    So then – it stands to reason that a person who is liberal/progressive in all things knows nothing of consequence. True? 

    • #37
  8. Taras Coolidge
    Taras
    @Taras

    CACrabtree (View Comment):

    Bryan G. Stephens (View Comment):

    I refuse to apologize for being white.

    I refuse to apologize for the sins of others.

    We live in the least racist time in our history.

     

    Ah, you said the key word; history.

    When you have high schools and universities that simply won’t teach the subject or, worse yet, put in their own bastardized versions of history (Ex., Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of The United States; The 1619 Project) how do any of today’s students have a clue as to how great this country truly is?

    I’m currently reading Mary Grabar’s Debunking Howard Zinn.  Highly recommended.

    The chapter on Christopher Columbus is worth the price of admission.

    • #38
  9. CACrabtree Coolidge
    CACrabtree
    @CACrabtree

    Taras (View Comment):

    CACrabtree (View Comment):

    Bryan G. Stephens (View Comment):

    I refuse to apologize for being white.

    I refuse to apologize for the sins of others.

    We live in the least racist time in our history.

     

    Ah, you said the key word; history.

    When you have high schools and universities that simply won’t teach the subject or, worse yet, put in their own bastardized versions of history (Ex., Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of The United States; The 1619 Project) how do any of today’s students have a clue as to how great this country truly is?

    I’m currently reading Mary Grabar’s Debunking Howard Zinn. Highly recommended.

    The chapter on Christopher Columbus is worth the price of admission.

    I hadn’t heard of that book!  Thanks!

    You might be interested in a couple of books by Professor Larry Schweikart (University of Dayton).  7 Events That Made America America and 48 Liberal Lies About American History are pretty good.  Schweikart coauthored A Patriot’s History of the United States, which is also a pretty good read.  Thanks again for your recommendation.

    • #39
  10. Paul Stinchfield Member
    Paul Stinchfield
    @PaulStinchfield

    Frontpage Magazine is a useful source of data on Black Lives Matter and other far-left organizations. And indeed, there is nothing reasonable or civilized about BLM.

    • #40
  11. Front Seat Cat Member
    Front Seat Cat
    @FrontSeatCat

    This is the message that the young black culture isn’t getting, and the liberal Democrats of all races don’t want them to because they’ve fallen away from what gave them strength once – faith, family, opportunity, real pillars of strength. There are so many great examples, not just MLK. They don’t know “how to overcome, or to dream”. It makes me angry to think that power and politics matter more. Great post!

    • #41
  12. Paul Stinchfield Member
    Paul Stinchfield
    @PaulStinchfield

    DonG (skeptic) (View Comment):
    Second, BLM, the organization, has been infiltrated and corrupted by socialists.

    It was not infiltrated by socialists: it was created by Marxists.

    • #42
  13. Derryck Green Member
    Derryck Green
    @DerryckGreen

    Western Chauvinist (View Comment):

    Wow, Derryck, I hope you’re running for office somewhere.

    I’ve contemplated it. Still do sometimes. Unfortunately, I live in California… even after the economic mismanagement of the Covid panic, I don’t see fellow Californians voting any differently than they have recently. 

    • #43
  14. Front Seat Cat Member
    Front Seat Cat
    @FrontSeatCat

    Derryck Green (View Comment):

    Western Chauvinist (View Comment):

    Wow, Derryck, I hope you’re running for office somewhere.

    I’ve contemplated it. Still do sometimes. Unfortunately, I live in California… even after the economic mismanagement of the Covid panic, I don’t see fellow Californians voting any differently than they have recently.

    Don’t be discouraged by that – you underestimate the power of the vote – look at the last presidential election, and the false “predictions”. There are many, including Ricochet folks, that would be more than glad to campaign and support you – go for it!

    • #44
  15. ericB Lincoln
    ericB
    @ericB

    Derryck Green (View Comment):
    Unfortunately, I live in California…

    There is a solution for that problem.  :-)

    Something to pray about.

    • #45
  16. ericB Lincoln
    ericB
    @ericB

    CACrabtree (View Comment):

    Derryck Green (View Comment):

    DrewInWisconsin, Ham-Fisted Bu… (View Comment):

    EHerring (View Comment):

    I think the saddest thing I have seen is whites kneeling before blacks, when asked, to apologize for being white.

    I saw that video today too, and it sickened me. That wasn’t about equality. That was about a man exercising power over a clearly frightened woman. It was an assault, and it turned my stomach. I’m getting increasingly bothered by what I see as self-abasement by white people to prove their non-racist bona fides. But if anyone other than white people were doing it, we’d see it as a form of racial oppression.

    I grew up in the 70s and I learned that everyone of every race had equal value, and I learned that you treated everyone equally. I believed MLK’s statement that we should be judged by the quality of our character, not the color of our skin. I believed it and I lived it. Thomas Sowell once noted that if back then you said something like “All Lives Matter” back in the 60s, you would be marked as a radical. Say it today and you’re a racist.

    I’m not having it. I’m not having any of it.

    White guilt has been as destructive to racial harmony in America as black rage/antagonism. Both cancers feed off each other.

    True. Shelby Steele has written two excellent books on the matter; White Guilt and Shame. Of course, both works were denounced by the gasoline throwers; self-reflection is difficult for a lot of people.

    Excellent books will benefit those who are already persuaded enough and motivated enough to read them.

    Does anyone have good recommendations for excellent videos (especially shorter ones) that might be watched by the many who need their eyes first opened and minds changed?

    For example, what about videos that might present the degrading treatment of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, or perhaps other Leftist revolutions, and connect those with what is happening on the Left now?

    Pictures worth thousands of words.

    • #46
  17. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    ericB (View Comment):
    Does anyone have good recommendations for excellent videos (especially shorter ones) that might be watched by the many who need their eyes first opened and minds changed?

    Not sure about particularly the Chinese Cultural Revolution, but Prager University videos are short, illustrated, and highly effective, which is why YouTube has tried everything to keep young people from seeing them.

    • #47
  18. ericB Lincoln
    ericB
    @ericB

    Western Chauvinist (View Comment):

    ericB (View Comment):
    Does anyone have good recommendations for excellent videos (especially shorter ones) that might be watched by the many who need their eyes first opened and minds changed?

    Not sure about particularly the Chinese Cultural Revolution, but Prager University videos are short, illustrated, and highly effective, which is why YouTube has tried everything to keep young people from seeing them.

    I agree about PragerU videos.  For example, check out two excellent videos by Derryck Green, the author of this post.

    Who Are the Racists? Apr 29, 2019, and
    Who Is Booker T. Washington? Jun 08, 2020  (Hot off the press!)

    Both of these have relevance to this discussion about race and what is true black empowerment.

    I’m wondering about something that would help people to see with their own eyes what Leftist revolution looks like (either actual footage or reenactments) and how it looks so similar to the images we see now.  Analysis must run deeper than images, but the images are powerful communicators.

    For example, many realize what abortion is once they see ultrasound video of who is being killed.  This started when Bernard Nathanson, an obstetrician, NARAL Pro-Choice America founder, and an abortion provider, recorded the ultrasound of an abortion.  This led to his opposing abortion and to the influential 1984 film The Silent Scream.  A recent example is Planned Parenthood clinic director Abby Johnson, whose understanding suddenly changed once she watched the ultrasound of an abortion.  See the movie Unplanned — What She Saw Changed Everything.  Many pregnant women are profoundly affected by seeing live ultrasounds because it lets them see who would be killed.

    I’m asking who is doing something like that to enable people to see how these acts of public humiliation are echos of past Leftist revolutions in ways that many people know nothing about (just as people were blind to who is in the womb).

    • #48
  19. Western Chauvinist Member
    Western Chauvinist
    @WesternChauvinist

    ericB (View Comment):
    I’m asking who is doing something like that to enable people to see how these acts of public humiliation are echos of past Leftist revolutions in ways that many people know nothing about (just as people were blind to who is in the womb).

    That’s just it. Our people are so maleducated regarding history, I’m not sure they’d know which side of any of these historical incidents they’re on! There’s a narrative that goes with these things that is unlike the conscience-challenging image of Emmett Till’s battered body in his casket or the ultrasound of a baby fighting for her life against the abortionist’s weapon in her mother’s womb.

    After all, I constantly hear friends of liberty (right wingers) and small-o orthodox churchmen refer to the Nazi-sympathizing “far right” as if the American right has some equivalence to the normative (Democrat Party-voting) Left currently burning down black neighborhoods — what I call the error of “wedoittooity.” 

    I’ve never had an answer as to what it is about American conservatism (those who believe in ordered liberty in a constitutional republic, individual sovereignty, sovereignty of the people, separation of powers. . .) that has any resemblance to Nazism or white supremacy. Why aren’t white supremacists more properly placed on the Left, like black supremacists who’re demanding (or, at least, enjoying having) whites kneel before them? Frankly, I have no clue what WWII-era German Nazis ever had in common with American conservatism. I think we accept the false premise when we speak of the “far right.” We tacitly accept that something about conservatism is racist.

    Show a left-winger video of the tank-defying Chinese man in Tienanmen Square and he’s likely to think he’s just like the Chinese man when he’s defying the police, rather than the creepy, authoritarian fascist imposing his will through Big (socialized) Government. 

    I just don’t think images will be enough. It will take capturing the narrative and, unlike the Left, telling the truth about history. 

    • #49
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