You know, I am going to have to rethink your posts. You can't discern what I am saying. This is not the first time.
No.
I discerned the meaning of your post just fine.
Just because I don't believe or support blatant racism, no matter what the source, does not make me your intellectual inferior.
Shipping those Americans to Africa at the end of the Civil War would have been a vast national mistake.
Allowing the Rodent party to reform and regain political office, that was a vast national mistake.
Allowing the Rodents to foment racial discrimination in the second half of the 1800's was something the GOP was happy to go along with. That was a vast national disgrace, considering the founding documents AND the wording of the 14th Amendment.
The Court ruling on Plessy v Fergusson was a disgrace, separate can never be equal. Not even for identical twins. That national disgrace took six decades to partially reverse, and then, IMMEDIATELY after, the Rodents decided to destroy the public schools AND force blacks to keep their kids in the destroyed schools.
These events are too frequent, too common to be accidental.
And the (b)lacks in the inner cities, the victims, are conditioned to believe any garbage their Masters put before them. Because they're the products of schools deliberately broken by the Rodents precisely to prevent their victims from learning how to think independently and critically.
And now the typical elements want to ship the victims of the Rodents' planned destruction of the (b)lacks, and anyone else who can't escape, "back" to Africa or somewhere. Then they lament the fact that Thomas Jefferson's children cause some sort of dilemma for the Great Idea.
Blaming the victim is usually a personal disgrace. Why should we make it a vast national disgrace? Why should we do what the Rodents always try to do?
So you don't understand my posts. Try harder. Learn humility. I'm fresh out.
Yeah you were blaming Lincoln, a man who considered the Back to Africa Plan (as I recall, Daniel Webster liked the idea, but I could be wrong. I'm Great, not perfect), but upon discussion with those most affected realized the idea was immoral.