What better way to celebrate Martin Luther King's birthday than to ignore Martin Luther King and write about Ronald Reagan?
Here's the article.
Who was the first black president?
Two decades before the election of Barack Obama, novelist Toni Morrison dubbed Bill Clinton "our first black president." She even said that Clinton was "blacker than any actual black person who could ever be elected in our children's lifetime."
Well, I could make an even stronger case for my father, Ronald Reagan, as "our first black president."-but I won't make that claim. I don't want to diminish the justifiable pride African-Americans take in having a president who is genetically and culturally black. Our first black President is Barack Obama.
But the past two years have made one thing clear: Ronald Reagan was a far better friend to black Americans than Barack Obama has been. Just compare the Reagan and Obama records. Under Obama, black unemployment rose from 12.6 percent in January 2009 to 16.0 percent today. This means that black unemployment has increased by more than one-fourth since Obama took office.
And the Reagan record? African-American columnist Joseph Perkins has studied the effects of Reaganomics on black America. He found that, after the Reagan tax cuts gained traction, African-American unemployment fell from 19.5 percent in 1983 to 11.4 percent in 1989. Black-owned businesses saw income rise from $12.4 billion in 1982 to $18.1 billion in 1987-an annual average growth rate of 7.9 percent. The black middle class expanded by one-third during the Reagan years, from 3.6 million to 4.8 million.
Before he was elected, in speech after speech, my father said that his economic plan would improve the lives of African-Americans. In a February 1977 CPAC address, he said, "The time has come for Republicans to say to black voters: 'We offer principles that black Americans can and do support. We believe in jobs, real jobs; we believe in education that is really education; we believe in treating all Americans as individuals and not as stereotypes or voting blocs.'" (fukken looooool)
My father understood that, while African-Americans may vote Democratic, they live as conservatives. Like all Americans, black Americans want to succeed, they want to be free, and they want to maintain strong families.
Because as a liberal, I do not wish to succeed, I hate freedom, and I firmly believe that all families should be annihilated from the face of the earth.
His only argument is unemployment numbers, proving once again that money is the only thing that matters to these people, and social issues are to be ignored entirely. Does he realize that the economy crashed when George Bush was president? Does he also know that Republicans have been fighting tooth and nail to prevent this president from enacting any solutions whatsoever? Does he know that Barack Obama is half black? Does he know that Reagan opposed making Martin Luther King's birthday a federal holiday like the rest of the Republican party? Or how much he opposed affirmative action? Or of his attempt to reverse the long-standing policy of denying tax-exempt status to private schools which practiced discrimination? Does he know that the majority of America's black community does not consider Ronald Reagan a friend?
This was written by Ronald Reagan's son Michael. I wonder what his brother Ron Jr. would have to say about it. Fun fact: Ron Reagan Jr. is extremely liberal, and believes his father had alzheimer's while still in office. Fox should run an op-ed from him, being so fair and balanced.
Yes! Finally something about quotes.
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