Sunday, August 9, 2009

Culture-ritis . . . The Bush Factor

"Shhh . . . what you are about to read is politically incorrect. Tafadhali, repeat only in whispers."

Nothing Worthwhile Can Be Built On A False Foundation.

But for the Bush factor, Obama might not have been elected President of the United States. There was that ever-present image of a hand-full of white men waltzing into Afrika where they were outnumbered a million to one by black people, but in short time had efficiently take over that Continent.

They had built modern cities and homes among millions of black people living in grass huts with goats and chickens, had brought in schools and the written word and new languages and newspapers among millions of illiterate black people.

Centuries earlier they had given free rides across the Atlantic to blacks to pick cotton in the Americas. But after hundreds of years in the United States, and becoming "blacks" (CARBON-COPIES), the "blacks" had not learned -- in spite of tons of "black" preachers, teachers, and leaders -- to put together a culture that could withstand the assault of the latest generation of "black" teenage boys -- and many adult men; they walked into the 21st century wearing their britches down to their knees, displaying their stink bloomers and behinds in public; they hurled the word "nigger" at each other in public, causing many civilized himans a bothersome thought: "Can there be some genetic difference between whites and blacks impeding the latter from reaching the intellectual level of the former?

"Why in the 1990s -- when whites were walking in space -- did the Hutu tribe in Rwanda take machetes and savagely hack hundreds of thousands of helpless Tutsi men, women, and children to pieces? And why were other tribes in other Afrikan countries kidnapping children and forcing them to become child-soldiers and killers in tribal wars?"

Yet, George W. Bush, as President of the United States, ignored that unflattering image and that bothersome thought. He judged Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, both Afrikan Americans, by their deportment and ability, selecting the former to be United States Secretary of State, and the latter to be his National Security Advisor and, later, to be United States Secretary of State; positions so high in the United States government that no other President had dared defy the country's racists and select and Afrikan American to fill.

He prepared the way for millions of Americans to also look past that unflattering image and that bothersome thought, and vote for an Afrikan American to be President of the United States.

Let History Record It.

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