You’re retarded. Joe Biden hated MLK
PoliticsNation dug up old NBC News footage to reveal just how some critics reacted to the March on Washington in the hours after the events. Hear what they said.
www.nbcnews.com
“The Negroes in this country own more refrigerators, and more automobiles, than they do in any other country,” South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond told NBC News in the hours after the event. “They are better fed, they are better clothed, they have better houses here than in any other country in the world.”
“No one is deprived of freedom that I know about,” he added. - Strom Thurman (Joe Biden’s best friend and mentor)
“In 2010,
Biden provided a eulogy for Democratic West Virginia Senator Robert C. Byrd, who in the 1940s helped recruit new members to his chapter of the KKK.”
www.presidency.ucsb.edu
At the time, Kamala Harris criticized Biden for "coddling" the "reputations of segregationists," attacking him as "misinformed" and "wrong," and called Biden's comments a "very serious matter."
Instead of apologizing,
Biden doubled down, incredulously asking "apologize for what?" and telling Cory Booker that "he knows better" than to criticize him.
President Joe Biden wants Americans to remember their country's racist legacy. We should take this advice.
gazette.com
Joe Biden sided with notorious segregationists to oppose integrative bussing, saying in 1977 he did not want his white children "to grow up in a jungle, the jungle being a racial jungle..."
Biden called Sen. Robert C. Byrd "a friend." At Byrd's funeral, Biden called him "a mentor, and he was a guide." Even more, "Robert C. Byrd elevated the Senate."
Byrd founded a major chapter of the Klan and later stood for 14 hours to filibuster against the Civil Rights Act. The racist filibuster came eight years before Biden won a Senate seat and fast embraced Byrd — an overt racist who repeated the "n-word" on TV this century — as his mentor. So maybe Byrd was a confused bumpkin when he led a Klan chapter and opposed civil rights. Maybe not.
In 2007, Joe Biden
referred to Barack Obama as
“the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean.”
Then in August 2020,
Biden told a gathering of black and Hispanic journalists that
“unlike the African American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly different attitudes about different things.”