The Civil
Rights Act of 1964 has resulted in a planned division in the US voter
base. Democrats seized on
victim-advocacy politics and developed voter blocks out of isolated groups.
Land mines were planted to ensure a stealthy increase in immigrants to
round-out the Democrat collection of minorities and gays.
The
problem with anti-discrimination laws is that they grow to favor the minorities
way beyond what is reasonable. For a
while, the majority will go along with the scheme until it gets out of control
and begins to crowd out our inalienable rights to free speech, religious
freedom and protection of property.
The Civil
rights act opened up jobs to blacks, but that could have been done with phone
calls to CEOs. Instead it became a political act. In business, we dealt with anti-
discrimination policies.
The only
issues we saw for decades were discrimination cases where 90% were baseless.
Later in the 1980s, when Affirmative Action Plans were required, we dealt with
these. But now they are telling us to give increases to women and minorities
regardless of their backgrounds.
The 2008
Meltdown was the poster-child of anti-discrimination laws gone wild. The notion
that banks should be forced to lend to “unqualified buyers” was outrageous.
Now we
see family bakeries closed and fined because they refused gay customers. Again,
this is another incident where citizen abuse is obvious. Gays can start their
own bakeries.
We see
churches under threat of lawsuits for not hiring gays and not removing warnings
that homosexuality is a sin from their bibles. Gays can start their own
churches.
We see
HUD usurping local zoning laws to endanger property values and schools. We see
Obama migrating Muslim refugees to the US with the same effect.
We also
see local officials caving in to whatever Muslims want for fear of losing a
lawsuit. Muslims have been open to admit that they are using our
anti-discrimination laws against us.
Muslims could forsake Sharia law to live under US law, but they don’t.
We see
Canada and other countries passing “hate speech” laws that carry fines and jail
time for those who criticize gays or Muslims.
I would
like to see the gains we made by removing segregation laws be continued, but I
would like for Blacks and all other citizens to free to be themselves and
pursue their own interests without interference. I continue to be impressed
with graduates of Morehouse and Spellman colleges and would like to see an
expansion of this model in high schools.
It is
time to consider how much trouble our anti-discrimination laws are causing and
whether or not they should be repealed. The US was founded to be a meritocracy
and the Trump election signals that US voters would like to return to this
path.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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