Democrats want everyone to think that blacks are monolithic.
Take, for example, that little statistic of the voting habits of black
Americans. It ranges anywhere from 90% to 96% of the vote going to the
Democratic candidate, depending upon the race, the region of the country and
the contest. One small detail is missing though . . . less than 30% of
blacks even vote. So if you take 90% of 29%, you will get about 26% or about
one quarter of the black population that actually votes for the Democratic
candidate.
What about that other 74%? Why don’t they vote?
We discovered while filming our documentary, Emancipation
Revelation Revolution, that the reason most blacks feel disenfranchised from
the voting machinery is that they don’t feel comfortable with the Democratic
platform and have been intimidated into believing that the Republican Party
is the spawn of Satan. They reject, as a matter of conscience, most of the
social positions the Democrats espouse. They have seen the figures and
realize that 40% of all abortions are performed on black women and can see
the finger of genocide pointing in their direction. At the same time, there
is an erroneous belief that the Republican Party has been wrong on civil
rights and lacks compassion.*
They have seen the devastation of the black family at the hand of the party
that replaced personal responsibility with government handouts laced with
immoral, impossible conditions. Conditions like forbidding the father of a
woman’s child to live in the family if they are to receive welfare, or the
restriction on returning to school if they are in the government system.
They have seen the black family smeared in the Petri dish of social
experimentation for several generations and realize the same monolithic
mentality exists that identifies blacks as victims of society, dependent
upon “the man” for their very existence. Sound familiar?
What is happening to those who are breaking out of this mindset, in the year
of the “black candidate,” declaring that the color of Barack’s skin color is
irrelevant because the content of his character is a bigger issue? The
mainstream media doesn't want to focus on that, because if they did, they
would be admitting that blacks are not monolithic, do not en masse support
one party over another, and don’t all attend churches as divisive as Rev.
Wrights.
The debate should be about whether someone who lacks judgment and attends a
divisive church that pits one group of people against another is qualified
to lead an entire nation, not whether Obama should have thrown Rev. Wright
under the bus for political expediency.