Retard's made an arse of himself again, so he's throwing strawmen into the debate to try to distract us...


In becoming the first Western democracy to elect a racial minority to the highest office in the land in 2008, the United States once again demonstrated its “melting pot” quality to the world.
In 1835 Disraeli and Daniel O'Connell quarrelled publicly over press reports that O'Connell had been called a 'traitor and incendiary' by Disraeli. The pair were to fight a duel but the police intervened and Disraeli was bound over to keep the peace. This was the first of their confrontations. In a heated debate in parliament, O'Connell referred to Disraeli's Jewish ancestry in disparaging terms to which Disraeli responded:
Yes, I am a Jew and when the ancestors of the right honourable gentleman were brutal savages in an unknown island, mine were priests in the temple of Solomon.






Except that Disraeli was not religiously different. He was baptized as an Anglican as a child. His identification as a Jew, therefore, was racial and not religious.rubato wrote:Disraeli was offered as an example of someone racially different.
Not religiously different.
Talking about racism, in the UK there has never at anytime been any restriction of voting rights based on anyones skin colour. As opposed to ....ermm..... 1964 in some parts of the USA I believe?rubato wrote:Only the English are so deeply racist that they would say that White Europeans are a different race.
And I won't even mention that the average working man in England didn't get the right to vote until after WW I (along with women).
yrs,
rubato
Yes, red heads were finally protected from outright discrimination. Of course, you had to be citizen to vote, and that was and still is the trick; well, that and there being an election.Talking about racism, in the UK there has never at anytime been any restriction of voting rights based on anyones skin colour. As opposed to ....ermm..... 1964 in some parts of the USA I believe?
Except for the Caucasians, old boy. Quite right about the rest - wogs begin at Calais altho' since the Tunnel they've started showing up all over. Oh well.... back to beating the servants.rubato wrote:Only the English are so deeply racist that they would say that White Europeans are a different race.
Now that's just being silly. The average working man in England had women long before 1920.And I won't even mention that the average working man in England didn't get the right to vote until after WW I (along with women).
The fact of the matter is, the Democratic party and their allies within the Latino community, (Like La Raza) have done an excellent job at convincing a substantial portion of the the Latino electorate that opposition to illegal immigration equals anti-Latino racism, and that therefore the GOP is just racially against them.As for the original post, I think there are a lot of good ideas that are pragmatic and workable, rather than the soapbox pandering variety that has dominated the debate.



Let's not pretend that there isn't a significant racial component to arguments against illegal immigration. You don't often hear squaking about illegal immigrants from Canada (who are substantial in number) or about building a wall along the northern border. Then when you add in measures like those taken in Arizona, which are going to amount to looking at every brown skinned person as a potential illegal immigrant...Lord Jim wrote:The fact of the matter is, the Democratic party and their allies within the Latino community, (Like La Raza) have done an excellent job at convincing a substantial portion of the the Latino electorate that opposition to illegal immigration equals anti-Latino racism, and that therefore the GOP is just racially against them.

The Portuguese (Portuguese: os Portugueses) are a nation and ethnic group native to the country of Portugal, in the west of the Iberian peninsula of south-west Europe. Their language is Portuguese, and Roman Catholicism is the predominant religion.
Due to the large historical extent of the Portuguese Empire and the colonization of territories in Africa, Asia and the Americas, as well as historical and recent emigration, Portuguese communities can be found in many diverse regions around the globe, and a large Portuguese diaspora exists.
Benjamin Disraeli's biographers believe he was descended from Italian Sephardic Jews. He claimed Portuguese ancestry, possibly referring to an earlier origin of his family heritage in Iberia prior to the expulsion of Jews in 1492. After this event many Jews emigrated, in two waves; some fled to the Muslim lands of the Ottoman Empire, but many also went to Christian Europe, first to northern Italy, then to the Netherlands, and later to England.
Hmmmm...rubato wrote:Disraeli was offered as an example of someone racially different.
Not religiously different.
Do you girls even read your own crap?
Of course not. Too fucking stupid.
Oh look :
In becoming the first Western democracy to elect a racial minority to the highest office in the land in 2008, the United States once again demonstrated its “melting pot” quality to the world.
yrs,
rubato
So, as he was born in Hawaii, which racial minority is he, retard?His mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, was born in Wichita, Kansas, and was of mostly English ancestry, along with Scottish, Irish, German, and Swiss. His father, Barack Obama, Sr., was a Luo from Nyang’oma Kogelo, Nyanza Province, Kenya.


