Morley wrote:
When I give specifics, the real life examples you request, you either shrug them off or ignore my posts and take a tangent to something else. Then you do things like make demands that I tell you how the man you're reading about advances my arguments. Why the hell would I keep playing this game with you?
What example did you give except to disparage certain people who you called inbred?
Another tangent. Those damn Italians in upstate New York picking on poor Northern Europeans. When and where and what were the white-and-delightsome folks being denied by their darker (gasp) brothers?
Where did I mention that one group was picking on another? I gave an example of segregation. Your conclusion was that the Italians were picking on the "poor Northern Europeans." Where did you get that from?
I will give you this. I am Mr Tangent^10 - sorry. It happens when you suffer from sentence derangement syndrome.
You seem to be arguing that because Mediterranean folks were mean to Germans in upstate NY a century ago, we should not pursue justice in the US today. You make no sense.
When did I write that Mediterranean folks were mean to Germans? when did I suggest that Justice - in all forms - should not be pursued today?
You're wrong. Some things are better.
What's better today about Watts than it was almost 60 years ago in the summer of 1965? What's different today at 109th and Willowbrook than it was 60 years ago?
Passing laws that require equal treatment does not equal throwing money at the problem.
When did I write that passing laws that require "equal treatment" was just throwing money at the problem?
I wrote:
"Maybe if the Majority voted with associate justice John Marshall Harland in the 1896 Supreme Court decision Plessy Vs Ferguson then things would have gradually changed but it didn’t happen, so things remained the same."
Morley wrote:
You do realize that this is my exactly my argument, don't you? Separate but equal didn't work.
thank you for agreeing with Justice Harlan that the constitution is color blind. I agree.
You say that things would be different if we didn't have 'separate but equal.' You know that Plessy v. Ferguson was overturned in 1954 with Brown v. Board of Education, right? We've had 70 years without it. Your argument is ridiculous.
Per wiki:
"Harlan's dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson influenced the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas in 1954. In Brown, the Court ruled that 'separate but equal' was unconstitutional."
Harlan argued that the "separate but equal" law violated the Constitution's protections of personal liberties and equal treatment.
He believed that the law created a badge of slavery that marked minorities as inferior.
Harlan predicted that the decision would lead to "race hate" in state law."
"Harlan's dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson influenced the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas in 1954. In Brown, the Court ruled that "separate but equal" was unconstitutional."
That's why Harlan dissented. The only one. That's why I wrote, "Maybe if the majority voted with associate justice John Marshall Harland [dissenting] in the 1896 Supreme Court decision Plessy vs. Ferguson then things would have gradually changed but it didn’t happen, so things remained the same."