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Convenient Myths Forgotten
00:02:19
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| Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance. | |
| Most people think that the United States was, from the very beginning, dedicated to the idea of racial equality. | |
| Yes, they say there was slavery and segregation, but we were always working to fulfill the promise of all men are created equal. | |
| Of course, Thomas Jefferson, who wrote those words, was a slaveholder who didn't think the races were equal at all. | |
| But that phrase from the Declaration of Independence will haunt his memory forever. | |
| Not many people know that in 1776, there were black slaves in all 13 colonies and in the entire New World, from Canada to the tip of South America. | |
| In 1770, 40% of the white households in Manhattan owned slaves, and there were more slaves in the colony of New York than in Georgia. | |
| Nine of the first eleven presidents were slaveholders. | |
| The two exceptions were John Adams and John Quincy Adams. | |
| Jefferson thought slavery was a bad thing and that slaves would eventually be freed, but he wanted freed slaves sent back to Africa. | |
| There's a quotation from him on the wall of the Jefferson Memorial that goes like this: Jefferson didn't stop there, adding, | |
| That part has been conveniently forgotten. | |
| He wanted blacks deported and separated from whites so that they would be, and I quote, James Madison agreed. | |
| He wanted the U.S. government to buy up every slave and deport them. | |
| After he served as president, He ran the American Colonization Society, which was set up to send blacks back to Africa. | |
| At the inaugural meeting of the Society, Henry Clay explained its purpose, quote,"to rid our country of a useless and pernicious, if not dangerous, portion of the population." Some of the most famous early Americans were not just members of the Colonization Society, | |
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Founders' Racial Bias
00:06:00
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| they were officers. | |
| Besides Madison, there were Andrew Jackson, Daniel Webster, Stephen Douglas, William Seward, Francis Scott Key, Winfield Scott, and John Marshall. | |
| James Monroe worked so hard to help freed American slaves leave the country and establish Liberia that grateful Liberians named their capital Monrovia in his memory. | |
| The Founders wanted blacks out and whites in. | |
| After the U.S. Constitution was ratified, The very first United States Congress had to decide who could be an American. | |
| They passed a law that said only, quote, free white persons could be citizens of the new country. | |
| Blacks couldn't be citizens even if they had been living in the colonies for generations. | |
| It took an amendment to the Constitution in 1868 for blacks to become citizens. | |
| And American Indians didn't finally become U.S. citizens until 1924. | |
| From colonial times on, there was strong opposition to mixed-race marriage. | |
| Massachusetts prohibited miscegenation from 1705 to 1843 and repealed the ban only because people thought it wasn't needed. | |
| They thought the idea of mixing was so repellent that no one would do it even if it were legal. | |
| Of the 50 United States, 44 at one time had laws prohibiting interracial marriage. | |
| White people did not want blacks to vote. | |
| In 1855 there were 31 states in the Union but blacks could vote only in four. | |
| All of them were in New England and together they had only four percent of the total black population of the country. | |
| The federal government made sure that blacks couldn't vote in the territories. | |
| When Oregon joined the Union in 1859 Its constitution stated that no black person could come live in or even visit the state. | |
| But Abraham Lincoln, the great emancipator, didn't he believe in racial equality? | |
| No. During the Lincoln-Douglas debates, he said this:"I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of making voters or jurors out of Negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people." There is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. | |
| Lincoln agreed with Jefferson. | |
| He wanted to free the slaves and then deport them. | |
| In 1862, Lincoln had the Civil War on his hands. | |
| But he was so worried about what to do with free blacks that he named a Commissioner on Immigration and sent him off to look for countries that would take in the blacks he wanted to be rid of. | |
| He also sent a message to Congress calling for free blacks to be deported. | |
| U.S. presidents usually say only bland, non-controversial things. | |
| Well, this is what some of them said about race. | |
| James Garfield wrote: I have a strong feeling of repugnance when I think of the Negro being made our political equal and I would be so glad if they could be colonized, sent to heaven, or got rid of in any decent way. | |
| Theodore Roosevelt wrote that he had, quote, not been able to think out any solution to the terrible problem offered by the presence of the Negro on this continent. | |
| As for Indians, he said,"I don't go so far as to think that the only good Indians are the dead Indians, but I believe nine out of ten are, and I shouldn't inquire too closely into the health of the tenth." William Howard Taft once told a group of black college students, | |
| "Your race is adapted to be a race of farmers, first, last, and for all times." Warren Harding thought the races would always be separate. | |
| This is not a question of social equality, but a question of recognizing a fundamental, eternal, inescapable difference. | |
| Harry Truman wrote, I am strongly of the opinion that Negroes ought to be in Africa, yellow men in Asia, and white men in Europe and America. | |
| He also referred to the black servants in the White House as, quote, an army of coons. | |
| Dwight Eisenhower told Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren he understood why Southerners wanted segregated schools. | |
| They didn't want, quote, their sweet little girls to sit in schools alongside some big black box. | |
| He said that what he regretted most about his eight years as president was sending federal troops to Little Rock, Arkansas to enforce school integration. | |
| It's not until John Kennedy... | |
| Elected in 1960, that we have a president with views on race that just might be considered acceptable today. | |
| Because now, of course, we are supposed to think that race doesn't even exist. | |
| And, even if it did, it would be immoral to base any decision on race. | |
| As I think I've made clear, this is a very recent way of thinking. | |
| From colonial times right up through the mid-20th century, virtually all white people believed race was an essential part of the American identity. | |
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America's Diverse Future
00:00:55
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| They understood that people of different races are different and build different kinds of societies. | |
| They thought only Europeans would make the United States the kind of country that they would want to pass on to their children. | |
| So, there are two views. | |
| There is the consensus on race that lasted for more than 300 years. | |
| And there's today's view that races are perfectly equal and interchangeable and that America can become black, Hispanic, Asian, Muslim, Hindu, anything at all. | |
| And not only will it be still America, it'll be better than ever. | |
| Well, which view is correct? | |
| Just look around. | |
| Read the news. | |
| I think you'll find the answer. | |