And If Trump were Black Would All these Racists Give a Shit About Serial Email Deletion? [the Deluded White Votary & their Ghost Problems]

[MORE] and [MOREDeluded racist sheep want to be deceived. Trump is standing for whatever they will fall for. All the racist white votary cares about is their hatred of non-white people - so any excuse to vote for Trump will do. 

Polling conducted earlier this year found that 65 percent of Trump supporters believe Obama is a Muslim; 59 percent believe Obama wasn’t born in the United States; 40 percent believe blacks are more “lazy” than whites; 31 percent support banning homosexuals from the country; 16 percent believe whites are a superior race; and 20 percent disagree with Lincoln’s signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed Southern slaves. [MORE]

Undeceiver, Neely Fuller plainly states, "Most white people hate Black people. The reason that most white people hate Black people is because whites are not Black people. If you know this about white people, you need know little else. If you do not know this about white people, virtually all else that you know about them will only confuse you."

A Black Church Burned in the Name of Trump! [MORE]

Amos Wilson breaks it down as follows:

'The Republican party is notorious for the strategy that requires the party to agitate latent emotional resentment and turn them into marketable political traits. The new raw materials for this are drawn from enduring social aggravations — wounds of race, class and religion, even sex. This strategy which centers around projecting the idea that the White populace is threatened by over­whelming alien forces, particularly Black criminals, non-white immigrants and Blacks demanding welfare and special entitlements, is not a strategy for governance. Again, as Greider notes, "The party's method deliberately coaxes emotional responses from people — teases their anxieties over values they hold important in their own lives — but then walks away from the anger and proceeds to govern on its real agenda, defending the upper-class interest of wealth and corporate power." He concludes that "The Republican party is not a party of conservative ideology. It is a party of conservative clients. Wherever possible, the ideology will be invoked as justification for taking care of the client's needs. When the two are in conflict, the conservative principles are discarded and the clients are served.'

Wilson further explains that many whites see "Blacks as the Primary Impediment to Governing." He states, at the center of American politics and governance stands the alien presence of Black America. This presence is White America's number one domestic issue and problem. This presence in its own peculiar way very significantly defines the shape and character of the collective White American psyche and body politic. This group, the Afrikan American community, intrudes disturbingly into White consciousness as insistently and persistently as White America seeks to exclude it from its midst and to deny and distort its reality through projective and self-deceptive stereotyping processes. Thomas and Mary Edsall cut right to the heart of the matter in their introductory remarks to an article titled "Race" published in the Atlantic Monthly (May, 1991):

Race is no longer a straightforward, morally unambiguous force in American politics; instead, considerations of race are now deeply imbedded in the strategy and tactics of politics, in competing concepts of the function and responsibility of government, and in each voter's conceptual structure of moral and partisan identity. Race helps define liberal and conservative ideologies, shapes the presidential coalitions of the Democratic and Republican parties, provides a harsh new dimension to concern over taxes and crime, drives a wedge through alliances of the working classes and the poor, and gives both momen­tum and vitality to the drive to establish a national majority inclined by income and demography to support policies benefitting the affluent and the upper-middle class. In terms of policy, race has played a critical role in the creation of a political system that has tolerated, if not supported, the growth of the disparity between rich and poor...'

The Edsalls give further evidence of the antipathy many in the White American nation have for Afrikan Americans in reporting the results of an analysis of the attitudes of White "Reagan democrats," i.e., White, nominally Democrats who supported Ronald Reagan and Republican party politics during the past decade. Their study found that many working class, non-college educated whites express a profound distaste for blacks, a sentiment that pervades almost everything they think about government and politics. Blacks constitute the explanation for these white voters' vulnerability and provide an explanation for almost everything that has gone wrong in their lives; not being black is what constitutes being middle class; not living with blacks is what makes a neighborhood a decent place to live ... These sentiments have important implications for Democrats, as virtually all progressive symbols and themes have been redefined in racial and pejorative terms ....

The special status of blacks is perceived by almost all of these individuals as a serious obstacle to their personal advancement. Indeed, discrimination against whites has become a well-assimi­lated and ready explanation for their status, vulnerability and failures.'