Segregation is back in style, and it’s being supported by the same party that defended segregation and slavery throughout American history — the Democrats.
The Democratic party may claim to be the “party of tolerance,” but their past tells a vastly different story. Just fifty years ago, George Wallace, the newly-elected Democrat Governor of Arkansas, exclaimed “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever!” during his inaugural address.
Now, the story is the same but the roles are reversed. On college campuses across the nation, leftist students are demanding “white-free” zones designated only for people of color.
At the University of Michigan, the students are demanding the space be set aside for “social justice work.”
Apparently, their love of “social justice” doesn’t extend to white students. In fact, their demands exhibit the very racism these social justice organizations claim to be against.
Read whether their demands are being met on he next page:
If these people want segregation, give them segregation! That would be in everything! I know what, let us go back to the way things were 50 to 60 years ago!! Now that was segregation! These cry babies, just think, they are going to be running our country one day! You stupid people allowing this are going to sorry. Unfortunately, that includes the rest of us.
Wasn’t a Problem until Obama Committed Treason, most people are enthocentric, Obama open border illegals with their illegal status here in America always playing the victim with their illegal status nobody owes them Anything their irrelevant not our monkeys, Not Americas Responsibility
How far they’ve come,,,, since the 60″s!!!!!
What?
Nope
Just another demand that needs to be stuffed where the Sun doesn’t shine. There is a whole field of those pictured above.
Ignorant fools,segregation works both ways,how many buissnes would love to ban blacks,64% of all robberies are committed by blacks
Get a Life, Grow up
Michigan already has had largely-segregated spaces — the Greek system.
Just Stop and learn to accept each other’s difference