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2kewl4u2know
Omnipotent One
Patron
Support Leader
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Because Democrats are "for the minorities."
------- "Energizer Bunny arrested, charged with battery."
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snowfish
Guru
Patron
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I'd like to see this graph cross referenced with one that shows people's political affiliation based on class (or, because class is so fucked up in the U.S. start with economic status) within racial groups. I think you might start to find some answers there.
------- LW's resident eccentric radical.
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2kewl4u2know
Omnipotent One
Patron
Support Leader
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I'm not saying they really are, just that is their platform, and people tend to take it as they say it instead of looking into it themselves.
------- "Energizer Bunny arrested, charged with battery."
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whoisabs
Dairy Product Addict
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When you smear any black who votes republican as an uncle tom, race traitor, porch monkey, etc. it makes it clear as to why blacks vote against their conscious and for the democrats.
------- whoisabs i'm not sure Guess who's back?
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Power Girl
Dairy Product Addict
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Tradition perhaps. Also I found this tidbit. http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/when_did_blacks_start_voting_democratic.html
Blacks mostly voted Republican from after the Civil War and through the early part of the 20th century. That's not surprising when one considers that Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican president, and the white, segregationist politicians who governed Southern states in those days were Democrats. The Democratic Party didn't welcome blacks then, and it wasn't until 1924 that blacks were even permitted to attend Democratic conventions in any official capacity. Most blacks lived in the South, where they were mostly prevented from voting at all. The election of Roosevelt in 1932 marked the beginning of a change. He got 71 percent of the black vote for president in 1936 and did nearly that well in the next two elections, according to historical figures kept by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. But even then, the number of blacks identifying themselves as Republicans was about the same as the number who thought of themselves as Democrats. It wasn't until Harry Truman garnered 77 percent of the black vote in 1948 that a majority of blacks reported that they thought of themselves as Democrats. Earlier that year Truman had issued an order desegregating the armed services and an executive order setting up regulations against racial bias in federal employment. Even after that, Republican nominees continued to get a large slice of the black vote for several elections. Dwight D. Eisenhower got 39 percent in 1956, and Richard Nixon got 32 percent in his narrow loss to John F. Kennedy in 1960. But then President Lyndon B. Johnson pushed through the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 (outlawing segregation in public places) and his eventual Republican opponent, Sen. Barry Goldwater, opposed it. Johnson got 94 percent of the black vote that year, still a record for any presidential election. The following year Johnson signed the 1965 Voting Rights Act. No Republican presidential candidate has gotten more than 15 percent of the black vote since. Footnote: Younger African American voters have been edging away from the Democratic Party in recent years. David Bositis of the Joint Center notes "a fairly long-term pattern of decreasing identification with the Democrats by younger African Americans." Of course, it remains to be seen what the 2008 campaign will bring. 
You have to thank Johnson and Goldwater for this divide,
------- All men and women are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality.
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( Bud2400 )
Swami
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Quote: from Power Girl at 12:01 pm on Nov. 6, 2008
Tradition perhaps. 
It's a possibility, though you see so many whites and other races voting against the political ideology they were exposed to from their parents while growing up. I wonder why this would not be the case for blacks?
You have to thank Johnson and Goldwater for this divide, 
Heh, when I was a kid, I was led to believe that black people couldn't vote at all throughout the entire country until the Civil Rights Movement, as opposed to just a select few states that imposed Jim Crow laws. But anybody who takes a deeper look at US history should know about that. Clearly, the shift has something to do with advocating propositions and beliefs that would benefit the black community during LBJ (and in the case of FDR, the simple fact that it was clear what Hoover was doing about the economy wasn't satisfactory, virtually uniting the entire country against him). Since then, the democrats have generally advocated more "pro-minority" propositions - at least if you consider "pro-minority" to be affirmative action and the like. Perhaps tradition plus this could explain why more conservative blacks tend to vote democrat, despite being more aligned with republicans (except perhaps when it comes to AA and a few other things)? It could really just be a general question about priorities, I suppose, which the graphs I showed about what's generally important to each race had nothing about racial issues.
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2:07 pm on Nov. 6, 2008 | Joined Dec. 2004 | 1189 Days Active Join to learn more about Bud2400 Washington, United States | Straight Male | 6736 Posts | 25136 Points
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