Mychal Massie wants you to believe that there is no such thing as race — but he sure spends a lot of time obsessively attacking black people despite being a black person himself, in the grand tradition of black WND columnists who sound like white segregationists. He ranted in his Aug. 7 column:
The fixation upon the mythical and corrosive idiocy that reduces human beings to crayon colors remains the most destructive influence in America today. With that said, I argue that racism is not systemic, as the pimps and prostitutes of inculcated marginalization would have people believe. However, ignorance and thoughtless gullibility are not only systemic, they’re generationally bred into the psyche of people given over to the inability to reason logically.
I admit there was a time I used the assignations that had been instituted to further the social divide. This is where Christendom very much gets it wrong today. Romans 16:17 (KJV) reads: “Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them.”
Christendom is to diligently observe those who cause divisions and stumbling blocks. We are to avoid all unnecessary contact with them. That specifically means we are not to embrace their divisionist practices and complaints intended to destroy America from within, as has been the neo-Leninist design. Little could anyone have realized just how thoroughly the weaponization of the fallacious construct misidentified as a skin color would lead to the deconstructing of America on every level.
Massie then attacked black activist W.E.B. Du Bois for pointing out that black people exist:
This trap started with Du Bois inventing the brilliant, albeit Satanic, creation of the assignation “colored peoples” early in the 20th century. From there America was never to be socially the same. This single act, I argue, changed forever the trajectory of the American people. That single act by Du Bois was the weaponizing of pigmentation for socio-political gain.
This move was the very definition of insidious. It was quickly absorbed into the bloodstream of America and has metastasized exponentially since then. It continues to do so unabated today; in many cases, under cover of good intentions.
It has allowed for the bastardization of not only the history of America, but the selective history of the world.
Massie didn’t explain how, exactly, Du Bois fighting for equal rights was a “bastardization” of America. Massie then went the can’t-we-all-get along route:
Americans aren’t black, white, red, yellow, chartreuse or any other made up color. We’re Americans, and as such we’re one people, one nation, under [one] God, with liberty and justice for all. The problem is, there can be no justice for all if there is a focus on the predisposition to prioritize people by crayon colors and foreign nationalities that detract and/or supplant the unity of one people identified singularly as one nationality, i.e., Americans.
Massie is sounding a lot like the “Colbert Report”-era Stephen Colbert, when he played a blowhard right-wing commentator: “I just want to say that I’m not a racist. I don’t even see race. Not even my own. People tell me I’m white and I believe them because I just devoted six minutes to explaining how I’m not a racist!”
Massie closed by ranting about an alleged “pathetic attempt to bully me by one of the leading left-wing commie radical Soros front groups whose responsibility it is to sponsor reprisal against those such as myself who aren’t afraid to speak the truth about the planned orchestration of using melanin as a weapon against their enemies.” But the link he supplied is broken, so we can’t see whether he was talking about us (as one of the few people who rmake a point of reading the silly things he writes).
Massie had a similar meltdown in his Aug. 14 column:
Suffice it to say there exists within the population of those who boast of their ancestral heritage as being that of slaves, an unchecked zeitgeist of incongruous parallactic.
It’s a social dysmorphic that demands a Vatican-trained team of exorcists to dislodge the grotesquely asphyxiating mentality that subscribes to one-sided blind hatred for the people and country to whom they truthfully owe their all.
I’ve asked many of their persuasion, but have yet to receive an answer: Where would they be if their ancestors hadn’t allegedly come here as slaves from the jungles? When I think of early Africans, Caribbean and West Indian settlers to America – before Democrats commercialized slavery and/or former slaves – I think Booker T. Washington, Frederick Douglas, George Washington Carver, Percy L. Julian, James Durham, Daniel Hale Williams, Norbert Rillieux, St. Elmo Brady, Garrett Morgan et al.
One of the most grievous consequences of the successful inculcation of the Erebusic inclusion of pernicious lies and the recension of factual history into a political construct of baseless heterodoxies successfully introduced into classrooms, has been a multi-year plan of occlusion to modernity.
Yes, Massie is beating us with his thesaurus again. Massie went on to blame black people for purportedly hating white people for no reason, as opposed to being pointing out that the white ruling class systemically discriminated against black people for centuries:
Paraphrasing the late Daniel Patrick P. Moynihan: The social alienation among the [so-called] black lower classes is matched and probably enhanced by a virulent form of anti-white feeling among portions of the large and prospering melanin-identified of their middle class. His words were prescient.
But by the 1970s, the trend of civility had changed. Moynihan wrote: “The incidence of anti-social behavior among young black males continues to be extraordinarily high.” This trend continues unabated today, the difference being it’s rewarded as culturally acceptable and rebranded as hip-hop culture.
Massie further tried to blame welfare and abortion for decimating black families:
Those people were proud of their work ethic and placed a high premium upon social propriety. But, with the introduction of pigment-based affirmative action and the fashionable acceptance of welfare and husbandless/fatherless homes, the organized deconstruction of the Negro family was fully underway. Add to that, the push to have children as a means of receiving more government money, i.e., welfare.
The payback for the initial payout has increased in return by untold hundreds of percent thanks to abortion and the industrialized systematic extermination of Negro children.
This has wrought a culture where self-segregation is also applauded and encouraged by universities, colleges and public schools across America.
Massie concluded with his own odd take on civil rights:
What I walk away with is: There never was a need to fight for civil rights. There was a need to uphold the Constitution. And these people who are today promoting segregation are the progeny of the same socio-political philosophy that Democrats embraced when they co-opted and weaponized the KKK.
It shouldn’t take a court ruling to end the reprobate behavior of these Negro con-artists and liars; if they had any decency they would never engineer such racist barbarism nor allow themselves to be exploited in such a way.
Of course, equal rights for non-white people were not specifically enumerated in the Constitution as originally written — something Massie didn’t mention.