SpiritualONE
09-04-2005, 06:56 PM
This book outlined several ways to eliminate people of Afrikan ancestry. You are witnessing only one of them:
An American Dilemma:
The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy
Twentieth Anniversary Edition
Harper & Row, New York (1962)
[NOTE: The original edition was published in 1944]
This book is an extremely influential document about the conditions under which Americans of African descent lived during the first half of the twentieth century. It became, in fact, the definitive study of "the American Negro" for its time -- carefully documenting social and economic conditions, family structure and lifestyle, political awareness, communal institutions, religion, and an enormous variety of other issues related to American racism. In many ways, this lengthy study (the text is nearly 1,500 pages in all) offered academic and political leaders useful and truthful evidence of the enduring effects both of slavery and contemporary racism on the part of whites. The study was, in fact, instrumental in the Supreme Court's historic 1954 anti-segregation decision. For that reason, its documentation of a virtually-universal genocidal intent on the part of whites is especially valid. Equally important is the fact that the author, while revealing to the white intellectuals for the first time the impact of systematic discrimination in the United States, openly agreed with the goal of removing black people from the country, even to the point of recommending openly how it might be accomplished. Gunnar Myrdal was affiliated with the Institute of International Economic Relations at the Stockholm University, Sweden. His research was funded by the Carnegie Corporation.
The portions of text quoted here are from Chapter 7, titled "POPULATION."
On page 167 of the book, under the sub-heading "Ends and Means of Population Policy," appears the following analysis (emphasis in original):
[T]here is no doubt that the overwhelming majority of white Americans desire that there be as few Negroes as possible in America. If the Negroes could be eliminated from America or greatly decreased in numbers, this would meet the whites' approval -- provided that it could be accomplished by means which are also approved. Correspondingly, an increase of the proportion of Negroes in the American population is commonly looked upon as undesirable."
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~/ S1~ENEMY OF EVIL\~
An American Dilemma:
The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy
Twentieth Anniversary Edition
Harper & Row, New York (1962)
[NOTE: The original edition was published in 1944]
This book is an extremely influential document about the conditions under which Americans of African descent lived during the first half of the twentieth century. It became, in fact, the definitive study of "the American Negro" for its time -- carefully documenting social and economic conditions, family structure and lifestyle, political awareness, communal institutions, religion, and an enormous variety of other issues related to American racism. In many ways, this lengthy study (the text is nearly 1,500 pages in all) offered academic and political leaders useful and truthful evidence of the enduring effects both of slavery and contemporary racism on the part of whites. The study was, in fact, instrumental in the Supreme Court's historic 1954 anti-segregation decision. For that reason, its documentation of a virtually-universal genocidal intent on the part of whites is especially valid. Equally important is the fact that the author, while revealing to the white intellectuals for the first time the impact of systematic discrimination in the United States, openly agreed with the goal of removing black people from the country, even to the point of recommending openly how it might be accomplished. Gunnar Myrdal was affiliated with the Institute of International Economic Relations at the Stockholm University, Sweden. His research was funded by the Carnegie Corporation.
The portions of text quoted here are from Chapter 7, titled "POPULATION."
On page 167 of the book, under the sub-heading "Ends and Means of Population Policy," appears the following analysis (emphasis in original):
[T]here is no doubt that the overwhelming majority of white Americans desire that there be as few Negroes as possible in America. If the Negroes could be eliminated from America or greatly decreased in numbers, this would meet the whites' approval -- provided that it could be accomplished by means which are also approved. Correspondingly, an increase of the proportion of Negroes in the American population is commonly looked upon as undesirable."
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~/ S1~ENEMY OF EVIL\~