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AverageOldGuy

(4,101 posts)
15. I am not at all surprised
Wed May 6, 2026, 09:39 PM
14 hrs ago

I'm 81, born 1944 in deep SW Mississippi . . little crossroads cotton picking town; county was 75% Black, as best I can tell from this vantage point, about 15 - 20 Blacks were registered to vote. I left at age 18 and never looked back. However, in those 18 years, three Black men were murdered, all of them for trying to register to vote or to form an NAACP chapter. Murders never solved -- what a surprise.

I have a dozen Mississippi and Louisiana cousins as well as my wife's Alabama cousins, in-laws, nephew.

Of these MS, AL, and LA kin, three families are Democrats. They take a lot of shit from their communities. The rest of our MS, LS, AL kin are MAGAts and white supremacists.

Their children and grandchildren all attend lily-white segregation academies -- Indianola Academy, Wilkinson County Christian Academy, Centreville Christian Academy, Bayou Academy (Cleveland MS). Read about them here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segregation_academy

They do not use the word "Black" or the term "African-American." They use as a normal part of their vocabulary the word "n####r" and "n####rs." They use these words as easily as the rest of us say "Hello" or "Goodbye."

They tell me Donald Trump was sent by God. They all -- except for a couple of families who are Methodists -- are Southern Baptists who are in church every time the doors are open and who tell me the Bible is literal -- flood, prophecy, resurrection -- it all happened.

I posted on my Facebook account a condemnation of the Supreme Court after last weeks decision gutting the Voting Rights Act. All Hell rained down on my Facebook, email, text messages, and phone calls from my beloved cousins who are delighted with the decision.

Not a fucking thing has changed in the Old South from the days of Southern Redemption following the end of Reconstruction in 1876. The six "justices" who overturned the VRA should swap their judicial robes for Klan robes and hoods.

Later, I'll post a comment telling everyone how I really feel.


A shock. Not at all. On the contrary. I've been WARNING about it for at least a DECADE now. B.See 14 hrs ago #1
True malaise 14 hrs ago #2
Step by step, the social taboo on overt racism decomposesd. SouthBayDem 12 hrs ago #29
Not hard to process at all misanthrope 14 hrs ago #3
Scary malaise 14 hrs ago #4
Yep Solly Mack 14 hrs ago #6
Same here Stuckinthebush 14 hrs ago #8
They did before misanthrope 14 hrs ago #10
Yep Stuckinthebush 14 hrs ago #11
Was in Alabama just after Trump took office in mobile airport JT45242 3 hrs ago #35
I also grew up in the rural south BeneteauBum 14 hrs ago #12
Nice story. Sometimes it takes just one real encounter to understand that we are all one, all the same. erronis 13 hrs ago #19
Nice malaise 5 hrs ago #32
I grew up in a small town in Michigan JBTaurus83 14 hrs ago #5
White people talking to white people Johonny 2 hrs ago #40
I was thrilled by the election of President Obama, believing it to be... 3catwoman3 14 hrs ago #7
+1. I'm afraid Obama was a rare anomaly. dalton99a 13 hrs ago #16
The fact that we had a Black president drove the racists crazy. wnylib 12 hrs ago #28
Never left! Floyd R. Turbo 14 hrs ago #9
I knew as a child, when i first heard the words "all men are created equal", that the shit was going to hit the fan one Solomon 14 hrs ago #13
I wonder how other countries have evolved past this. Or have they? erronis 13 hrs ago #21
They have not. malthaussen 45 min ago #45
I just never understood why they think racism is advantageous. Trueblue Texan 3 hrs ago #38
I never understand how people do not get the simple concept that hamsterjill 2 hrs ago #41
A lot of racists in this country KT2000 14 hrs ago #14
I am not at all surprised AverageOldGuy 14 hrs ago #15
Helluva post already! I got a great taste of southern living from this erronis 13 hrs ago #22
Freaking wow malaise 3 hrs ago #39
As someone born an raised in the south, my reply is to ask "What do you mean, 'return'?" OldBaldy1701E 13 hrs ago #17
MAGA like 1850!!! moondust 13 hrs ago #18
Generally speaking, most Republicans are "Surface People". chouchou 13 hrs ago #20
It is mind boggling how these Kluxers are reimposing Jim Crow. My God. PatrickforB 13 hrs ago #23
More of our electeds and candidates must do a FAR better job of denouncing, demonizing, and delegitimizing... pat_k 13 hrs ago #24
Not surprising at all RetiredParatrooper 12 hrs ago #25
I live in ruby red Florida mcar 12 hrs ago #26
I live in Purple Florida PCB66 4 hrs ago #33
When sports in America starts being effected we will see some change. BradBo 12 hrs ago #27
Not a shock. The racism never left. Like cockroaches, they hide in the shadows awaiting the dark Scalded Nun 12 hrs ago #30
Seems not too long ago comments like this would get a rash of shit from southerners claiming the north is just as racist Hassin Bin Sober 11 hrs ago #31
Wow! malaise 4 hrs ago #34
That should be an OP on its own. Passages 1 hr ago #42
JFK tried. Kid Berwyn 3 hrs ago #36
Thanks for this my friend malaise 3 hrs ago #37
A shock, but not an unexpected one. malthaussen 50 min ago #43
Sheathing for eight years with a black president their brains filled with putrid puss. Hope22 47 min ago #44
I have family members by marriage who voted for him. Baitball Blogger 44 min ago #46
Not if you voted for it, which Trmp's supporters most certainly did. eppur_se_muova 38 min ago #47
The racism in the U.S. is deep and wide PJMcK 37 min ago #48
I'm so damn sick of racism. It's STUPID. We are all humans. WTF? Joinfortmill 52 sec ago #49
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