chefnerd I see you are using selective statistics to attempt to support you argument.
Wrong! I'm using the appropriate statistics to support my argument. When it comes to the argument as to which party is racist, they mention Republican or Democrat... generally.
The statistics that I utilized are very relevant and right on point. What you did was utilize a strawman argument. You focused on six nay votes outside the former Confederate states but ignored the balance. That is an example of what we, in the PSYOP community, call propaganda.
chefnerd I guess it is easier to by a single word than
No, it is easier to utilize the applicable statistics that counter the claims that Republicans have been a party of racists. However, it was easier for you to cherry pick information to build a strawman argument in the post where you failed to prove wrong in my arguments.
chefnerd to think and get into details.
First, understand that I do not get into arguments online, or elsewhere, unless two conditions are simultaneously met:
1. I have extensive knowledge on the topic gained from first-hand experience and/or extensive study/analysis/research...
2. It is clearly obvious that those who would disagree with me, or those that I am arguing against, do not have a command of the topic that they are arguing.
It is clear, based on your first response to me here, that both of these conditions have been met.
Before I argue a topic, not only have I done extensive research/study, on that topic, but I have done extensive analysis. I detect a pattern of facts. Then, based on a pattern of facts, I make projections. It is at this point when I become comfortable talking about a topic or argue it.
There is an extensive amount of research into the details, as well as an analysis on the facts, to assist with arriving at my arguments. Understand that I've been a history buff since the late 1970s.
Second, the argument tactics that you are using here are similar to argument tactics that are used when I was a teenager. This was back in the 1980s. There is a reason to why I rejected that tactic. Hopefully, after reading my responses to you, you are also seeing why I rejected that tactic.
What you are doing is utilizing a strawman argument; nitpicking information to build a strawman argument does not constitute "thinking and getting into the details".
chefnerd If you look at the breakdown of votes ALL but 6 nay votes came from the states that formed the Confederacy. Of those 6 votes 5 were cast by Republicans. Outside of the Confederacy there was 98% approval by Democrats. The only nay vote was Robert Byrd of West Virginia
[INDUCTIVE FALLACY: STRAWMAN]
First, understand that the electorate back home are going to influence how Congress personnel are going to vote. They influence the chances of a congressperson of winning reelection. This has little relevance on your argument on whether they are racist or not.
Second, when this vote was taking place, the Democrats dominated the majority of the states that were a part of the Confederacy. Let this sink in. Now, connect your statement about all but six votes coming from the states coming from the former Confederacy, and the fact that I mentioned in my first point.
Most of the states that were formally a part of the Confederacy were dominated by Democrats. Even your strawman argument does not change the fact that a largely Democratic constituency influenced the votes of Republican and Democrats alike in Congress. This is an indication that the racism was not just in Congress, but among the people.
Hint: it was not until the 1990s that the South was associated with "being dominated by Republicans" in our current part of history.
Third, compare and contrast those five Republican nay votes, from outside the former Confederate states, to the yes votes for the Republicans from outside the former Confederate states. Do the same with the nay votes within the Confederacy along party lines. I consider it suspect that you failed to mention the breakdown of the nay votes coming from the states that were formally a part of the Confederacy.
However, the fact remains that percent support for the Civil Rights Act was stronger among Republicans in Congress that it was among the Democrats in Congress. This alone is what is relevant when determining which party is actually racist.