tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8839412.post7063821415293873341..comments2024-03-19T07:48:54.021-06:00Comments on Gus Van Horn: An Unsung LegionGus Van Hornhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05126749051688217781noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8839412.post-50394504749816693542013-07-26T13:48:51.419-06:002013-07-26T13:48:51.419-06:00And we wouldn't want to break a narrative, wou...And we wouldn't want to break a narrative, would we?Gus Van Hornhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05126749051688217781noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8839412.post-30702388170758917542013-07-26T12:25:30.417-06:002013-07-26T12:25:30.417-06:00Thanks Gus,
It is nice to see the heroism coming ...Thanks Gus,<br /><br />It is nice to see the heroism coming out of the horribly bad circumstances where many law abiding blacks live. And while that problem is cultural, gov't programs have magnified them rather than mitigated them. <br /><br />Those folks who would use racialist rhetoric based on the crime numbers or other metrics would exclude the heroes cited by Coulter from consideration, an act of supreme injustice. But then, when one embraces a collectivist premise, many such injustices are embraced as well. <br /><br />It seems that the press has a curious lack of depth in regard to black citizens. They are either victims, race warriors, or Uncle Toms. Of course the large number of criminal perpetrators are rarely pointed out by the press and neither are those individuals standing on their own to make their own lives. Coverage of either would break the narrative and we can't be having any of that!<br /><br />c. andrewAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com