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Former Gov. George Wallace was against integration. Trump is against inclusion. Two nickels or a dime?
Scoop USA Newspaper
|ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 12
Integration and inclusion: If they are not identical twins--they are siblings.
In the post-slavery period, former slave owners fought to prevent racial integration.
Today, the descendants of slave owners and like-minded folks are fighting to prevent racial inclusion.
The opposite of inclusion is exclusion. The opposite of integration is segregation. The infamous Governor of Alabama, George Wallace, once boasted, “segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever” as he stood in front of the doors of the University of Alabama. His aim was to prevent Black people from enrolling in the early 1960s.
Most Americans saw this as being terribly wrong. It represented the epitome of hate and racial discrimination toward Black people. It was the opposite of good.
In the late 19th until the mid-20th centuries, the goal of the Republican Party and Americans of good character was to integrate the former slave population into the rest of free America. Some in the Democrat Party and bad people found this totally unacceptable.
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