Wednesday, June 3, 2026

'Progressive activists' are a scourge to American society. This outstanding post written by Brian C. Joondeph proves that fact.

 

The Soft Bigotry of Historical Amnesia

Democrats abandoned segregation but never entirely abandoned paternalism.

Brian C. Joondeph | June 1, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/06/the_soft_bigotry_of_historical_amnesia.html

For decades, Democrats and their media allies have aggressively branded Republicans as the party of racism.

Support voter ID? Racist.

Oppose affirmative action? Racist.

Criticize DEI programs? Racist.

Advocate merit over quotas? Racist.

The accusation is so persistent that many Americans simply accept it as fact without asking a simple question:

Which political party actually built the system of racial segregation in America?

The answer is remarkably clear.

 

Image generated by ChatGPT

 Jim Crow laws were Democrat initiatives. Poll taxes were enacted by Democrats. Segregation was defended by Democrat governors, mayors, sheriffs, and legislators throughout the South.

The Ku Klux Klan was founded by Democrats and operated for decades as the violent enforcement arm of Democrat political power in the post-Civil War South.

Bull Connor, the Birmingham official who unleashed police dogs and fire hoses on civil rights protesters, was a Democrat.

George Wallace, who famously declared “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever,” was a Democrat.

Robert Byrd, a former KKK recruiter who later became one of the Senate’s most influential Democrats, served until 2010 and was praised by many Democrat leaders upon his death. His career is a reminder that the historical links between the Democratic Party and racial politics are not ancient history from the nineteenth century.

It was a Republican president, Abraham Lincoln, who fought a war to end slavery.

These are not disputed facts. They are history.

The question is not whether these things happened. The question is why so many Americans have forgotten them.

Modern Democrats speak as though Republicans created segregation while Democrats spent the last two centuries marching beside Martin Luther King, Jr., the latter of whom, by the way, was a lifelong registered Republican.

Even the Civil Rights Act of 1964 tells a more complicated story than the modern political narrative allows. Republicans cast a higher percentage of votes for the legislation than Democrats did, while Southern Democrats mounted the fiercest opposition, including a lengthy Senate filibuster.

None of this means Republicans were historically perfect or that racism existed only within a single political party. History is rarely that simple.

But the modern caricature, Democrats as racial liberators and Republicans as racial oppressors, collapses under scrutiny.

More importantly, it ignores an uncomfortable truth:

The Democratic Party may have abandoned overt segregation, but it never fully abandoned paternalism.

It simply modernized it.

In 2000, President George W. Bush famously warned against “the soft bigotry of low expectations.”

He was speaking primarily about education, but the phrase captures a broader problem. The assumption that certain groups cannot succeed without special accommodations, reduced standards, or government intervention is still a form of condescension, even when wrapped in the language of compassion.

Consider voter ID laws.

Democrats routinely argue that requiring identification to vote is somehow discriminatory because minorities — particularly black Americans — supposedly face unusual difficulty obtaining identification.

The implication is strikingly condescending.

Black Americans can obtain driver’s licenses. They board airplanes. They cash checks. They open bank accounts. They purchase alcohol. They check into hotels. They enter government buildings and office complexes requiring identification.

Yet we are expected to believe they are uniquely incapable of obtaining an ID to vote.

That is not respect. It is paternalism. And condescension. 

And it is remarkably similar to the underlying assumptions that drove earlier eras of Democrat racial politics — the belief that minorities require special treatment because they cannot compete or function under ordinary societal standards.

The rhetoric has changed. The assumptions remain.

Today’s progressives rarely express overt racial prejudice. Instead, they promote a gentler, more socially acceptable form of condescension.

Minorities, we are told, cannot succeed without racial preferences.

Students cannot compete without lowered standards and DEI bureaucracies.

Economic disparities must always be attributed to systemic oppression rather than the complex interplay of culture, family structure, education, economics, and personal choices.

Government must permanently intervene because equal rules supposedly lead to unequal outcomes.

This worldview traps minorities in perpetual victimhood while casting progressive elites as enlightened protectors.

It is less overt than Bull Connor standing in a schoolhouse door.

But it still rests on diminished expectations.

Ironically, many minority voters themselves reject these assumptions. Polling repeatedly showsstrong support among black and Hispanic voters for voter ID requirements. Many immigrant families strongly support merit-based education and oppose race-conscious admissions policies that disadvantage their children.

But progressive activists insist they know better.

That is because modern racial politics is not fundamentally about empowerment. It is about political dependency.

A population encouraged to see itself primarily through the lens of grievance is easier to mobilize politically. Identity politics keeps Americans divided into categories of oppressor and oppressed while allowing political elites to position themselves as moral saviors.

And maintaining that narrative requires historical revisionism.

If Americans fully understood which party defended segregation, imposed Jim Crow, opposed civil rights legislation, and built much of the racist infrastructure of the old South, the simplistic modern narrative would collapse.

So history must be rewritten.

Democrats must become the eternal heroes of civil rights while Republicans are cast as permanent villains.

The media, academia, and progressive activists have spent decades reinforcing this inversion.

But facts still matter.

The party of slavery was the Democratic Party.

The party of Jim Crow was the Democratic Party.

The party of Bull Connor was the Democratic Party.

And many of the paternalistic assumptions embedded in modern progressive politics bear an uncomfortable resemblance to the “soft bigotry of low expectations” that George W. Bush warned about more than two decades ago.

Why has this history been forgotten, and what modern political purpose does that forgetting serve?

Bull Connor’s fire hoses are gone.

Jim Crow’s poll taxes are gone.

But the assumption that minorities cannot compete without special treatment remains very much alive.

The language changed.

The politics changed.

Yet the soft bigotry of low expectations endures.

 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

ICE Facility New Jersey Delany Hall Riots continue un-abatted!

 


Anti-Law-Enforcement Riots Like New Jersey’s Will Escalate Without Stronger Deterrence

By: Brianna Lyman June 01, 2026 thefederalist.com

A rioter was charged Friday “for allegedly kicking and biting ICE officers” at a New Jersey illegal immigrant holding center on Thursday, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said on X. Another individual was arrested after threatening to murder an immigration officer and his family, Blanche said Friday. The Department of Homeland Security arrested at least six rioters last Wednesday alone for allegedly assaulting law enforcement, while others were arrested in the subsequent days, ABC 6 reported.

The attacks took place outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in New Jersey called Delaney Hall. Fox News reported that “agitators…were seen establishing a highly organized logistics and support operation before protests began at the site. Stockpiles of masks, duct tape, hard hats and medical supplies were laid out near the facility.”

By Sunday a curfew was imposed near the facility, with Democrat Gov. Mikie Sherill saying, “It has grown unsafe, and that’s completely unacceptable.”

The arrests are welcome. But the Trump administration cannot stick to occasional prosecutions while allowing the broader ecosystem of anti-ICE extremists to operate with relative impunity. Otherwise, such violence will only continue and expand.

The Newark violence is eerily reminiscent of the riots against Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis just a few months ago. During those riots, one rioter bit the finger off an ICE agent, while others blocked and obstructed roadways and federal law enforcement, threatened authorities, and attempted to interfere with immigration enforcement.

As The Federalist’s Joshua Monnington noted, those riots came after other riots in which “Young men cavalierly chucked rocks at law enforcement vehicles; protesters with freshly ordered (and unironed) Mexican flags blockaded highways. Tennessee congressional candidate Aftyn Behn gleefully announced on Facebook that she and her ‘girl squad’ were ‘bullying the ICE vehicles.’ A government bureaucrat in D.C. heaved a hoagie at agents and walked free.”

Four far-left extremists were also arrested, in December. They were allegedly planning a series of New Year’s Eve bombings and an ambush on ICE officers in Los Angeles.

“In any case,” Monnington wrote, “the administration failed to carry out justice in a manner that was sufficiently swift, decisive, and visible enough to dissuade obstructionists from engaging in reckless, anti-ICE behavior of the kind that ultimately led to Renee Good’s death.”

As has been widely covered, in Minneapolis an ICE agent fatally shot protester Renee Good after she appeared to accelerate her vehicle toward the agent. The shooting spurred additional violence and riotous behavior. As Monnington wrote, the escalation highlighted “the need for a just and decisive crackdown on anti-ICE obstruction…that parallels the Jan. 6 manhunt, not in the corrupt politicization, but in its scale and effectiveness.”

As Monninton wrote shortly after Good’s death, “Now only a law enforcement effort with the magnitude of that launched by the Biden administration in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 protests will have any chance of restoring the law and order ICE needs to enforce immigration law effectively. Leaving aside the Jan. 6 prosecutions’ largely corrupt and politically weaponized underpinnings, the Trump administration needs to imitate its scale justly.”

In fact, the riots outside Delaney Hall happened precisely because the Trump administration has not responded strongly enough to the previous violence. Much like the riots outside Delaney Hall, the riots in Minnesota appeared to be well-funded and planned.

The New York Post reported that Indivisible Twin Cities “led many of the protests against ICE raids in Minnesota.” Indivisible “is an offshoot of the Indivisible Project in Washington, DC, which bills itself as a movement to defeat the ‘Trump agenda,’ and received $7,850,000 from [George] Soros’ Open Society Foundations between 2018 and 2023…”

Fox News reported that another financial backer of the protesters is a Chinese Communist Party “advocate traced to a multitude of dark money organizations known to fuel far-left, CCP-influenced extremism in the U.S. and across the globe.” One of the groups Neville Roy Singham reportedly bankrolled is the Party for Socialism and Liberation, which the House Oversight Committee flagged as having “organized” and engaged with “a series of destructive protests and civil unrest,” according to Fox News.

Taken together, it’s clear ongoing violence against ICE agents and facilities is not from isolated grassroots protesters but a coordinated, well-funded network willing to use disruption, intimidation, and outright violence to make following federal immigration laws logistically difficult and even impossible.

To the administration’s credit, President Donald Trump has recognized the seriousness of the threat to an extent. Trump announced he was designating Antifa as a terrorist organization just days after Charlie Kirk was murdered by a radical left-winger who engraved bullet casings with slogans including, “Hey fascist! Catch!” The announcement also followed an Antifa cell’s attempt to assassinate police officers outside of ICE’s Prairieland Detention Center in July.

That action suggests the administration understands the underlying problem, but the question is whether it is willing to act with sufficient and necessary force to solve it.

The Biden administration used the full weight of federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies to relentlessly pursue Jan. 6 defendants, including defendants whose offenses were far less serious than assaulting federal officers. In fact, some people Biden targeted had committed no crimes at all, such as parents who peacefully showed up to school board meetings, traditional Catholics, and even innocent grandmothers.

If the Biden administration can weaponize federal agencies to target innocent political dissidents, the least the Trump administration can do is crack down on violent criminal organizations.

 

Another criminal illegal alien caught, sentence and will be deported. Good job ICE!

 

Illegal immigrant who led Iowa’s largest public school district sentenced to 24 months in jail

Federal prosecutors argued that Roberts knowingly built his career while lacking authorization to work in the country and submitted false documents during the hiring process.

By Nicholas Ballasy justthenews.com 5-31-26

The former leader of Iowa’s largest public school district was sentenced Friday to two years in federal prison after admitting he falsely claimed U.S. citizenship and illegally possessed firearms, capping a stunning collapse for a once-prominent education administrator.

Ian Roberts, the former superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools, pleaded guilty earlier this year to immigration and weapons charges that prosecutors said stemmed from years of deception about his legal status in the United States. Roberts, who was born in Guyana, is expected to face deportation after serving his sentence.

Federal prosecutors argued that Roberts knowingly built his career while lacking authorization to work in the country and submitted false documents during the hiring process. They advocated for a sentence of more than three years, describing serious misconduct.

Defense attorneys instead requested probation, arguing that Roberts would likely be deported once released from custody.

U.S. District Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger ultimately imposed a 24-month sentence, rejecting the request for probation.

 

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Governor of New Jersey continues to battle ICE and lt's pursuit to enforce government immigration regulations.

 

Anti-ICE protests in New Jersey boomerang on Democrats as escalating violence forces curfew

New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill, who earlier embraced protesters, acknowledged Sunday l some had engaged in “dangerous actions.”

By John Solomon justthenews.com 5-31-26

New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill, who earlier embraced protesters outside a federal immigration detention center in Newark, acknowledged early Sunday that some had engaged in “dangerous actions” against local police as escalating violence forced the city’s mayor to impose an emergency curfew.

Protesters grew increasingly aggressive Saturday night as they threw projectiles, grabbed security barriers and set fires outside ICE’s Delaney Hall facility. Mayor Ros J. Baraka admitted some were arrested in possession of weapons, necessitating the curfew.

The escalating violence created an embarrassment for Democrats like Sherrill who had embraced the protests just 24 hours earlier and asked ICE to stand down and let New Jersey police handle the crowds only to see her own officers assaulted and fires set on the streets.

Shortly after midnight Sunday, Sherrill put out a statement acknowledging the severity of the violence and saying it had “put peaceful protesters and law enforcement in danger.” She blamed agitators outside New Jersey for the escalation.

“I do not know why these individuals attacked or what they wanted to accomplish, but I refuse to let these dangerous actions detract from New Jersey’s dedication to ensuring public safety, keeping people safe from ICE, and that the people detained inside Delaney Hall are treated with dignity,” the governor added.

Baraka issued a curfew covering a half-mile radius around the ICE facility in his city, outlawing civilians in the area from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. until further notice.

“Multiple individuals have already been arrested and found in possession of weapons, underscoring the seriousness of the threat,” he said.