President Joe Biden’s outreach to black voters consists of more of the same race-baiting that has marked his time in the White House as the most divisive leader in the nation’s history.
But while many will likely buy into the hatemongering and fear tactics, many black Americans have grown tired of Democrats and their failed promises to the one demographic that is vital to their political hopes, that’s why many are now open to supporting former President Donald J. Trump this year.
After Biden’s lying, vitriol-saturated speeches to Morehead College graduates and the Detroit NAACP, some black voters expressed their disdain for the geriatric demagogue on Monday’s edition of “Fox & Friends” on Fox News.
(Video: Fox News)
“Race baiter,” said New Yorker Lou Valentino of Biden. “It’s tough to hear that because imagine you going to college for four years… ready to… hit the world, start a career, and… this guy is trying to set you back literally, I don’t know, civil rights. I don’t know what’s going on with the Democrats.
This role that they’re trying to play, instead of… pulling up and saying, well, ‘Here we go. This is your time. Congratulations. Let’s kill it. Let’s do our best.’ Nah, you know what, Lawrence? They don’t love you like that,” the told co-host Lawrence Jones.
“You missed your high school graduation. You started college just as George Floyd was murdered, and there was a reckoning on race. It’s natural to wonder if the ‘democracy’ you hear about actually works for you. What is democracy? That black men are being killed in the street,” Biden ranted to the graduating black students in Atlanta on Sunday, not exactly a sunny and uplifting message from the divider in chief.
“What is democracy? The trail of broken promises still leaves Black communities behind. What is democracy? You have to be ten times better than anyone else to get a fair shot. Most of all, what does it mean? As you’ve heard before, to be a Black man who loves his country even if it doesn’t love him back in equal measure,” Biden added in his race-baiting diatribe.
“It’s hopelessness, man… it’s the party of hopelessness,” said Ajay Brewer, a black business owner from Virginia.
“I could say that… I was a Democrat my entire life until I opened my business… It’s like a drug… victimhood, and, ‘We can do this for you,’ and to be honest with you the Black folks I surround myself with just want government to get out of the way,” Brewer told “Fox & Friends First” co-host Carley Shimkus on Monday.
(Video: Fox News)
“We don’t need folks to do things for us. We don’t need people to baby us,” he said. “It’s kind of disturbing… that they pander to us in this manner because they can depend on us at a clip of 90 percent plus, but I think that’s going to change this election.”
Bernadette Wright, a black independent voter from Georgia, told Shimkus, “America is changing and people are becoming more sensitive to what’s affecting us as individuals, as business owners, as parents. Not just because we’re Black, not just because we’re women, not just because we’re men. They can’t keep putting us in these race baskets.”
“Accountability season is here, and America is ready for someone who’s ready to lead from a place of understanding that you’re going to have to meet with the states, and you’re going to have to meet with the local government if you want to affect individual communities on a micro level,” she said.
“When it comes to me as an African American, I need you to pay attention to what’s going on with my business,” she continued. “It’s not always just about, ‘Oh, you’re black, so you must need this in your community,” Wright added. “They don’t even know who we are at this point. We’re just looking for somebody to come to the middle and lead.”
“If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t black,” Biden infamously remarked before the 2020 election.
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Author: Chris Donaldson
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