Please disable your adblock and script blockers to view this page

The roots of the ?great replacement theory? believed to fuel Buffalo shooter


Unite
Ku Klux Klan
White
the U.S. Senate
the Journal of Mississippi History
Evening Post
the Negro Council
Army
the Ku Klux Klan
the Committee of Catholics for Human Rights
AfricaIn March 1946
the U.S. Senate Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures
Cadillac
the Federal Bureau of Narcotics
Internal Revenue Service
the New York Times
The Washington Post
the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
the Panama Papers


act.10
Payton Gendron
Theodore G. Bilbo
Franz Boas
Adolf Hitler
Robert L. Fleegler
Bilbo “America’s
Harry Truman
Robert Taft
Alben Barkley
senator.”Martha M. Hamilton


Western
White Americans
Democrat
Italians
Jews
Black Americans
Africans
Caucasian
German
Jewish
Democratic
Republican
Mississippians
Republicans
Southern Democrats


Europe
White America

No matching tags


Buffalo
Christchurch
New Zealand
Charlottesville
U.S.
Mississippi
back.“The
Egypt
America
the United States
Chicago
New York’s
Ohio
D-Ky


World War II
Black —

Positivity     43.00%   
   Negativity   57.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2022/05/15/great-replacement-theory-buffalo-bilbo/
Write a review: The Washington Post
Summary

“The mongrel not only lacks the ability to create a civilization, but he cannot maintain a culture that he finds around him,” he wrote.“A White America or a mongrel America — you must take your choice!”Bilbo proclaimed in his book and in addresses to followers that he was “convinced, beyond every reasonable doubt, that our race is in jeopardy.” It was a fact, he said in one campaign speech, using racial slurs, that at “the present rate of interbreeding and miscegenation and intermarriage between the [Black people] and the Whites, that in nine generations, which is only 300 years, there’ll be no Whites, there’ll be no Blacks in this country. Bilbo’s admission in August 1946 on “Meet the Press” that he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan probably didn’t help.There were calls to oust Bilbo, including from veterans groups and the Committee of Catholics for Human Rights, which called Bilbo’s conduct “a chilling deterrent to the world-wide belief that America is the symbol of democracy and human rights.” They were joined by politicians, including New York’s Democratic senators and a state senator whose son was killed in World War II, who said, “I hate and despise those bigots” like Bilbo.A century ago, Mississippi’s Senate voted to send all the state’s Black people to AfricaIn March 1946, Republican conservative leader Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio called Bilbo “a disgrace to the Senate.”On Sept.

As said here by Martha M. Hamilton, Aaron Wiener