IRONIC: MSNBC INVESTIGATES “SEGREGATION”…
MSNBC investigating how Rand Paul “reconciles” his belief in small government with “racism, segregation. and civil rights.” The irony.
MSNBC investigating how Rand Paul “reconciles” his belief in small government with “racism, segregation. and civil rights.” The irony.
Jesse Jackson’s complaint was in 2007. Three years later it’s still “All Day, All Night, All White” at MSNBC. Probably the best quote in the history of man. Jon Stewart can you hear me?
Not a boycott, consumer awareness!
“Race has nothing to do with the color of your skin!” -KOC
GUESTS OF COUNTDOWN: 2/4 through 2/18
February 4, 2010 (0/5)
Howard Fineman
Debbie Wasserman Schultz
Jonathan Turley
Richard Wolfe
Markos Moulistas
February 5, 2010 (0/4)
Richard Wolffe
Arriana Huffington
Craig Crawford
Richard Justice
February 8, 2010 (0/4)
Howard Fineman
Ezra Klein
Chris Hayes
Harry Shearer
February 9, 2010 (1/4)
Lawrance O Donnell
Jonathan Turley
Eugene Robinson
Bill Carter
February 10, 2010 (0/5)
Howard Fineman
Markos Moulistas
Jack Rice
Lawrance O Donnell
Rob Boston
February 11, 2010 (0/4)
David Corn
Paul Van Nocker
David Senoff
Richard Wolfe
February 15, 2010 (0/4)
Lawrance O Donnell
Ezra Klein
David Corn
Steven Nissen
February 16, 2010 (1/5)
Eugene Robinson
Richard Wolfe
Wendell Potter
John Dean
Jeffrey Lewis
February 17, 2010 (0/5)
Richard Wolfe
David Corn
Ezra Klein
Markos Moulilstas
Christian Finnegan
February 18, 2010 (0/5)
Sam Stein
Chris Hayes
Pete Williams
Arriana Huffinton
Brent Budowsky
2/45 = 4%
From February 4 through 18 2010, 4% of Keith Olbermann’s Guests were black.
Jon Stewart can you hear me?
Mike 3:40 am on May 25, 2010 Permalink |
Small government isn’t segregation. (Why does Olbermann want big government to tell people what they can and can’t do and thus segregate their opportunities?) The small government of the Republican Party was the ones who passed the Civil Rights Act, but the Democrats always want to have control over people, and they supported the control they had in the Democratic Jim Crow South. Rand Paul may not support a 1964 law, but today isn’t 1964, so just because he’s wrong about the law that the Republicans passed against the attacks of big government Democrats doesn’t mean he’s wrong about the policies of 2010.