@farmerman,
Do you know what racism is, Farmerman?
I don't think you do. Like most people you have your own definition.
Here, for your edification, is the dictionary definition---
"The doctrine that INHERENT differences among the various human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one's race is superior"
You do know what inherent means, I hope.
First of all, I am sure that you are aware that when we speak of race, we must admit that pure racial strains are a concept but not usually found in society if we examine human history. Even Barack Hussein Obama does not fall easily under the heading of African-American.
Secondly, your gobbledegook about "Aryan Nation" is far off target. As a person who claims an Asian great grandfather, I would not buy Rockwell's thesis.
I am very proud of my Asian roots because, on the whole, the Asian genetic inheritance combined with Asian culture has resulted in a incredible result for Asians in this country. You may be aware that Asians are among the most affluent groups in the USA.
You do not seem to understand the genesis of the Afro-American dilemma.
As a group, African-Americans test lower than any other group in the USA. That is a fact--not racism.
This is partly due to the race carders, who, in order to keep thier power, insist that because one's great grandmother was a slave, that person can never ascend to the heights of a society.
It is a useful excuse. As the brilliant political scientist Harvey Mansfield from Harvard commented:
"White students have to admit their guilt so that minority students do not have to admit their incapacity."
A useful model for Afro-Americans would be the Asians in the USA. That group has a largely intact culture, very low rates of povertyy and reliance on welfare, and a very strong attachment to education as an end.
Most colleges have ceremonies at the end of the year to honor the best--the Phi Beta Kappa nominees. In some colleges, there are groups of fifty, sixty or seventy which do not include a single African-American.
I think that African Americans would do well to read and listen to one of their own, Dr, Thomas Sowell. He is a brilliant African-American who pulls no punches with regard to the things African-Americans must do in order to become full participants in the American dream.
The first thing is to forget the fiction that the are VICTIMS.
You must really explain why, farmerman, African-Americans who make it into Medical and Law schools invariably end up in the lower half of the class.
I know why and so does Dr, Sowell, but apparently, you do not!!