The race card

white guilt, Black resentment, and the assault on truth and justice

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Last edited by MARC Bot
August 7, 2024 | History

The race card

white guilt, Black resentment, and the assault on truth and justice

  • 0 Ratings
  • 3 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

The Race Card captures the twisted hypocrisy of many of today's civil rights champions who, by word and by deed, seem more intent on tearing open new wounds than on healing old ones. In stunning detail we're shown how the notorious cases of O.J. Simpson and Huey Newton have turned our judicial system upside down.

We learn of Louis Farrakhan's curious affinity for the Ku Klux Klan and thumb through radical Afrocentric literature whose bizarre theories, in the name of multiculturalism, are entering the reading lists of schools across the country.

We're left to wonder whether our nation has become so race obsessed that it has lost its ability to distinguish right from wrong.

Included are unflinching reports on Angela Davis, the Lenin Prize winner and pseudo-scholar who's honored with an endowed chair by the University of California; Mumia Abu-Jamal, Philadelphia's media-genic cop killer and cause celebre for Hollywood actors; and the alarming ease with which revisionist pop culture canonizes a Black Panther Party whose bloody, violent past continues to haunt its victims.

Publish Date
Publisher
Prima Pub.
Language
English
Pages
230

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The Race Card
The Race Card: White Guilt, Black Resentment, and the Assault on Truth and Justice
April 2, 1997, Prima Lifestyles
Hardcover in English
Cover of: The race card

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes index.

Published in
Rocklin, Calif

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
305.8/00973
Library of Congress
E185.615 .R21226 1997

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 230 p. ;
Number of pages
230

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1011782M
Internet Archive
racecardwhitegui00coll
ISBN 10
0761509429
LCCN
96052393
OCLC/WorldCat
36147222
Library Thing
1342856
Goodreads
583493

Work Description

This collection of provocative essays, edited by bestselling authors Peter Collier and David Horowitz, explores how Martin Luther King's dream of a color-blind society is being undermined by black separatists and others who profit from the cynical exploitation of racial pride. The writers expose the underside of this new Afrocentrism—the crackpot theories, the bullying of dissent, the naked appeals to violence. Three themes emerge:

• Political trials—how the notorious cases of O.J. Simpson, Philadelphia's convicted cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, and others have muddied our sense of truth, justice, and reason
• Afro-fascism—how some influential black leaders such as Louis Farrakhan have fueled a separatist movement that seems to feed on the hatred of Jews, Koreans, and whites
• The new racism—how racial pride, taken to its destructive extreme on the streets and in the schools of America, is leading to a society of bitter divisions.

Academic partisans have rewritten the textbooks to enshrine Afrocentric orthodoxy inside Ivy League walls; politically correct media reports have ignored the troubling implications. The Race Card is a cogent, compelling, and long-needed call for a return to reason.

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August 7, 2024 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
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July 8, 2019 Edited by SearchingForAnswers Authors, description, from Amazon
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record