Larry Elder: The Big Black Guy at the Back of the Room Who Gives Conservatives Hope for America
A couple of years ago, I gave a speech before a conservative, predominantly white audience. I couldn’t help but notice a tall, heavyset black man, arms folded, standing in the back.
From time to time, I would look at him, only to see him frown and shake his head — disapprovingly, I assumed — when I made what I considered important points.
After the speech, he came up to me. “I am angry,” he said. “Not at you — at myself. I thought I was well informed. I read the news. I watch the news. I now see I’ve been manipulated by the party that I voted for all my life.”
He then ticked off some of the points I made in my speech that he said surprised or even shocked him.
He said he had no idea that (according to a 2004 Thomas B. Fordham Institute study) 44 percent of Philadelphia public school teachers send their own school-age kids to private school. Yet the Democratic Party adamantly opposes school vouchers, which would give K-12 children of urban parents a chance at a better school.
He did not know that Democrats, including President Barack Obama, tried to end the Washington, D.C., Opportunity Scholarship Program. It is a lottery that allows fortunate parents to opt out of their local public school for a better private school. The program is so popular that there are far more parents who want to participate than there are seats.
“What’s more important, ” he asked me, “than making sure are kids are well educated?”
He did not know that, in 1965, 25 percent of black kids were born outside of wedlock, versus 70 percent today, a phenomenon that cannot be attributed to slavery and Jim Crow.
He did not know that Obama once said, “Children who grow up without a father are five times more likely to live in poverty and commit crime; nine times more likely to drop out of schools and 20 times more likely to end up in prison.”
He said he was unaware that out of the approximately 390,000 slave owners in 1860, no more than a “handful” were Republican, according to conservative Dinesh D’Souza.
He did not know that more Republicans, as a percentage of their party, voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 than did Democrats. Nor did he know that more Republicans, as a percentage of their party, voted for the Voting Rights Act of 1965 than did Democrats.
He did not know that Democrats founded the Ku Klux Klan and that one of its goals was to stop the spread of the Republican Party.
He said he was unaware that, before 1938, when the first federal minimum wage law was enacted, a black teenager was more likely to be employed than a white teenager.
He did not know that, according to Harvard economist George Borjas, illegal immigration creates winners and losers. But the big losers are low-skilled American workers of color who compete against low-skilled illegal immigrant workers — who place downward pressure on the wages of the native-born.
The man did not know that, according to The Washington Post, in recent years, more unarmed white people have been killed by the police than unarmed black people.
He was unaware of studies, including one by a black Harvard economist, that found the police more hesitant, more reluctant, to pull the trigger on a black suspect than on a white suspect.
He did not know that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, police killings of black people declined almost 80 percent from the late ’60s through the 2010s, while police killings of white people have flatlined.
He did not know that, about racism, then-Sen. Obama said: “The previous generation, the Moses generation, pointed the way. They took us 90 percent of the way there. We still got that 10 percent in order to cross over to the other side.”
This would be the same Obama who, when he became president, said: “The legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, discrimination in almost every institution of our lives — you know, that casts a long shadow. And that’s still part of our DNA that’s passed on. We’re not cured of it.”
According to MSNBC political analyst Steve Kornacki, 43,000 votes in just three states would have switched the winner of November’s election from Joe Biden to Donald Trump. This means all Republicans need to do is change the minds of a small percentage of the electorate.
The man at my speech proves this is more than doable.
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