[Case]
> My first experiences with this kind of thinking came from old southerners
> who where really mad about letting black kids in our schools and their
> parent into our restaurants. It was the commie baiters of the McCarty era
> and the fear mongering of the cold war. The Klan, the John Birch Society 
> and other right wing hate groups may have changed the terms they use but 
> how, oh how did they work their way into the mainstream? Mainstream, hell,
> the oval office?

[Platt]
My first experience with your kind of thinking came when I read the
Communist Manifesto.

[Case]
And what specific problems did you see with Marx' analysis. I know as a
child I thought it was wrong to have some people banned from using
particular restrooms and water fountains. I could not understand why a
society that was supposed to be of the people, by the people and for the
people seem to be for some people more than others. And it is disturbing
that that legacy continues today disguised as "class warfare" by your talk
show cronies.




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