Read this hatchet job on the 1967 St. Louis Cardinals of the NFL in the July 29, 1968 issue of Sports Illustrated and notice how the language is almost identical to that used by today's media Cultural Marxists, with the exception that the word "Negro" is intermingled with "black." Negro (and "colored") was common usage until late '67, early '68, and by the end of '68 had been completely replaced by black.
The article portrays the black Cardinalsas faultless saints and the "white supremacist" Cardinals as evil incarnate. Notice how the black players are repeatedly quoted by name while the White players remain anonymous the entire article. Makes demonizing them easier that way since none of the alleged quotes can be traced to an actual player. Do I mean that alleged incidents and quotes are made up and/or embellished? Yes I do.Using quotes from anonymous sources that magically fit a story's slant is a time-honored media tradition.
Black players several times refer to "white boys" in the article,itself a racist slur, but that's fine with SI.
1968 was the fateful year the permanent Cultural Marxist revolution erupted full boar in the U.S. That was the same year SI did a worshipful series on black athletes and otherwise did a complete 180 in how they covered White and black athletes, which is how it's been ever since. 1968 was the first year of the blossoming of the Caste System, though its full effects weren't to be seen for some years after that. I'm sure there were some not-so-quietracially conscious White playersin the NFL pre-1968, as there still was throughout the U.S., but '68 was the year the system went into overdrive mode to eradicate them from the country.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1081429/index.htmEdited by: Don Wassall
The article portrays the black Cardinalsas faultless saints and the "white supremacist" Cardinals as evil incarnate. Notice how the black players are repeatedly quoted by name while the White players remain anonymous the entire article. Makes demonizing them easier that way since none of the alleged quotes can be traced to an actual player. Do I mean that alleged incidents and quotes are made up and/or embellished? Yes I do.Using quotes from anonymous sources that magically fit a story's slant is a time-honored media tradition.
Black players several times refer to "white boys" in the article,itself a racist slur, but that's fine with SI.
1968 was the fateful year the permanent Cultural Marxist revolution erupted full boar in the U.S. That was the same year SI did a worshipful series on black athletes and otherwise did a complete 180 in how they covered White and black athletes, which is how it's been ever since. 1968 was the first year of the blossoming of the Caste System, though its full effects weren't to be seen for some years after that. I'm sure there were some not-so-quietracially conscious White playersin the NFL pre-1968, as there still was throughout the U.S., but '68 was the year the system went into overdrive mode to eradicate them from the country.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1081429/index.htmEdited by: Don Wassall