Showing posts with label Carl Braden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carl Braden. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

CHAD O. JACKSON: How communists fomented race riots

Black Wall Street was built back relatively quickly after the race riot and so too were many of the other black communities where are these riots took place.  There were two reasons for this that the Communists would come to understand by the 1930s.  The first is that you have to remember that Booker T. Washington, 1856-1915, only died the decade before many of these race riots took place, and so the entrepreneurial spirit was still alive and well in many of the black communities.  

The Communists were Masters at covertly creating disasters in order to cause discontent they did this for example by bombing their own houses and bombing black churches and then crying white supremacy.

00:21.  Carl Braden, 1914-1975, for example, was convicted for doing such a thing where he bought a house for a black party member in a predominantly white neighborhood then fanning the flames by drawing attention to the fact that a negro just moved into a white Kentucky neighborhood.

00:42.  "They arrested Carl Braden for bombing his own house and charged him with sedition and he spent years in jail," explains Mortimer Daniel Rubin, Former Secretary Young Communist League, 1931-2015.

The charges were ultimately dropped.  This, of course, should not be looked at as a revelation of Innocence.  The communists dedicated a lot of time and effort to mastering litigation.

Breaking News: The Illinois Supreme Court has just overturned Empire actor Jesse Smollett's conviction.

In recent years the charges against Jussie Smollett were dropped.

. . . staging a racist and homophobic attack against himself then lying about it to the police.

It would, of course, be foolish to look at that as a revelation of his innocence

01:19.  Carl Braden and his wife, Anne, of course, would go on to be relatively close to Martin Luther King and be heavily involved in the Civil Rights Movement, which ironically was constantly being victimized by church bombings.

There have been more unsolved bombings of negro homes and churches in Birmingham than any other city.  --Martin Luther King

Although the Soviet directive to demoralize blacks was effective in many ways, it didn't completely solidify blacks to the ranks of the Communist Party.

Black Wall Street was built back relatively quickly after the race riot and so too were many of the other black communities where are these riots took place.  There were two reasons for this that the Communists would come to understand by the 1930s.  The first is that you have to remember that Booker T. Washington, 1856-1915, only died the decade before many of these race riots took place, and so the entrepreneurial spirit was still alive and well in many of the black communities.  The second was that they were empowered by their unshakable faith in God, which the Communists discovered was a hurdle that they, the Communists, couldn't jump simply by being dismissive of religion as an opiate of the people.

We have been watching the Communist takeover of territories and countries.  While this was going on . . . around the world, . . . 

As a result of this, they set their sights on the church to subvert it for their own goals.

. . . their movements follow a rather rigid pattern, and there's a reason for this, because it is spelled out in the Communist International's official publication, Communist.

Monday, June 23, 2025

CHAD O. JACKSON: So [MLK's] speeches [were] written by Clarence Jones, a Marxist; Stanley Levison, a Marxist; Bayard Rustin, a Marxist; Jack O'Dell, a Marxist, and sometimes by him, also a Marxist.

 
00:00.  Martin Luther King Force for good or Force for bad for black people in American culture?

00:10.  Force for bad.  Total Force for bad because what the civil rights movement did is it turned black people into a protected class and that was the worst thing that I think could happen to Black Americans black people like to be catered to in this way and they like for their what they believe to be there kind of cultural preferences to be catered to in pandered to and so for someone like Martin Luther King he's considered to be a hero he's considered to be a leader he's considered to be almost like a deity quite frankly.

00:45.  If I heard that correctly what Marx's vision was that the church one day would be marrying two men, that they would so reject God that they would be marrying two men and affirming gay marriage.  Is . . . did I read that right?

01:00.  Yeah, you could argue that, but yeah.  So Marx he was a degenerate and he was a Satanist.  When you look at Marxism as a school of thought and you see it as a kind of taking up of the baton from one generation to the next, it certainly was like what King was doing was certainly within the continuation and within the tradition that Karl Marx and Frederick Engels started.

01:25  Carl Braden, the white communist, that bought the home intentionally rented it to a black family put the family into this all white neighborhood to stir things up in what is referred to as the Wade Incident of 1954.  Carl Brandon then bombs the home right and to make me out of here look what the right white race white supremacy yeah they did this to this black couple and then the ultimate Nail is you then show and call Brayden had a relationship and work with Martin Luther King.  

01:54. So his speeches are written by Clarence Jones, a Marxist; Stanley Levison, a Marxist; Bayard Rustin, a Marxist; Jack O'Dell, a Marxist, and sometimes by him, also a Marxist.  Like Martin Luther King when you look at his favorability ratings in the 1960s, people had a higher view of J. Edgar Hoover than they did of Martin Luther King.  Now that's important because if you look at it today, it's completely flipped.  They were able to pull a fast one on us, and now we are celebrating here.  Martin Luther King, not only did he have all the answers, but who else could have done it? 

03:05.  Perhaps you've heard of Chad from the documentaries he was involved in Uncle Tom I and Uncle Tom II which took a unique look at America's racial history as it relates to the black and white dynamic.  Mostly what we're going to talk about today is his latest