Jamie Foxx as Django in the movie Django Unchained. |
Yeah, right!
Tell me if you have a friend or co-worker who is White utter comments about non-White people?
According to right wing pollster Scott Rasmussen, he's thrown together a poll about how Americans feel about race. So far he's determined that more Americans view Blacks as the "racists" than White (non-Hispanic), Latinos and Asians.
Again, why do we waste my time with these false narratives.
I agree that everyone has a prejudice against someone. Everyone has a reactionary fear towards something.
I think sometimes that conservatives live in a bubble. They can't stomach the fact that they're not liked among the Black community so they'll try to reassure their hatred in false polls and heresay.
In this poll, Rasmussen finds that Americans consider blacks more likely to be racist than whites and Hispanics in this country.
Thirty-seven percent (37%) of American Adults think most black Americans are racist, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Just 15% consider most white Americans racist, while 18% say the same of most Hispanic Americans. (To see survey question wording, click here.)
There is a huge ideological difference on this topic. Among conservative Americans, 49% consider most blacks racist, and only 12% see most whites that way. Among liberal voters, 27% see most white Americans as racist, and 21% say the same about black Americans.
Scott Rasmussen |
Among black Americans, 31% think most blacks are racist, while 24% consider most whites racist and 15% view most Hispanics that way.
Among white adults, 10% think most white Americans are racist; 38% believe most blacks are racist, and 17% say most Hispanics are racist.
Overall, just 30% of all Americans now rate race relations in the United States as good or excellent. Fourteen percent (14%) describe them as poor. Twenty-nine percent (29%) think race relations are getting better, while 32% believe they are getting worse. Thirty-five percent (35%) feel they are staying about the same.
These figures reflect more pessimism than was found in April when 42% gave race relations positive marks and 39% said race relations were improving. However, the April number reflected all-time highs while the current numbers are more consistent with the general attitudes of recent years.
And in his previous polls he found that perennial loser Mitt Romney was likely to trounce President Barack Obama in the general election.
And in his last poll he thought that the Democrats would lose the U.S. Senate in the 2010 U.S. Midterm elections in which the Republicans won control of the House of Representatives and state/territorial governorships.
Ignore the pollster behind the curtain.
Thanks Rob Redding for posting the headline, and me finding the link.
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